The SEC and CFTC are pushing closer coordination on crypto oversight just as the Senate Banking Committee prepares to take up the CLARITY Act on May 14, setting up one of the most important U.S. crypto policy moments of 2026.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig said this week that his agency is working with SEC Chairman Paul Atkins to harmonize policymaking and oversight. He pointed to a memorandum of understanding, a joint harmonization initiative, SEC Project Crypto participation, and a shared crypto asset taxonomy as signs that the two agencies are trying to reduce confusion for builders and investors.
The timing matters. For years, crypto firms have complained that the SEC and CFTC often sent mixed signals over which tokens are securities, which are commodities, and which rules apply to exchanges, brokers, and DeFi platforms.
Why SEC and CFTC Crypto Oversight Matters
The biggest problem in U.S. crypto regulation has never been a lack of agencies. It has been too many agencies saying different things at the same time.
The SEC regulates securities markets. The CFTC regulates derivatives and commodity markets. Crypto often sits awkwardly between both. Bitcoin is generally treated as a commodity. Many token sales have been treated as securities offerings. Some tokens may begin as fundraising assets and later trade more like commodities.
That gray area has caused years of lawsuits, enforcement actions, and uncertainty. Crypto companies say unclear rules pushed projects offshore. Regulators say many firms used “uncertainty” as an excuse to avoid investor protection rules.
A joint SEC and CFTC approach could make the market easier to understand. It would not remove every dispute, but it could reduce overlapping enforcement and give companies a clearer path before they launch products.
What Did the CFTC Say This Week?
Selig’s latest remarks focused on coordination, not a brand-new rulebook.
He said the CFTC and SEC have entered into a memorandum of understanding, launched a joint harmonization initiative, joined the SEC’s Project Crypto, and advanced a crypto asset taxonomy. His message was that regulators should modernize rules without blurring the difference between the two agencies.
That is important because crypto oversight cannot work if every token becomes a turf war. A company listing a token needs to know whether it is dealing with securities rules, commodities rules, both, or something else.
The agencies already took one formal step in March, when the CFTC joined the SEC in issuing an interpretation on how federal securities laws apply to certain crypto assets and crypto transactions. The CFTC said it would administer the Commodity Exchange Act in a way consistent with that SEC interpretation.
That March action is not today’s news, but it matters because Selig is now pointing to it as part of a broader effort to align crypto policy ahead of Congress taking up market structure legislation.
How the CLARITY Act Fits In
The Senate Banking Committee has released a 309 page version of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act ahead of a May 14 markup. A markup is where committee members debate the bill, propose changes, and decide whether to advance it.
Reuters summarized the bill as a broad attempt to define how crypto assets should be regulated, including rules for stablecoin rewards, anti-money laundering duties, token fundraising, DeFi platforms, and tokenized securities.
The bill would not simply hand crypto to one regulator. Instead, it tries to draw clearer lines between SEC and CFTC authority. That is exactly where joint oversight becomes important. Even if Congress passes a market structure bill, regulators still need to write rules, coordinate supervision, and avoid giving firms conflicting instructions.
That may sound bureaucratic, but it is the difference between a usable crypto law and another round of confusion.
What Could Change for Exchanges and Token Issuers?
If the SEC and CFTC stay aligned, centralized exchanges and token issuers could get a clearer compliance map.
A token issuer would need to know whether its fundraising activity falls under SEC rules. An exchange would need to know whether secondary trading is overseen by the CFTC, the SEC, or both. A broker or dealer would need to understand registration, disclosures, market surveillance, custody, and anti-money laundering obligations.
The Senate bill also includes stablecoin and DeFi provisions. Reuters said the bill would ban interest payments on idle stablecoin balances while allowing some transaction-based incentives. It would also define when a DeFi platform is truly decentralized and when a platform with control or special privileges should be regulated more like a financial intermediary.
Those details matter because crypto regulation is no longer only about whether a token is a security. It now touches stablecoin rewards, custody, trading venues, smart contract control, tokenized stocks, and national security screening.
For companies, clearer rules could reduce legal risk. For users, the hope is better protection without killing the products people actually use.
Why the Framework Still Faces Pushback
A joint SEC and CFTC approach sounds clean, but the politics are not simple.
Banks are worried about stablecoin rewards pulling deposits away from traditional accounts. Crypto firms are worried that broad restrictions could block useful incentives and make U.S. products less competitive. DeFi developers are worried that vague wording could make software builders responsible for activity they do not control.
There are also concerns about anti-money laundering enforcement. Some lawmakers want tougher rules for exchanges, brokers, and DeFi access points. The Senate Banking Committee’s own fact sheet says the CLARITY Act is designed to close national security gaps, keep legitimate crypto activity onshore, and give law enforcement targeted tools to fight money laundering, terrorist financing, and sanctions evasion.
That balance will be hard to get right. Rules that are too loose can leave users exposed to scams and market abuse. Rules that are too strict can push activity offshore, where U.S. regulators have less visibility.
The better outcome is not “no regulation.” It is regulation that is clear enough for serious companies to follow and tough enough to stop bad actors from hiding behind complexity.
What Crypto Investors Should Watch Next
The first thing to watch is the May 14 Senate Banking Committee markup. If the CLARITY Act advances with meaningful bipartisan support, the market may treat it as a stronger signal that U.S. crypto market structure rules are finally moving.
The second thing is whether the SEC and CFTC keep their coordination public and practical. Speeches and memorandums help, but companies need actual rules, forms, exemptions, registrations, and enforcement boundaries.
The third thing is stablecoin language. Rewards, transaction incentives, and deposit-like products are likely to remain some of the most sensitive parts of the bill.
The fourth issue is DeFi. Lawmakers want to avoid regulating ordinary software developers like banks, but they also do not want centralized operators hiding behind a “decentralized” label. The final wording could decide how much DeFi activity remains comfortable operating in the United States.
For investors, this is not a direct price prediction story. Regulation can support confidence, but it can also create short-term uncertainty as companies adjust to new requirements. The cleaner long-term signal is that Washington is moving from scattered enforcement toward a more formal crypto rulebook.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















