SEC Pivot Under Paul Atkins Signals Cooperative Era for Crypto, Leaving Policy Durability in Doubt
TL;DR:
The SEC launched an official podcast where chairman Paul Atkins and two commissioners outlined a pro-innovation crypto regulatory agenda.
The agency’s enforcement actions dropped 22% in fiscal year 2025. Monetary relief fell from $8.2 billion to $2.7 billion.
Experts warn the U.S. has a window of 12 to 18 months to attract crypto infrastructure before Singapore, the UAE or the EU take the lead.
The SEC launched its official podcast Material Matters with a message as crucial as it is unambiguous: the era of confrontation with the crypto industry is over. In the inaugural episode, chairman Paul Atkins sat alongside commissioners Hester Peirce and Mark Uyeda to outline a regulatory vision centered on innovation. Atkins stated that the U.S. must be the place “where people want to innovate, whether in crypto or any other area,” and described the current moment as “a very important inflection point in American markets“.
Commissioner Uyeda described the Gensler era as “a complete deviation” from the agency’s core mandate, noting that the SEC had ventured into areas such as DEI oversight, greenhouse gas disclosures and supply chain management. “We weren’t even in the stadium. We were outside,” he said.
The SEC Changes the Rules of the Game
Since Donald Trump’s return to the presidency, the SEC closed or dismissed cases against Ripple, Coinbase, Binance and other companies in the sector. The agency also issued guidance establishing that “most crypto assets” are not securities, and granted exemptions to DeFi interfaces. In a recent report, the Commission acknowledged that prior years’ enforcement “generated mistaken expectations” and that resources “were misapplied to generate media headlines“.
Hester Peirce, leading the crypto task force now rebranded as Project Crypto, argued that regulation open to innovation strengthens financial markets and directly benefits investors.
The Clock Is Ticking for Washington
Within the industry, analysts are cautiously optimistic. Male Zane, regional manager at CoinEx, noted that Atkins’ approach represents a shift toward “a systemic and predictable regulatory architecture,” which could accelerate the return of institutional capital and facilitate the launch of more complex products, from derivatives to new ETFs.
Sergey Kravtsov, co-founder and CEO of Papaya Finance, warned that the window for the U.S. to capture the infrastructure layer —not just trading applications, but real payment infrastructure— is only 12 to 18 months. “If the framework takes two more years, that infrastructure will be built in Singapore, the UAE or the EU under MiCA,” he said. Kravtsov indicated that he is already relocating his company to the U.S. and filing a patent with the USPTO in support of the current administration’s position.
Filed under: News - @ April 17, 2026 4:27 pm