Home Cryptocurrency SEC to Notify Crypto Businesses of Technical Violations Before Taking Action: Report

SEC to Notify Crypto Businesses of Technical Violations Before Taking Action: Report

A report by the Financial Times revealed that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) plans to issue crypto firms notices of technical violations before taking action.

The move is a shift away from the aggressive enforcement approach that was pursued under former President Joe Biden.

SEC Chair Vows Softer Approach

Trump-appointed SEC Chair Paul Atkins told the Financial Times in an interview in Paris that the agency would continue to pursue fraudsters but that there were “other gradations” that required notice. He criticized what he described as the SEC’s past habit of “bashing down doors” over minor violations, explaining that it would now stop treating technical mistakes with the same harshness.

Atkins believes that regulated businesses should have a chance to correct compliance issues before enforcement action is taken. He described his approach as an effort to fix what many saw as a lack of due process, proper notice, and rule of law in the commission’s work.

One of his criticisms is about the billions of dollars in fines handed out for record-keeping violations. He argued that the regulator’s actions were not guided by precedent or predictability and said, “That’s not how a regulator should have acted.” Atkins added that many people were right to bash the SEC in recent years for its methods.

The change is part of other efforts made by Republican regulators to reduce enforcement programs launched under Biden and reshape the agency into a more business-friendly body. Since January, the agency has dropped several cases against crypto platforms, including Binance, Coinbase, and Ripple, among others.

Crypto Regulation Goals

The official also talked about his plans for digital asset regulation, explaining that he wants to fulfill Trump’s promise to make the United States the crypto capital of the world.

Former SEC Chair Gary Gensler’s tenure was marked by fines and lawsuits against banks, brokers, and crypto firms. He also maintained the view that most digital assets qualified as securities and resisted calls to establish crypto-specific rules. On the other hand, Atkins believes that most tokens are not securities and supports legislation that would let investors trade tokenized shares and bonds using blockchain technology.

He cited the 2022 collapse of FTX as an example of why domestic oversight is important. Many investors in the Bahamas-based exchange lost money, but customers of its regulated U.S. derivatives arm were reimbursed because it operated under official safeguards.

The 32-year-old said the financial watchdog has intentions of making rules for smart contracts and tokenized securities and warned companies already offering trading in such U.S. stocks to move carefully while the commission works on these standards.

The post SEC to Notify Crypto Businesses of Technical Violations Before Taking Action: Report appeared first on CryptoPotato.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles

SEC, Gemini Trust reach agreement over crypto lending dispute

Almost three years after the SEC filed a complaint involving allegations with...

Canary sets 0.95% fee for spot Litecoin ETF

Canary Capital Litecoin ETF fee set at 0.95% as disclosed in filings...

Polymarket files with SEC indicating warrants that hint at token launch

Polymarket disclosed other warrants in an SEC filing, a structure often tied...

As digital asset treasury mNAVs collapse, only the strong will survive — Standard Chartered

Standard Chartered warns of risks as Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana treasury companies...