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    U.S. SEC says software allowing crypto wallet transactions not considered broker

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    The latest crypto view from the securities agency concludes software that clears the way for securities transactions with individual wallets won’t trip regulations.

    SEC Chairman Paul Atkins (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

    What to know:

    • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has issued another crypto-world policy statement, with the staff finding that broker regulations won’t be triggered by software interfaces allowing users securities transactions through self-hosted wallets.
    • The statement doesn’t have the force of a rule and joins an increasingly lengthy list of similar findings meant to give the industry some clarity over what’s allowed in the crypto space.
  • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has issued another crypto-world policy statement, with the staff finding that broker regulations won’t be triggered by software interfaces allowing users securities transactions through self-hosted wallets.
  • The statement doesn’t have the force of a rule and joins an increasingly lengthy list of similar findings meant to give the industry some clarity over what’s allowed in the crypto space.
  • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said that software that sets up user interfaces allowing crypto securities to be transacted through individuals’ wallets won’t need to be registered and regulated as a broker.

    In the latest of the agency’s staff statements on crypto — now a wide-ranging list of views meant to allow the crypto industry to move forward in the absence of permanent rules — the SEC staff said on Monday that the websites or software used by people pursuing securities transactions with their self-hosted wallets won’t itself be considered as belonging to the broker-dealer category. That tracks with the agency’s recent stance that developers should be able to write software without triggering such regulations.

    The agency provided a checklist of measures the creators of these interfaces can take to keep them out of the regulatory box, including that it «does not solicit investors to engage in any specific crypto asset securities transactions» and «does not provide commentary on any potential execution route(s) displayed to a user.»

    If the interface offers financing, provides investment recommendations, handles user assets, takes orders or executes transactions, it’s no longer outside the agency’s regulatory reach.

    «The staff is providing its views as an interim step while the commission continues to consider various regulatory issues relating to crypto asset securities activities and the feedback it has received,» the document said.

    Under the administration of President Donald Trump, who has demanded that his executive branch clear an easier path for the rise of friendly crypto regulation, the leadership of the SEC has reversed previous resistance and embraced the technology. Even before the arrival of SEC Chairman Paul Atkins, a series of pro-crypto statements began emerging, clarifying the regulator’s new view that various assets wouldn’t be considered securities or wouldn’t trigger oversight requirements. But these statements don’t carry the weight and greater permanence of full-fledged rules.

    In the meantime, Atkins’ agency is working on such rules. Wide-ranging SEC rules are close to the proposal stage at the agency, he’s said. Even as the Senate continues to work on the Clarity Act that would cement crypto regulations into law, the agency is working on interim measures to give the agency great certainty.

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