As of September 2, 2025, the SEC’s “Project Crypto” has moved from launch rhetoric to first, tangible steps—though the heavy lifts (formal rule proposals) are still in the queue.
What’s happened since launch (Jul 31 → Sep 2)
- Launch + marching orders. In his July 31 speech, Chair Paul S. Atkins framed Project Crypto as a commission-wide program to modernize U.S. market rules so issuance, trading, custody, and tokenization can run “on-chain.” He also previewed near-term use of interpretive and exemptive relief while rulemaking is drafted. The speech notably states that “most crypto assets are not securities,” and directs staff to develop bright-line classification guidance (e.g., digital collectibles, commodities, stablecoins) and “rules of the road” for distributions, custody, and trading. SEC
- SEC formalized the initiative. The Commission stood up a public hub—The SEC Launches “Project Crypto”—that points stakeholders to the Chair’s remarks and to the new Crypto Task Force pages. SEC
- Crypto Task Force goes operational. Led by Commissioner Hester M. Peirce, the Task Force opened multiple engagement channels (written input, meetings, roundtables, FAQs) and is coordinating with other regulators. SEC
- A concrete interpretive move: liquid staking. On Aug 5, the Division of Corporation Finance issued a staff statement concluding that “liquid staking activities” and staking receipt tokens, as described, do not involve the offer or sale of securities—with important caveats and the usual disclaimer that staff views are not Commission rules. This follows a May staff statement on protocol staking and came with Commissioner statements for and against. Net effect: near-term clarity for large swaths of staking—without waiting on a rule. SEC+3SEC+3SEC+3
- “On the Road” outreach. The Task Force added a traveling roundtable schedule (e.g., Dallas on Sep 4; Chicago Sep 15; New York Sep 25), and it’s posting the list of participating projects from early stops (Berkeley, Boston). This is the most transparent, structured crypto outreach the SEC has run to date. SEC+1
- Policy backdrop firmed up. The GENIUS Act (stablecoins) was signed Jul 18, providing a federal framework for payment stablecoins and clarifying supervision—context that Project Crypto explicitly leans on. The White House’s PWG report set the broader inter-agency roadmap that the SEC is now executing against. The White House+2The White House+2Reuters
Early read-throughs for the market
- Staking is getting daylight. The two staff statements (May and Aug) together sketch a view that protocol staking and the described liquid staking do not by themselves create securities transactions. That alleviates core frictions for validators, staking services, and DeFi integrations that rely on staking receipts—subject to facts and limits. For now, this is staff guidance (not binding law), but it’s practical clarity the industry can use. SEC+1
- Classification + tokenization next. Atkins’ speech leans toward categorical guidance and workable paths for both non-securities and crypto asset securities (tailored disclosure, registration on-ramps). He also floated a venue vision where registrants could list both securities and non-securities (“Reg Super-App”), plus a commitment to modernize custody rules for on-chain assets. Expect these topics in the first wave of proposals. SEC
- Stakeholder push-and-pull is visible. The Crypto Task Force’s docket shows trade groups urging caution on broad exemptive relief for tokenization, arguing major changes should come via notice-and-comment rulemaking, while others press for safe harbors and pragmatic on-ramps. Translation: comment files are active, and the Commission is getting cover to publish proposals sooner rather than later. SEC+2SEC+2api.a16zcrypto.com
What remains unclear
- Timeline to proposed rules. The Chair promised draft rules on distributions, custody, and trading “for public notice and comment,” but no proposal text has posted yet. The interpretive/exemptive track is clearly being used first (e.g., staking). Watch the SEC’s Proposed Rules feed and the Task Force newsroom. SEC+1
- Where tokenization lands. The staff has signals to work directly with firms and provide targeted relief, but market commenters are split on using exemptions vs. full rulemaking for tokenized securities. Expect detailed definitions, record-keeping, smart-contract controls, and market structure questions (ATS vs. exchange; clearing) to dominate the first proposal. SEC+1
- Venue architecture (“super-app”). Allowing SEC-registered platforms to host both securities and non-securities raises practical issues (surveillance, disclosures, investor segmentation, routing). The Chair’s speech opens the door; the mechanics will have to show up in rule text. SEC
Why this matters to builders and investors—right now
- If you stake (directly or via services): The Aug 5 staff view on liquid staking reduces registration anxiety—provided your facts fit the statement’s contours. Document your flow meticulously; where your activities go beyond “administrative or ministerial,” you’re out of the safe lane. SEC
- If you’re exploring tokenized products: Start drafting to both scenarios: (i) exemptive relief pilot (with guardrails), and (ii) a full rule regime that could arrive in comment form this autumn. Use the written-input channel to pre-clear thorny issues (KYC/AML splits, on-chain transfer restrictions, auditability). SEC
- If you operate a venue or broker/adviser: Track the custody modernization thread and the “super-app” hints; both could change how you register and what you can list in one UX. SEC
The next month: what to watch
- Sep 4 (Dallas) & Sep 15 (Chicago) Task Force stops, with potential posting of meeting participants/notes—useful tea leaves on priorities. SEC+1
- Any additional staff statements (e.g., on liquidity pools, restaking, bridges)—the Aug 5 cadence suggests more targeted clarifications may precede rules. SEC
- Stablecoin implementation memos from Treasury/OCC aligning with the GENIUS Act—watch how those interact with SEC custody and market-structure plans. The White House
Bottom line
One month in, Project Crypto is doing two things at once: (1) using staff interpretations to clear the underbrush (staking), and (2) building the runway for formal rules on distributions, custody, trading, and tokenization. The politics and policy backdrop (GENIUS Act + PWG roadmap) is supportive; the comment file shows healthy tension that should sharpen forthcoming proposals. Net-net: near-term clarity on some activities, with the decisive architecture changes still ahead in rule text.