The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has announced its examination priorities for 2025, highlighting spot crypto ETFs. The SEC’s Divisions of Examinations released its focus areas related to crypto assets, blockchain technology, and distributed ledger systems.
This year, the regulator plans to look into Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) exchange-traded products, a change from last year. The SEC will focus on crypto services offering, trading, or providing tokenized advice on digital assets.
This decision continues a debate on market volatility and security risk. The examination will also examine registrant practices relating to technological risks associated with blockchain.
This is a big step for the SEC, which greenlit its first spot BTC ETFs at the beginning of 2024 and then made way for Ethereum ETFs.
The regulator signaled with the inclusion of spot crypto ETFs in the 2025 list that they will closely monitor the evolving crypto market. The move coincides with digital assets increasingly becoming part of mainstream finance.
SEC Targets Spot Crypto ETFs for 2025
The SEC has plans to evaluate the risks of crypto service providers. These assessments will cover security protocols and the risk of damage to the investor from blockchain technology.
The SEC says it will also dedicate itself to enforcing federal regulations on market participants. The examinations focus on spot crypto ETFs and other crypto assets and products.
The SEC intends to provide clear regulatory oversight to protect investors and encourage capital formation. To do so, the agency is looking at how crypto firms deal with the complexities of blockchain technology.
SEC’s legal challenges against Coinbase and Ripple are not deterring the agency from its regulatory goals and pursuing crypto ETFs next. However, the 2025 plan says it intends to make no immediate changes to how it enforces the rules. The regulator will still use examinations as a compliance enforcement tool.
Election May Influence SEC’s Crypto Regulation
The 2024 U.S. Presidential Elections will likely change the SEC’s leadership and direction. Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have different views on regulating crypto.
Trump is considered more favorable toward the crypto industry, while Harris is less favorable owing to the current administration’s stance. Bringing industry leaders into both campaigns is, in part, a sign they care about policy change.
Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen has given more than $10 million to Harris’s campaign, while Trump is gaining more than $7.5 million in crypto donations. Depending on the election outcome, if the SEC’s current chair, Gary Gensler, is pushed out, it will likely pave the way for another big name.
He will step down in 2026, but speculations abound that he could quit sooner. The uncertainty of the crypto regulation in the United States also raises questions about its future.
SEC Faces Criticism Over Crypto Enforcement Strategy
Critics have also lambasted the SEC’s enforcement actions against crypto firms as part of Gensler’s regulatory strategy. Some believe such an approach stymies innovation and incurs regulatory uncertainty.
The SEC asserts, however, that it’s acting to protect investors from risk. Major crypto firms such as Coinbase and Ripple are locked in ongoing legal battles with the Commission.
A recent Supreme Court ruling overturning the Chevron doctrine could change the SEC’s power in these cases. However, in light of that, the agency is continuing its examination priority in 2025.