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SEC and CFTC Strike Agreement to Coordinate Crypto Oversight and Market Regulation

 |  March 12, 2026

U.S. financial regulators are taking a significant step toward coordinated oversight of digital assets and other emerging financial technologies. The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced a new memorandum of understanding (MOU) designed to harmonize how the two agencies regulate overlapping areas of financial markets, including the fast-growing crypto sector.

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    The agreement reflects a long-awaited effort to reduce regulatory conflicts between the two agencies, whose jurisdictions frequently intersect. Historically, the SEC oversees securities markets while the CFTC regulates derivatives markets such as futures and commodities trading. But digital assets and crypto trading platforms have increasingly fallen into gray areas where both agencies claim authority.

    Under the new memorandum, the SEC and CFTC will coordinate their rulemaking, supervision and enforcement activities in areas where their responsibilities overlap. The agreement establishes procedures for sharing data, conducting joint meetings with market participants and coordinating policy decisions affecting financial products that may fall under both agencies’ jurisdiction, according to a fact sheet outlining the agreement.

    SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins said the agreement is intended to resolve longstanding tensions between the agencies and provide clearer guidance to financial firms.

    “For decades, regulatory turf wars, duplicative agency registrations, and different sets of regulations between the SEC and CFTC have stifled innovation and pushed market participants to other jurisdictions,” Atkins said in a statement. “By aligning regulatory definitions, coordinating oversight, and facilitating seamless, secure data sharing between agencies, we will ensure our rules and regulations deliver the clarity market participants deserve.”

    The MOU outlines several specific areas where coordination will increase. These include clarifying how certain financial products are classified, modernizing rules governing clearing and collateral, and reducing compliance burdens for firms that must register with both agencies.

    Related: A $300 Billion Crypto Market Is Propping Up US Government Debt 

    Digital assets are a major focus of the agreement. The agencies identified the development of “a fit-for-purpose regulatory framework for crypto assets and other emerging technologies” as a core objective of their collaboration.

    For years, disputes between the SEC and CFTC over whether certain crypto assets should be treated as securities or commodities created uncertainty for companies operating in the sector. The new agreement aims to reduce that ambiguity by coordinating product definitions and regulatory interpretations through joint rulemakings and policy guidance.

    The collaboration will extend to supervision and enforcement as well, according to the announcement. Staff from both agencies will meet regularly to identify potential regulatory issues early and exchange information about investigations and market risks. When enforcement cases involve overlapping jurisdiction, the agencies will consult with each other about potential charges and litigation strategies to avoid conflicting actions.

    To support this work, the agencies are launching a Joint Harmonization Initiative that will coordinate policymaking, examinations and enforcement activities. The initiative will also promote the use of compatible data standards and analytical tools so both regulators can more effectively monitor markets and detect misconduct.

    “America’s financial markets are the envy of the world because they scale and adapt to meet investor demands,” CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig said. “By working together, we’ll eliminate duplicative, burdensome rules and close gaps in regulation for the benefit of all Americans and usher in a Golden Age of American finance.”

    The agreement also includes provisions designed to reduce overlapping regulatory examinations. Both agencies plan to coordinate inspections of exchanges, trading venues and intermediaries where possible, share findings from those examinations and align their supervisory approaches.

    Market participants have long argued that overlapping oversight created confusion and discouraged innovation in emerging financial markets. By formalizing cooperation, the SEC and CFTC are signaling a more unified approach to supervising digital assets and other complex financial products.