
US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Paul Atkins told the fifth Cryptocurrency Roundtable of the Agency on 9 June that the ability to keep crypto without an intermediary in the core of American legislation hears.
Atkins opened the “Defi and the American Spirit” session by linking the decentralized (Defi) financing to the traditions of the country of private property rights and open markets.
He described Blockchains as peer-to-peer databases that record ownership of digital assets without central control. Atkins also noticed that network participants are competing in a reimbursement market to validate transactions and to keep larges in synchronization.
He explained:
“The right to be confident for someone’s private ownership is a fundamental American value that should not disappear when someone signs up on the internet.”
The new SEC chairman contrasted that model with the approach to the earlier administration and said that it was trying to discourage participation through enforcement actions and public statements that, validated and deploy as securities activity.
He has credited the Division of Corporation Finance to later clarify that routine validation work by setting does not fall under the federal securities rules, but added that the guidelines was insufficient because it lacks a rule force.
Roadmap for regulations in the chain
The chairman urged the committee to make rules that depend on the conference authority instead of informal staff. He argued that forced mediation introduces costs and limited functions in chains such as deployment.
Atkins criticized previous regulatory actions that wallet developers as non -registered brokers described, and claimed that software publication alone should not encourage securities obligations.
He compared such an enforcement to sue a car company because a driver used an autonomous vehicle to commit a crime. Atkins emphasized that many blockchain applications work without managers, so that they are written outdoor frames for issuing markets.
He asked the staff to study how registrants can deal with self -execution code while meing to disclose and guardianship requirements. The SEC chairman also supported changes with which intermediaries can migrate and clean up to block chains, reduce friction and improve liquidity.
To accelerate experiments, ATKINS commissioned the staff to design an “innovation exemption” that could provide conditional exemption for companies that launch on-chain products.
Committee strives for a formal proposal
Atkins claimed that the establishment of a sustainable policy must take place through regulations and comment assignment instead of declarations or lawsuits by ad hoc.
He added that resilient on-chain protocols transactions continued to process during recent market stress, while various centralized platforms failed.
Atkins concluded that the Commission will strive for formal rules and possible exemptions to enter self -coasts and decentralized financing within the securities framework without endangering the long -term investment protection.
