SEC Staff Issues Statement on Stablecoins
Time 3 Minute Read
Categories: Cryptocurrencies

On April 4, 2025, Staff in the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance issued a public statement on stablecoins. The statement opines that the offer and sale of “covered stablecoins” do not involve the offer and sale of securities, and that persons involved in minting covered stablecoins do not need to register their offer and sale with the SEC.

The Staff statement provides several characteristics of “covered stablecoins” for the purpose of its analysis, and the issuer of a stablecoin that does not meet these criteria may not be able to rely fully on the statement’s holding. In particular, the statement assumes that a covered stablecoin is backed by a reserve fund of high-quality assets (such as cash, cash equivalents or treasury securities), that the stablecoin is exchangeable one-for-one with a fiat currency (such as the US Dollar), and that the stablecoin is marketed solely for use in commerce, as a means of making payments, for transmitting money, or as a means of storing value, but not as an investment. The Staff further notes that covered stablecoins are typically marketed so as not to impart any governance rights to holders or to reflect any ownership interest in the issuer of the stablecoin. To support its conclusion, the statement also provides a brief analysis of a covered stablecoin under both the Supreme Court’s Howey test for investment contracts and the “family resemblance” test under the Supreme Court’s Reves case. Over the years, the SEC Staff has provided little guidance as to its views on the Reves test, so the Staff statement is interesting in that regard.

While the Staff’s guidance is helpful as a general starting point, it does not delve into several nuances among different varieties of stablecoins that could impact the security analysis. More generally, and as described above, the guidance makes a number of other critical assumptions about the structure of a hypothetical covered stablecoin as well. The guidance seems to imply that algorithmic stablecoins are out of scope and do not meet the criteria for a covered stablecoin, for example. Notably, the Staff guidance does not speak to the status of the reserve fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940, a topic outside the purview of the Division of Corporation Finance. SEC Commissioner Crenshaw also issued a public statement highly critical of the Staff’s analysis. With several bills on stablecoins making their way through Congress, we anticipate that the Staff statement will not be the last word from Washington on stablecoins.

  • Partner

    Scott brings in-depth knowledge of SEC policies, procedures and enforcement philosophy to each representation. Scott regularly advises clients across a broad sector of the economy facing sensitive reporting, compliance and ...

You May Also Be Interested In

Time 1 Minute Read

On February 25, 2026, the federal Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), published draft regulations for payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act. The proposed rules focus on stablecoin activities of entities that the OCC will supervise under the GENIUS Act, including stablecoin issuers that are owned or chartered as national banks, as well as certain federally licensed nonbanks and foreign stablecoin issuers operating in the US.

Time 2 Minute Read

In mid-January 2026, key Senate committees published discussion drafts of market structure legislation for comprehensive federal regulation of digital assets. The Senate Banking Committee’s version of the bill is called the “Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.”  The Senate Agriculture Committee’s version of the bill is called the “Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act.”

Time 2 Minute Read

On November 20, 2025, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued a brief announcement that it filed a joint stipulation with defendants SolarWinds Corporation and its Chief Information Security Officer to dismiss, with prejudice, the SEC’s ongoing civil enforcement action against them.

Time 5 Minute Read

On September 29, 2025, staff in the SEC’s Division of Investment Management issued no-action relief for certain crypto asset custodians. Specifically, the relief will, under certain circumstances, allow SEC-registered investment advisers (Registered Advisers), registered investment companies and business development companies (collectively, Regulated Funds) to treat a state-chartered trust company as a “bank” (for custody purposes) with respect to crypto assets and related cash or cash equivalents, without fear of enforcement under the SEC’s custody rules.

The Hunton Blockchain Blog features opinions and legal analysis as we follow the development and use of distributed ledger technology known as the blockchain.

Search

Subscribe Arrow

Recent Posts

Categories

Tags

Authors

Archives

Jump to Page