For years, the crypto industry has begged US regulators for clarity. On June 4, Jamie Selway, Director of the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets, showed up at the Piper Sandler Global Exchange & Fintech Conference with something that looks suspiciously like a plan.
Selway outlined four strategic priorities that the SEC has been developing under Chair Paul Atkins’ leadership: a comprehensive framework for tokenized securities, harmonization of overlapping SEC and CFTC regulations, extended trading hours, and modernization of Regulation NMS. The first two carry the most weight for crypto markets, and they signal a genuine shift in how Washington thinks about digital assets.
Innovation without arbitrage
The guiding principle behind the SEC’s tokenized securities framework is what Atkins has called “innovation without arbitrage.” In English: let the technology evolve, but don’t let anyone exploit regulatory gaps to game the system.
The framework being developed would establish clear guidelines for listing and trading tokenized securities. Selway’s remarks suggest the SEC wants to treat tokenized securities as securities under existing law, not as some novel regulatory category requiring entirely new legislation. That approach has the advantage of speed. The SEC can move through rulemaking and guidance without waiting for Congress to pass comprehensive crypto legislation.
SEC and CFTC finally talking to each other
The two agencies released a joint taxonomy in January 2026 that classifies various digital assets and expressly categorizes tokenized securities as securities under applicable law. A shared classification system is the foundation everything else gets built on.
Beyond taxonomy, the harmonization effort includes aligning swap reporting requirements, portfolio margining rules, and product definitions. A Memorandum of Understanding has been established to facilitate ongoing coordination on digital asset regulation.
Right now, a financial institution trading a tokenized security that has derivative characteristics might face conflicting reporting obligations from two different agencies. That kind of friction doesn’t just create compliance headaches. It makes entire product categories economically unviable. Eliminating those conflicts could unlock product innovation that’s been sitting on the shelf for years.
What this means for the market
The extended trading hours priority and Regulation NMS modernization complement the broader agenda. Extended hours could eventually apply to tokenized securities markets that naturally operate around the clock. Regulation NMS updates could incorporate the market structure changes that tokenization introduces, such as atomic settlement and decentralized order routing.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

1 hour ago
2
















English (US) ·