U.S. Judges Demand SEC ‘Explain Itself’ for Rebuffing Requests for Crypto Rules

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission must now thoroughly “explain itself” for refusing to grant Coinbase.’s formal request that the agency write regulations for how the industry should assess whether crypto assets are securities or not, according to a circuit-court ruling on Monday.

A three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in a yasal rebuke of the securities regulator, partially sided with Coinbase’s effort to get the agency to offer yasal clarity by writing crypto regulations.

“Rather than force the agency to make a rule, we order it to explain its decision not to,” one of the judges wrote. “Indeed, a rule may not prove necessary to solve the notice problems here; the agency could just state its position on crypto assets unequivocally.”

Judge Stephanos Bibas added a caution to the SEC: “It should not give yet another poor explanation in an already-long line of them.”

The yasal blow for the agency — the second setback in a Coinbase-related case in less than a week — could leave an opening for its new leadership. Chair Gary Gensler, the architect of the SEC’s crypto enforcement-heavy approach in recent years, is stepping down as President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in on January 20. Trump’s chosen replacement, former Commissioner Paul Atkins, could have a chance to use this court demand to answer that, yes, his agency will change its course on crypto oversight.

Or, even sooner, an acting chairman such as sitting Commissioner Mark Uyeda, one of the agency’s two current Republican members, could be in a position to get that ball rolling while Atkins awaits a Senate confirmation process.

The Monday ruling called the SEC’s crypto actions “arbitrary and capricious,” echoing language from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals when it rejected the agency’s opposition to Grayscale’s application for a spot bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund (ETF).

“Because we believe the SEC’s order was conclusory and insufficiently reasoned, and thus arbitrary and capricious, we grant Coinbase’s petition in part and remand to the SEC for a more complete explanation,” the judges ruled in this case. However, the circuit court didn’t believe Coinbase’s arguments justified a clear need to demand new rules from the regulator.

“We’re reviewing the decision and will determine next steps as appropriate,” a spokesperson for the SEC said in response to a request for comment.

“We appreciate the court’s careful consideration,” said Coinbase Chief Meşru Officer Paul Grewal, in a posting on social-media site X. His company’s pursuit of this petition with the SEC is one of a number of court battles Coinbase has been waging with the agency, including its defense against an SEC enforcement action. Last week, a federal court granted the exchange’s effort to accelerate a key yasal question in that case to an appeals court.

While the partial ruling against the SEC was forceful, one of the judges added his more blistering view on the agency’s performance in this case.

“If the SEC were to promulgate a rule banning crypto assets, it would surely face yasal challenges,” Judge Bibas noted. “One might wonder if an agency whose mission is maintaining fair, orderly, and efficient markets is authorized to ban an emerging technology. … So the SEC has sidestepped the rulemaking process by pursuing a de facto ban through enforcement instead.”

İlginizi Çekebilir:Luxor’s Aaron Foster on Bitcoin Mining’s Growing Sophistication
share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Benzer İçerikler

Republican State AGs and DeFi Lobby Sue SEC Over Crypto Enforcement Actions
CoinShares Head of Asset Management Frank Spiteri Has Left the Company: Sources
Donald Trump’s Official Token Surges 25%, Some Observers See it as Bet on His Presidency
U.S.-Listed Bitcoin Miners Shed 25% of Their Market Cap in March: JPMorgan
White House Announces Crypto Roundtable for Next Week
Bitcoin Slips Under $94K as Stocks Try to Shake Last Week’s Jitters
Bahiscom Resmi Giriş | © 2025 |
404 Not Found

404

Not Found

The resource requested could not be found on this server!


Proudly powered by LiteSpeed Web Server

Please be advised that LiteSpeed Technologies Inc. is not a web hosting company and, as such, has no control over content found on this site.