The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have jointly issued new guidelines for classifying digital assets. According to ChainCatcher, these guidelines categorize digital assets into five types: digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital utilities, stablecoins, and digital securities (tokenized securities). Only the last category is considered a security, requiring registration or exemption under federal securities laws.
The guidelines, published as an interpretive rule in the Federal Register, replace the 2019 "investment contract" analysis framework from the Gensler era. They provide two clear paths for tokens to shed their securities status: if the issuer completes its core management tasks, the investment contract ends, allowing tokens to trade freely as non-securities in secondary markets; or if the issuer abandons the project or remains inactive for an extended period, the investment contract also terminates. Additionally, the guidelines clarify that airdrops, mining, and staking generally do not constitute securities transactions, and the wrapping or unwrapping of assets does not alter their securities status.
Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Research, noted that these guidelines mark the end of the Gensler era's adversarial regulatory stance towards the crypto industry, providing significant clarity for institutional entry. However, he cautioned that interpretive rules lack legal binding power and can be overturned by a new administration, highlighting the industry's ongoing push for the CLARITY Act legislation.