Rewriting the Rules: The SEC & CFTC on Crypto, IPOs & the Future of American Markets
American capital markets stand at a crossroads. SEC Chair Paul Atkins and CFTC Chair Michael Selig are tearing down decades of regulatory friction that has driven innovation offshore and locked ordinary investors out of the private markets where most value is created. The number of public companies has fallen by half in three decades, while insiders capture returns that once belonged to IPO buyers. Can two agencies that have spent years in turf wars harmonize their approach in time to keep blockchain, prediction markets, and AI innovation onshore — or will the next wave of financial technology flourish in Russia and the Caymans instead?
Puntos clave
The SEC and CFTC are collaborating on a memorandum of understanding to end turf wars and create substituted compliance regimes, allowing one primary regulator per product and eliminating duplicative registration for cross-jurisdictional offerings.
Chairman Atkins plans a «spring cleaning» of SEC rules with focus on materiality, reduced disclosure burdens, litigation reform, and potentially moving from quarterly to semi-annual reporting to make IPOs attractive again.
Both chairs are committed to revising accredited investor definitions to include knowledge-based tests (like a driver's license for investing) rather than wealth-only thresholds, democratizing access to venture capital and private markets.
Tokenized securities remain under SEC jurisdiction with full insider trading and disclosure rules, while digital commodities, tools, and collectibles fall to the CFTC — separating capital raises from the tokens themselves to enable innovation without abandoning fraud protection.
The push to reshore innovation from offshore exchanges is urgent: without purpose-fit regulation for blockchain, AI agents, and prediction markets, American builders will continue to flee to jurisdictions with lighter oversight, risking both capital flight and systemic integrity.
En resumen
The SEC and CFTC are embarking on the most ambitious deregulatory agenda in decades: streamlining IPO rules, opening private markets to non-accredited investors, harmonizing crypto oversight, and future-proofing regulations for AI and blockchain — all while racing to keep American innovation from fleeing offshore.
The IPO Inversion: How Private Markets Captured Public Returns
Thirty years ago the public owned the upside; today insiders take the lion's share.
Three Inhibitions Killing the IPO
Ending the Turf War: SEC-CFTC Harmonization
Decades of agency infighting left new products dead in no man's land.
For three decades, the SEC and CFTC operated as rival fortresses with a demilitarized zone between them. The casualties were innovation: single stock futures, portfolio margining, blockchain products, and prediction markets all withered under crossfire from competing regulators. Chairman Atkins described the no man's land as «littered with the bodies of would-be products» that never reached market because issuers couldn't determine jurisdiction.
Both agencies are now negotiating a memorandum of understanding to share information, coordinate policy, and establish substituted compliance regimes. The goal is a single primary regulator per product, eliminating duplicative registration and conflicting rule sets. For cross-jurisdictional offerings — prediction markets involving securities, blockchain networks with both commodity and security tokens — the agencies will set consistent standards so developers don't need separate blockchains for each asset class.
Chairman Atkins envisions a «super app» future: blurred regulatory lines, coordinated exemptions, and frictionless treatment for dually registered firms. Both chairs emphasized this requires not just top-level alignment but cultural change at the staff level, where much of the historical sniping originated.
Quarterly Reporting: A 1970 Innovation Past Its Prime?
President Trump floated semi-annual reporting; the SEC is now reviewing cadence and filer categories.
Quarterly Reporting: A 1970 Innovation Past Its Prime?
Quarterly reporting is not a founding principle of securities regulation. The SEC originally mandated annual reports in 1934, moved to semi-annual in 1955, and only adopted quarterly in 1970. The UK followed the same path but reverted to semi-annual in 2014, allowing companies to report quarterly voluntarily. Chairman Atkins is agnostic but preparing a proposed rule to solicit comment, particularly for smaller firms that struggle to attract analyst coverage and may benefit from reduced compliance burden without sacrificing transparency.
Accredited Investor Reform: Knowledge Over Wealth
Why should an heiress qualify but a finance professor earning $100k be locked out?
The accredited investor standard dates to 1940 and turns almost exclusively on wealth: a million dollars in assets or $200,000 in annual income. This locks 95% of Americans out of private markets where value is created — venture capital, private equity, pre-IPO opportunities in companies like Uber or Airbnb. Chairman Atkins recalled a comment letter from his prior tenure: «Today I can invest in a hedge fund. Tomorrow, once you raise the threshold, I cannot. What changed?»
The statute actually includes the word «knowledge,» not just net worth. Both chairs support a knowledge-based test analogous to a driver's license: pass an exam, demonstrate sophistication, gain access. A finance professor earning $100,000 would qualify; an heiress who inherited $10 million but knows nothing about markets would not — unless she hires advisors, who themselves may be «dummies.» The SEC will propose rule changes this year, potentially recognizing CPA or CFA credentials or creating a new certification.
Opening private markets also means reconsidering fund formation limits. Venture funds are capped at 100 investors under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Jason Calacanis noted he had over $100 million in demand from accredited investors for his last fund but could only accept $10 million due to the cap. Lifting or modernizing these statutory limits — potentially with percentage-of-income or net-worth caps per investor — would democratize venture capital and increase startup funding.
Crypto Clarity: Separating Capital Raises from Tokens
Prediction Markets: Integrity, Insider Trading, and the Truth Machine
Markets need transparency and anti-manipulation rules, but they're powerful information aggregators.
Prediction markets have existed since the 1990s, starting with the Iowa Electronic Markets for election forecasting. They are not unregulated gambling: the CFTC requires exchanges to certify that each contract is not readily susceptible to manipulation or insider trading. Contracts on events like «what color Gatorade gets dumped on the coach» raise obvious manipulation risk if team insiders can trade. Exchanges must police this as self-regulatory organizations, and the CFTC surveils for fraud.
Insider trading rules apply in commodities markets just as in securities. Kalshi recently brought enforcement actions against participants who traded on non-public information — one involving a Mr. Beast YouTube video release, where an employee exploited insider knowledge. The CFTC has a duty-of-care standard similar to the SEC's, and violators face consequences. Chairman Selig emphasized that markets are «truth machines» that surfaced accurate information during the 2024 election when polls were manipulated, but the prior administration tried to ban them. Allowing prediction markets to flourish offshore in Russia or elsewhere would turn them into disinformation vectors.
Gray areas remain: is a contract on whether a dictator is deposed versus executed manipulable? Exchanges are learning to craft fungible, standardized contracts with integrity. The agencies want to foster innovation and transparency without allowing markets to become tools for fraud or foreign influence.
Leverage, Liquidity, and Systemic Risk in 24/7 Markets
Distributed ledger tech enables T+0 settlement, but autonomous AI agents trading around the clock demand new guardrails.
Study the Risks Autonomous AI agents deploying capital 24/7 on-chain are unprecedented. Regulators must understand code, operate nodes on blockchains, and work with technologists to map vulnerabilities before imposing rules.
Set Purpose-Fit Guardrails Don't apply old rules designed for human traders and T+2 settlement. Develop standards specific to algorithmic execution, real-time settlement, and decentralized networks. This may include circuit breakers, speed bumps, or liquidity requirements.
Preserve Best Execution In 24/7 markets, concepts like best bid and offer become fluid. Regulators must define what best execution means when markets never close and liquidity fragments across time zones and platforms.
Monitor Leverage Across Asset Classes Banks, broker-dealers, and futures exchanges all have margin rules. Extend transparency and controls to crypto and on-chain lending. The Fed, SEC, and CFTC must coordinate to prevent systemic risk from hidden leverage in decentralized finance.
Keeping Innovation Onshore: The Existential Threat
Regulation by enforcement drove crypto, AI, and prediction markets offshore; reshoring them is the top priority.
“When I was in private practice, every week my clients would get a subpoena from Gary Gensler or from the CFTC and were faced with this onslaught of regulation by enforcement. These were crypto firms, prediction markets, artificial intelligence firms. They were just relentlessly attacked by the federal government under the prior administration. So I really came into government to help right the ship, to help make sure that we have purpose-fit rules and regulations for new innovative technologies.”
The Twin Dangers: Offshore Flight and Fraud at Home
America must balance welcoming builders with protecting investors from the next FTX.
Generation Bet: Education and Guardrails for Young Investors
Forty-five percent of young men report gambling problems; education and suitability standards are critical.
Generation Bet: Education and Guardrails for Young Investors
Among men aged 18–30, 45% report problems with wagering or gambling, and 10% meet clinical addiction criteria. The upside: a generation fluent in markets, risk, and capital formation. The downside: developing brains may lack impulse control for high-leverage, high-frequency trading. Both chairs emphasized education — at the platform level (Robinhood now requires tutorials before options trading), in schools, and for parents who often don't know what their children are doing on phones. Brokers and exchanges already enforce suitability standards, ensuring participants can afford the risks they take. Voluntary disclosure and informed consent, not bans, are the path forward.
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