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SEC And CFTC Landmark Interpretation: “Most Crypto Assets Are Not Securities” And What The New Token Taxonomy Changes For Users

Crypto University • 20 March 2026

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Introduction

For years, many crypto users have lived in regulatory fog. They heard sweeping claims like “everything is a security” or “nothing is regulated,” and neither helped them understand what they could safely build, hold, or use.

On March 17, 2026, the SEC issued an interpretation clarifying how federal securities laws apply to certain crypto assets and transactions involving crypto assets. The CFTC joined the interpretation to signal aligned administration of the Commodity Exchange Act consistent with the SEC’s framework.

The SEC chair’s statement emphasized two ideas that matter immediately:

Most crypto assets are not themselves securities.

Investment contracts can come to an end.

This is one of the most important “market structure clarity” moments in U.S. crypto policy in years because it provides a token taxonomy that separates asset types, a clearer line between SEC and CFTC jurisdiction, and practical guidance on common crypto activities like protocol mining, protocol staking, wrapping, and airdrops.

What Happened (The Short Version)

According to the SEC’s press release and fact sheet:

  • The SEC issued an interpretation to clarify application of federal securities laws to certain crypto assets and transactions.

  • The CFTC joined the interpretation, indicating the agencies will administer their statutes in a harmonized way consistent with the framework.

  • The interpretation aims to provide:

    1. a coherent token taxonomy,

    2. guidance on how a non-security crypto asset can become subject to an investment contract and later cease to be subject to it,

    3. clarity that protocol mining, protocol staking, wrapping of a non-security crypto asset, and certain airdrops do not involve the offer and sale of a security as described.

Why This Matters Even If Legislation Is Stalled

Legislation is the strongest form of clarity. But interpretation and guidance still matter because they change how agencies approach enforcement and compliance, shape exchange listing decisions, influence institutional willingness to engage, and give builders a more legible framework for product design.

A practical way to understand it:

Legislation builds the map.

Agency interpretation sets the traffic rules while the map is being drafted.

The 5-Category Token Taxonomy

The SEC fact sheet describes five categories based on characteristics, uses, and functions.

Category

Plain English Definition

Key Clarification

Common Examples / Notes

1. Digital Commodities

Value from programmatic operation of functional system + supply/demand, not managerial efforts

Covers commodity-like, network goods, infrastructure tokens

Focus: No reliance on “essential managerial efforts”

2. Digital Collectibles

Designed to be collected/used (artwork, media, in-game items, cultural references)

“Collectible use” as center of gravity; not all NFTs automatically out

Profit possible, but not primary expectation from management

3. Digital Tools

Perform practical functions (memberships, tickets, credentials, identity badges)

Treated like tools, not investment products

Marketing as investment can create securities risk

4. Stablecoins

GENIUS Act payment stablecoins issued by permitted issuers

Treated as not securities under this framework

Still carries reserve, redemption, issuer, regulatory risks

5. Digital Securities

Traditional securities represented on crypto networks

Tokenization does not remove securities law

Ownership on-chain doesn't change classification

“Investment Contracts Can End”: The Most Important Conceptual Shift

A major historical frustration has been the feeling that once something is labeled a security, it stays a security forever.

The SEC fact sheet explicitly addresses how:

  • a non-security crypto asset can become subject to an investment contract,

  • and how it can cease to be subject to an investment contract when that contract terminates.

How it becomes subject (Howey-style):

  • Investment of money

  • In a common enterprise

  • With representations/promises of essential managerial efforts

  • Creating reasonable expectation of profit

How it can cease:

  • Issuer fulfilled representations/promises, or

  • Issuer failed to satisfy them

This introduces a lifecycle-aware approach: early-stage promotion creates securities-like features, while later-stage functional networks may differ materially.

Think in phases:

  1. Launch and promotion

  2. Maturation and functionality

  3. Ongoing governance

Staking, Airdrops, Wrapping, and Mining: Clarifications

Activity

Clarification from Fact Sheet

Why It Matters

Important Nuances / Limits

Protocol Mining

Does not involve offer/sale of a security

Reduces fear around basic network participation

Core infrastructure activity

Protocol Staking

Does not involve offer/sale of a security

Clarity for native staking mechanics

Intermediated “staking products” may differ due to pooling/custody

Wrapping (non-security asset)

Does not involve offer/sale of a security

Reduces uncertainty for bridges and cross-chain wrappers

Security and bridge risks remain

Certain Airdrops

Do not involve “investment of money” under Howey

Distinguishes distribution from capital raising

Not blanket; structure/marketing can change outcomes

Where the SEC Stops and the CFTC Starts

The joined interpretation suggests many non-security crypto assets can meet the “commodity” definition under the Commodity Exchange Act.

Simplified model:

  • SEC focus: Securities offerings, disclosure, investor protection

  • CFTC focus: Commodities, derivatives markets, market integrity

This helps exchanges sort spot commodities vs. securities-compliant assets, and regulate derivatives accordingly.

Practical Effects by User Type

User Type

Potential Benefits

Ongoing Considerations / Risks

Everyday Holders

Clearer mental model; reduced fear of “everything illegal”

Scams, volatility, custody safety still apply

Exchanges

Confident listing frameworks; clearer compliance roadmaps

Must separate digital securities from non-securities

DeFi Builders

Better categorization for tools/commodities

Governance tokens, yield promises, intermediated products gray

NFTs

Helpful “collectibles” category

Aggressive profit marketing still faces scrutiny

Taxes

Reduced confusion via clearer categories

Tax treatment follows IRS rules, not this interpretation

What Is Clarified vs. What Remains Unclear

Clarified (high-level):

  • Structured taxonomy for crypto asset types

  • Most crypto assets are not themselves securities

  • Lifecycle concept: investment contracts can terminate

  • Protocol mining, staking, wrapping, and certain airdrops clarified

Still unclear or fact-dependent:

  • Borderline cases dominated by marketing/promises

  • Complex DeFi with pooled yield and intermediaries

  • Court alignment in contested cases

  • State-level rule interactions

Clarity is increasing, but competence requires reading facts, not slogans.

Practical Takeaways

  • Learn the taxonomy: digital commodities, collectibles, tools, stablecoins (as defined), digital securities.

  • “Not a security” does not mean “safe.” It means a different regulatory framework.

  • “Investment contracts can end” encourages lifecycle thinking: launch behavior matters.

  • Protocol activities differ from intermediated products with promises, pooling, or custody.

  • Use the framework to understand risk, not to rationalize speculation.

FAQ

1) Does this mean I can assume my token is not a security?

No. Classification can be fact-dependent. The taxonomy helps, but specific marketing and promises can change outcomes.

2) What does “investment contracts can end” mean in practice?

It means a crypto asset that is not itself a security may be sold in a way that creates an investment contract, and later the relationship can terminate once promises are fulfilled or fail.

3) Does this clarify staking rewards for taxes?

Not directly. Tax treatment depends on tax authorities. This focuses on securities law, not tax policy.

4) Are all airdrops now “safe” from securities law?

No. The guidance references certain airdrops. Some distributions could still raise issues depending on structure and marketing.

5) What changes for exchanges?

It can support clearer listing and compliance frameworks, but exchanges must still separate digital securities from non-security crypto assets and comply with applicable rules.


Suggested further reading:

Top 10 Public Companies Holding The Most Bitcoin In 2026

Top 10 Richest People In Crypto In 2026

Top 10 Biggest Bitcoin Holding Countries In 2026

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