Thu, 16 Apregulation

Warum die SEC selbstverwalteten Krypto-Apps nur fünf Jahre Zeit gab, um traditionelle Broker-Lizenzen zu erhalten

Burns Brief

Die SEC hat die Kryptomarktstruktur im April vorangetrieben. Die Marktteilnehmer wägen die Auswirkungen sorgfältig ab, wobei das Ergebnis wahrscheinlich von den allgemeineren Makrobedingungen und dem Volumen abhängen wird. Achten Sie auf die Bestätigung des Volumens – ein Ausbruch über das durchschnittliche Volumen würde signalisieren, dass sich der Trend wahrscheinlich fortsetzt.

The SEC moved the crypto market structure forward on Apr. 13 without waiting for Congress to act. The agency's Division of Trading and Markets published a staff statement on Covered User Interfaces, such as websites, browser extensions, wallet-linked apps, and mobile applications that help users in self-custodial setups prepare transactions in crypto asset securities. Staff said it will not object to these providers operating without broker-dealer registration under Exchange Act Section 15, provided they stay inside a strict set of behavioral and disclosure guardrails. Why this matters For the first time, the SEC is telling wallet-linked crypto trading apps how they can operate around securities without full broker licenses, but only if they avoid execution, custody, and anything that looks like DeFi. That opens a thin path for real products to ship now while signaling that bigger, full-service protocols are still stuck in a different regulatory box until Congress or the Commission goes further. That framing of the conditional, narrow, and deliberately provisional reflects that the SEC is far enough into its own regulatory program to sketch operating conditions for an on-chain securities stack, yet still dependent on Congress for anything that lasts. What the statement actually does A Covered User Interface Provider qualifies if it allows users to customize transaction parameters, avoids soliciting specific trades, relies on pre-disclosed and independently verifiable routing logic, and presents execution options based on objective factors such as price or speed, among others. The statement expressly includes distributed ledger trading systems, such as automated market maker (AMM) liquidity pools and liquidity aggregators, as venues to which these interfaces may connect. That is the first time the SEC has described, with any operational specificity, how a self-custodial interface layer for crypto asset securities could function while staying outside broker status. A

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