Chairman Paul Atkins of Securities and Exchange Commission has appointed James Moloney on Wednesday to lead the division of the Corporation Finance Agency and to place a pro-Crypto veteran at the helm of the influential unit that assesses IPO archives and company insersions.
Moloney, partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, previously worked at the SEC from 1994 to 2000, where he specialized in mergers, acquisitions and financial reporting.
He will start his new role next month, successor to acting director Cicely Lamothe, who returns to her earlier position as deputy director.
Crypto guidance under control
The Moloney division will play a central role in assessing the income of the company, the disclosure of the executive wage and compliance with accounting standards.
In recent months, the unit has also taken on an extensive role in shaping the SEC’s approach to digital assets, publishing guidelines that distinguish between memecoins, stablecoins and effects.
The position positions the Agency in the middle of an ongoing debate on jurisdiction with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Moloney said that he is planning to pursue ‘smart, practical and effective regulations’ that will relieve the disclosure tax and at the same time ensure that investors receive accurate information.


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His appointment comes when the Congress De Clarity Act, legislation weighs that could move the primary supervision of crypto to the CFTC, while still needing joint regulations with the SEC.
Veteran returns to the crucial time
Atkins praised the return from Moloney to the SEC and quoted his earlier experience within the desk and in private practice.
He explained:
“I would like to work with Jim, Cicely and others in the Division of Corporation Finance to modernize and improve our existing rules.”
The appointment emphasizes the increasing emphasis on crypto supervision at a time when regulators get the pressure to clarify the rules for digital assets.
With Moloney in Power, the Corporate Finance division of the committee is expected to play an important role in drawing up disclosure requirements that can determine how companies that enter the public markets report their exposure to cryptocurrencies.
