The chairman of the US SEC said that the agency is considering introducing innovative exemption policies to encourage the development of asset tokenization
Odaily News After the U.S. House of Representatives passed a landmark stablecoin bill early Thursday, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Paul Atkins said the SEC is considering an innovation exemption policy to incentivize the development of asset tokenization. He said in a press conference: SEC staff is considering what other changes are needed in our regulatory framework to incentivize asset tokenization, including the establishment of an innovation exemption policy to allow novel trading methods and the introduction of more precise exemptions to promote the construction of other components of the tokenized securities ecosystem.
Atkins praised the passage of the stablecoin legislation and told reporters that the SEC looks forward to “creating clear rules” for the digital asset space. The bill now goes to President Trump for his signature. (Bloomberg)
You may also like
A valuation of 8 billion dollars, doubling in 8 months! What makes the crypto-friendly bank Erebor Bank stand out?
340 billion valuation: Li Yanhong's largest IPO, a seat in Kunlunxin's shares is hard to come by
Stablecoins are the "royalists" of the crypto world: Open USD brings the old currency system into play
Semiconductor stocks plummet, yet Anthropic wants to create a 2nm chip
Where is Zhao Changpeng's billion-dollar investment going? YZi Labs' investment landscape fully revealed
Ethereum Foundation Report: A Basic Guide to Ethereum for Governments and Financial Institutions
A pre-announced harvesting case: After the cryptocurrency price dropped by 99%, the public chain Saga exited to transform into AI
When American giants collectively "defect" from Chinese AI models
BIS Report Compliance Observation: The Real Risks of Stablecoins, Not Just "Depegging"
Portugal 2-1 Croatia: Ronaldo's 20-Year Knockout-Stage Drought Ends With a Debt Finally Collected
Portugal beat Croatia 2-1 in the 2026 global football championship's knockout rounds as Ronaldo scored his first-ever knockout-stage goal, Gonçalo Ramos struck a stoppage-time winner, and VAR ruled out a late equalizer for offside.
