Key points to remember:
- Brad Garlinghouse linked SEC policy change to improving sentiment in the United States crypto markets.
- Paul Atkins highlighted clearer rules, lighter compliance burdens and support for blockchain finance.
- Ripple’s CEO said a more predictable regulatory framework could strengthen innovation and growth in the long term.
Cryptocurrency Sentiment improves as SEC changes direction
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse linked a broader regulatory change to improving sentiment in the United States. crypto markets on April 20. His remarks came as Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Paul Atkins publicly outlined the agency’s recent focus around clarity, capital formation, and support for blockchain-based finance, rather than a more heavy-handed enforcement posture.
Referring to former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler’s approach to regulation by enforcement, Garlinghouse said on social media platform X:
“In comparison, Paul Atkins is a breath of fresh air and common sense. He is a model of what SEC leadership should look like…he focuses on what matters: protecting investors and fostering innovations that help those investors and the markets.”
This view aligns with Atkins’ recent message. Last week, the SEC chairman criticized the agency’s past reliance on law enforcement in cryptosaying the market has faced years without viable compliance pathways. Atkins also said digital assets are “really at the top of our list,” while outlining crypto policy as a top priority for the SEC in 2026.
Atkins advocates clearer rules for digital assets
Supporting this change, Atkins set out a more formal regulatory framework for digital assets and tokenized markets. On April 21, he outlined a push for clearer oversight, reduced compliance burdens, and closer coordination with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). He also said the SEC is approaching an “innovation exemption” designed to allow market participants to facilitate the trading of tokenized on-chain securities in a limited compliant structure while longer-term rules are developed. These measures reflect a broader effort to align regulation with developments in market infrastructure while preserving investor guarantees.
This evolving position follows a landmark legal outcome that has shaped crypto oversight. The Ripple v. SEC case drew a distinction between institutional sales of XRP and public market transactions. Filed in December 2020 and concluded in August 2025, the court ruled that programmatic sales of XRP on exchanges did not constitute securities transactions, while direct institutional sales violated securities laws. Ripple was fined $125 million, later reduced to $50 million, well below the $2 billion initially requested, as both sides withdrew their calls to officially end the case.
In his April 20 statement, Garlinghouse sharpened his criticism of the earlier approach, saying:
“The SEC’s primary mission is to protect investors. Under Gary Gensler, the SEC clearly lost its way. He declared war on a technology. It was an illegal power grab…and the courts said so.”
These remarks reflect continued industry criticism of the SEC’s past enforcement-focused strategy, while also highlighting expectations that a clearer framework could reshape compliance and support broader adoption of digital assets.


