In a highly anticipated congressional hearing today, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Gary Gensler and his fellow commissioners faced intense scrutiny over the agency’s handling of digital asset regulation.
For the first time since 2019, all five commissioners, including Caroline Crenshaw, Hester Peirce, Jaime Lizárraga and Mark Uyeda, testified together before the House Financial Services Committee. The hearing highlighted growing tensions over the SEC’s oversight of cryptocurrencies, which critics say has become excessive and legally ambiguous.
Committee Chairman Patrick McHenry, a North Carolina Republican, wasted no time in setting the tone, accusing Gensler of overstepping his regulatory authority. “Chairman Gensler’s legacy will be defined by transforming the once-proud SEC into a rogue agency,” McHenry said, accusing the SEC of enforcing regulations “often without adequate rationale, economic analysis, or public engagement.” The SEC’s heavy-handed approach has targeted a wide range of U.S. crypto companies, from exchanges like Coinbase to decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms like Uniswap
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SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, often dubbed “Crypto Mom” for her industry-friendly stance, criticized her agency’s lack of clarity in defining what constitutes a security. “We took a legally imprecise position to mask the lack of regulatory clarity,” Peirce said. “By using imprecise language, we were able to sort of suggest that the token itself is a security, outside of the investment contract, which has implications for secondary sales and who can list it. We failed in our duty as a regulator.”
Gensler has consistently cited the Howey Test, a legal framework established by the U.S. Supreme Court that determines whether a transaction is an investment contract and should therefore be subject to U.S. securities laws, as the backbone of his regulatory approach. However, Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) took issue with Gensler’s interpretation of the test as it applies to non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Torres called Gensler’s reading “idiosyncratic,” noting that the SEC’s logic could turn “pretty much any collectible or any consumer good or any piece of art or any piece of music” into a security. “It’s so open-ended that it blurs the line between collectible and security, between art and security,” Torres noted.
Resistance to Gensler’s approach isn’t limited to the cryptocurrency industry: Lawmakers on both sides have expressed frustration. One of the most contentious issues is Staff Accounting Bulletin (SAB) 121, which requires custodians of digital assets to treat them as liabilities on their balance sheets. The rule has sparked rare bipartisan resistance, with 33 Democrats joining Republicans in voting to repeal the policy, which critics say imposes onerous capital requirements on banks looking to expand their cryptocurrency businesses.
Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D-CA) struck a more measured tone, stressing the need for legislative action beyond the SEC’s purview. “Before the end of this year, I want us to reach a grand agreement on stablecoins and other long-awaited bills,” she said, signaling that Congress could finally make the decision many in the industry have been waiting for.
Amid the regulatory turmoil, the role of cryptocurrencies in American politics has grown significantly. Both presidential candidates have acknowledged the importance of digital assets to the future of the American economy, in stark contrast to the industry’s once marginal status. This new political influence is exemplified by the rise of Fairshake, a super PAC funded by the largest crypto companies, including Ripple, Andreessen Horowitz, Coinbase, and Jump Crypto. During the 2024 election cycle, it has endorsed the winning candidate in 33 of the 35 House and Senate primaries it has contested, according to CNBC, with notable victories in states like Utah, California, and New York.