April 21, 2025

Here’s a con­cise overview of the SEC’s new rules on meme­coins, as ref­er­enced in Car­o­line Crenshaw’s crit­i­cism:

On Feb­ru­ary 27, 2025, the SEC’s Divi­sion of Cor­po­ra­tion Finance issued a staff state­ment titled “Staff State­ment on Meme Coins: What Does it Meme?” This guid­ance out­lined that most memecoins—cryptocurrencies root­ed in inter­net cul­ture or social trends, like those tied to Don­ald Trump’s inauguration—are not con­sid­ered secu­ri­ties under U.S. fed­er­al law. The key points of the SEC’s new stance are:

  1. Non-Secu­ri­ty Clas­si­fi­ca­tion: Meme­coins are gen­er­al­ly viewed as lack­ing the char­ac­ter­is­tics of an invest­ment con­tract under the Howey Test. They don’t typ­i­cal­ly involve an expec­ta­tion of prof­its from the efforts of oth­ers but are instead dri­ven by com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment or nov­el­ty, akin to col­lectibles or com­modi­ties.
  2. Lim­it­ed Reg­u­la­to­ry Over­sight: By clas­si­fy­ing most meme­coins as non-secu­ri­ties, the SEC has shift­ed pri­ma­ry reg­u­la­to­ry respon­si­bil­i­ty away from itself to oth­er agen­cies, like the Com­mod­i­ty Futures Trad­ing Com­mis­sion (CFTC), or left them large­ly unreg­u­lat­ed if they don’t involve fraud or oth­er vio­la­tions.
  3. Case-by-Case Excep­tions: The guid­ance notes that some meme­coins could still be secu­ri­ties if their issuance, mar­ket­ing, or eco­nom­ic real­i­ty sug­gests an invest­ment scheme (e.g., coor­di­nat­ed efforts by pro­mot­ers to dri­ve prof­it). How­ev­er, it sets a high bar for such deter­mi­na­tions, favor­ing a light-touch approach.
  4. No Reg­is­tra­tion Required: Issuers of meme­coins deemed non-secu­ri­ties aren’t required to reg­is­ter with the SEC or com­ply with dis­clo­sure rules, a depar­ture from stricter over­sight applied to tokens in past enforce­ment actions.

This shift reflects a broad­er pol­i­cy piv­ot under incom­ing SEC lead­er­ship aligned with Trump’s pro-cryp­to agen­da, con­trast­ing with the Gensler era’s aggres­sive stance. Crenshaw’s dis­sent, call­ing it a “roadmap for dodg­ing reg­u­la­tion,” high­lights her con­cern that this vague­ness lets issuers exploit the “meme­coin” label to avoid account­abil­i­ty, even for tokens with secu­ri­ty-like traits. The rules aim to fos­ter inno­va­tion but have sparked debate over investor pro­tec­tion, espe­cial­ly for high-pro­file cas­es like Trump meme­coins.

SEC News­room

John Deacon

John is a researcher and digitally independent practitioner working on aligned cognitive extension technology. Creative and technical writings are rooted in industry experience spanning instrumentation, automation and workflow engineering, systems dynamics, and strategic communications design.

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