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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is intensifying its scrutiny of decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocols through a series of regulatory initiatives and stakeholder engagements. Recent developments, including a draft legislative proposal and revised enforcement approaches, highlight the agency’s efforts to balance innovation with investor protection in the rapidly evolving crypto space.
The , a revised draft bill from U.S. Senators, seeks to clarify the SEC’s and Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) roles in regulating DeFi. The bill introduces protections for developers and users of decentralized protocols, exempting activities like airdrops, staking rewards, and DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) tokens from securities law requirements, provided protocols remain decentralized. Notably, the bill mandates a , composed of SEC and CFTC representatives, to foster transparency and coordination. Both agencies must publicly respond to the committee’s findings, signaling a shift toward collaborative oversight[1].
Parallel to legislative efforts, the SEC has signaled a toward DeFi regulation. Chair Paul Atkins emphasized the need for updated frameworks that support innovation while mitigating risks. A key proposal involves for qualified DeFi projects, allowing startups to operate with reduced regulatory barriers during early development. The SEC is also reviewing self-custody rules and assessing the jurisdictional scope of activities such as proof-of-work mining and staking-as-a-service platforms[2]. These changes aim to address prior legal ambiguities that stifled participation, particularly after high-profile cases like the Tornado Cash conviction, which raised concerns about criminal liability for developers[1].
The SEC’s has further advanced its agenda through public roundtables. A May 2025 event focused on tokenization, exploring how blockchain technology could reshape financial markets. Commissioner Hester Peirce noted that tokenization could bridge traditional finance (TradFi) and DeFi, but cautioned that regulatory clarity remains critical. The Task Force also postponed a June roundtable titled “DeFi and the American Spirit” to accommodate stakeholder feedback, underscoring its iterative approach[3].
Market participants have responded cautiously. While some view the SEC’s conditional exemptions and guidance as steps toward a balanced regulatory environment, others warn of enforcement inconsistencies. For instance, the in
Core 30—a technical change enabling larger non-monetary data storage—has sparked debates over blockchain bloat and decentralization. Critics argue such changes could divert Bitcoin from its monetary purpose, leading to a surge in adoption of alternative node implementations like Bitcoin Knots, now accounting for 17% of the network.The SEC’s evolving stance reflects broader institutional interest in DeFi. Major investment firms and developers have lobbied for clear, enforceable rules to attract institutional capital. However, stakeholders emphasize that policy implementation must prioritize consistency to avoid market confusion. As the Senate finalizes the 2025 bill and aligns it with the House’s Clarity Act, the SEC’s ability to harmonize innovation with investor safeguards will shape the future of DeFi’s regulatory landscape[1].
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