Nasdaq urging the sec to treat some digital assets as securities could lead to increased regulatory scrutiny, potentially impacting the market's risk appetite and investor sentiment.
The information is from cointelegraph, reporting on an official nasdaq comment letter to the sec, which are reliable sources.
Increased regulation typically leads to short-term price corrections as the market adjusts to new rules and compliance requirements. the sec's evolving stance introduces uncertainty, which can further dampen investor enthusiasm.
The immediate market reaction to regulatory news tends to be swift but the long-term effects will depend on the specific regulations implemented and their impact on innovation and adoption.
Alex O’Donnell 3 minutes ago Nasdaq urges SEC to treat certain digital assets as 'stocks by any other name' In a comment letter, the exchange proposed categorizing some digital assets as financial securities. 19 Total views Listen to article 0:00 News COINTELEGRAPH IN YOUR SOCIAL FEED Nasdaq has urged the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to hold digital assets to the same regulatory standards as securities if they constitute “stocks by any other name,” according to an April 25 comment letter. The exchange said the US financial regulator needs to establish a clearer taxonomy for cryptocurrencies, including categorizing a portion of digital assets as “financial securities.” Those tokens, Nasdaq argued, should continue to be regulated “as they are regulated today regardless of tokenized form.” “Whether it takes the form of a paper share, a digital share, or a token, an instrument’s underlying nature remains the same and it should be traded and regulated in the same ways,” the letter said. It also proposed categorizing a portion of cryptocurrencies as “digital asset investment contracts,” to be subject to “light touch regulation” but still overseen by the SEC. Nasdaq’s April 25 letter to the SEC. Source: Nasdaq Related: Certain stablecoins aren't securities, SEC says in new guidance Regulatory U-turn The SEC has dramatically pivoted its stance on cryptocurrency oversight since US President Donald Trump took office in January. Under the leadership of former Chair Gary Gensler, the SEC took the position that practically all cryptocurrencies, with the exception of Bitcoin ( BTC ), represent investment contracts and therefore qualify as securities. This stance led the agency to bring upwards of 100 lawsuits against crypto firms for alleged securities law violations. However, under Trump nominee Paul Atkins, who was sworn in as chair on April 21 after a lengthy Senate confirmation, the SEC has claimed jurisdiction over a narrower segment of cryptocurrencies. In February, the agency issued guidance stating that memecoins — if clearly identified as purely speculative assets with no intrinsic value — do not qualify as investment contracts pursuant to US law. In April, the SEC said that stablecoins — digital tokens pegged to the US dollar — similarly do not qualify as securities if they are marketed solely as a means of making payments . Stablecoin market overview. Source: RWA.xyz Integrating crypto into TradFi In its April 21 letter, Nasdaq said existing financial infrastructure “can readily absorb digital assets by establishing the proper taxonomy and calibrating certain rules to reflect what is truly new and novel about digital assets.” The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) — a private US securities clearinghouse closely overseen by the SEC — has been laying the foundation for integrating blockchain technology into regulated financial markets. In March, the DTCC committed to promoting Ethereum’s ERC-3643 standard for permissioned securities tokens. Magazine: Ethereum is destroying the competition in the $16.1T TradFi tokenization race # Business # Security # Nasdaq # SEC # Stocks # Donald Trump # Tokens # Stablecoin # Regulation # Memecoin # Gary Gensler # RWA Add reaction