The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) acting chair revealed that the agency is reviewing its rulemaking process and will revisit a controversial rule on crypto custody requirements for investment advisers proposed during the Biden administration.
đžCrypto Custody Rule Proposal Could Be Abandoned
At the Investment Company Instituteâs 2025 Investment Management Conference, SECâs acting chair, Mark Uyeda, discussed the regulatory agencyâs new approach to rulemaking. During the Monday conference, he affirmed that the Commissionâs blueprint must prioritize âeffective and cost-efficient regulations that respect the limits of our statutory authority.â
As a result, the SEC could work on a âback to basicsâ framework for its rulemaking process. Under this framework, the agency could consider withdrawing or re-proposing existing rule proposals, as some, including the 2023 crypto custody rule, raise various concerns.
On February 2023, the Commission, led by Gary Gensler, voted to pass a proposal to make amendments to the 2009 Custody Rule, which would âexpand and enhance the role of qualified custodians when registered investment advisers custody assets on behalf of investors,â stated the former SEC chair.
Under the 2009 rule, registered investment advisers must hold their client assets with a qualified custodian, like a bank or broker-dealer. The proposed amendment would expand the custody rule to include virtually any asset, including crypto, which raised several concerns among industry players.
At the time, Uyeda stated, âThis approach to custody appears to mask a policy decision to block access to crypto as an asset class. It deviates from the Commissionâs long-standing position of neutrality on the merits of investments.â
On Monday, The SECâs acting chair revealed that âthere may be significant challenges to proceeding with the original proposal.â Based on this, he asked the regulatory agencyâs staff to âwork closely with the Crypto Task Force to consider the appropriate alternatives, including its withdrawal.â
He also affirmed that the Commission could consider extending or delaying compliance dates for some recently adopted rules.
đžUS SEC Returning To A âSmootherâ Regulatory Approach
Uyeda criticized the past administrationâs approach to rulemaking and regulatory changes, asserting that these âwere not for the better.â Moreover, he added that the ârulemaking shortcutsâ have âreturned to haunt the Commission in subsequent litigation.â
Turning to future rulemaking, the Commission should act like a super-sized freighter, not a speed boat â and that means returning to a smoother regulatory course than the rapid changes that have been promulgated over the last four years. Investors and the industry must be able to rely on us to act consistent with precedent and through an informed and thorough public process.
Uyeda concluded that the Commission needs to âtake the time to do things carefully and methodically, rather than rush and risk actions that are not fully thought through.â
The acting chairâs remarks follow the ongoing changes in the SECâs approach to the crypto industry under the Trump administration. Over the past two months, the Commission has paused, closed, or dismissed most of its key crypto processes, including the lawsuits and open investigations against Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, and Robinhood.
the SEC allegedly has been taking action to stop ârogue attacksâ on the industry by requiring top-level approval to launch investigations and scaling back on its crypto enforcement unit.
Additionally, SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, known for her crypto-friendly approach, has revealed that the regulatory agency will start to establish âpiecesâ of its new framework this year.