The SEC and CFTC jointly issued their first unified interpretation of how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets, creating a five-category taxonomy that formally classifies tokens like BTC, ETH, SOL, and 13 others as digital commodities rather than securities. The guidance took effect on March 23, 2026, and carries immediate implications for exchanges, custodians, stakers, and everyday holders.
What the SEC and CFTC Actually Decided
On March 17, 2026, the SEC and CFTC published a joint interpretive release titled “Application of the Federal Securities Laws to Certain Types of Crypto Assets and Certain Transactions Involving Crypto Assets.” It is not a new law. It is formal agency guidance that tells the market how both regulators intend to apply existing statutes to crypto.
The release organizes crypto assets into five categories: digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins, and digital securities. That taxonomy matters because it draws the boundary between what falls under SEC jurisdiction and what the CFTC oversees.
The interpretation explicitly names 16 tokens as digital commodity examples: APT, AVAX, BTC, BCH, ADA, LINK, DOGE, ETH, HBAR, LTC, DOT, SHIB, SOL, XLM, XTZ, and XRP. For holders of those assets, the classification means the tokens themselves are not treated as securities under this guidance.
The joint nature of the release is what makes it historic. One week earlier, on March 11, 2026, the two agencies signed a formal Memorandum of Understanding covering joint interpretations, examinations, and enforcement coordination. The crypto guidance is the first product of that cooperation, ending years of overlapping and sometimes contradictory regulatory signals.
The CFTC confirmed it will administer the Commodity Exchange Act consistently with the SEC’s interpretation, acknowledging that certain non-security crypto assets meet the CEA definition of a commodity. That alignment removes one of the industry’s longest-running regulatory ambiguities.
What It Means for Your Crypto Holdings and Activity
The most immediate impact lands on stakers, airdrop recipients, and users who wrap tokens across chains. The SEC stated that protocol mining, protocol staking, and wrapping a non-security crypto asset do not involve the offer and sale of a security. For anyone holding tokens like XRP or SOL and staking them natively, this is direct regulatory relief.
Airdrops also got a carve-out. The interpretation says certain crypto asset disseminations known as airdrops do not involve an investment of money under the Howey test, which is the core legal framework the SEC uses to identify securities transactions.
For exchanges and custodians, the five-part taxonomy provides a framework for compliance. Assets classified as digital commodities fall primarily under CFTC oversight, while digital securities remain with the SEC. Platforms that list both types now have clearer guidance on which regulator to engage.
The stablecoin category interacts directly with the pending GENIUS Act. The interpretation treats GENIUS Act-compliant payment stablecoins as falling outside securities status, giving issuers a path to regulatory clarity if that legislation passes.
Baker Donelson, a national law firm, noted that the March 17 interpretation is the most significant SEC guidance on digital assets to date, with immediate implications for issuers, exchanges, custodians, DeFi operators, and fund managers, while leaving some boundary questions and litigation risk unresolved.
What Still Isn’t Clear and What Comes Next
This guidance is interpretive, not statutory. Congress has not yet passed comprehensive market-structure legislation, and the interpretation itself acknowledges it serves as a bridge while that legislative work continues. A court could still challenge the agencies’ reading of existing law.
Partially decentralized projects sit in a gray zone. The release does not fully resolve how tokens that launched through initial sales, potentially qualifying as investment contracts, transition to commodity status as networks decentralize. Secondary-market obligations for platforms listing these transitional assets also remain open.
The claim that this guidance fully settles how every crypto asset will be regulated is overstated. The official release is interpretive guidance rather than a comprehensive statute, and expert analysis says boundary cases and judicial challenges remain possible.
For readers tracking the regulatory landscape alongside broader market moves and exchange-level policy changes, the next signals to watch are: whether Congress advances the market-structure bill that would codify the taxonomy into law, whether the GENIUS Act passes and activates the stablecoin carve-out, and whether any enforcement action tests the boundaries of the new five-category framework in court.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.