

US Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins has revealed that a key crypto market safe harbor proposal has landed at the White House for review.
Speaking at the Digital Assets and Emerging Technology Policy Summit on Monday, Atkins said the Regulation Crypto Assets proposal â outlined by the SEC in mid-March â has now been submitted to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
"We will have reg crypto that we will be proposing here shortly. It's in fact at OIRA right now, which is the next step before being published," he said.
Regulation Crypto Assets covers three main ideas: a startup exemption, a fundraising exemption and an investment contract safe harbor for issuers.
If the proposal does end up becoming official rules as part of the SECâs oversight, it could drive more crypto innovation in the US while providing further regulatory clarity for the industry.
Atkins emphasized that the SEC wants to "hear from the marketplace" to make the whole package "workable." He did not go into many specifics but said there were a few things the SEC is "building into it" alongside measures such as crypto safe harbors and exemptive relief.

Source: Paul Atkins
Generally, the SEC first votes to approve a formal proposal, which is then sent to OIRA for review. OIRA then completes the review and it is published in the Federal Register and put up for public feedback.
Cointelegraph reached out to the SEC for comment on the matter.
Related: CFTC chief launches innovation task force focused on crypto framework
The startup exemption would enable projects to raise up to a defined amount over a four-year period with softer disclosure requirements, while the fundraising exemption would enable issuers to raise a defined amount over 12 months while "retaining the ability to rely on other exemptions from registration under the federal securities laws."
The investment contract safe harbor would protect certain assets from the definition of a security once the project team has ceased all of its managerial efforts "represented or promised" as part of the investment contract.
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Atkins said the Regulation Crypto Assets proposal is now at the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs for review. He explained that this is the next step before the proposal can be published. The SEC first has to move through this review process before any formal rulemaking can continue.
The proposal includes three main ideas: a startup exemption, a fundraising exemption, and an investment contract safe harbor for issuers. These measures are meant to give crypto projects more room to operate under clearer rules. Atkins also said the SEC is building in additional measures such as safe harbors and exemptive relief.
The proposal could encourage more crypto innovation in the US if it becomes official SEC policy. It is also expected to provide more regulatory clarity for the industry. Atkins said the SEC wants the package to be workable and to hear from the marketplace.
After OIRA completes its review, the proposal is published in the Federal Register and opened for public feedback. Before that, the SEC generally has to vote to approve the formal proposal. The article says this is the standard path for SEC rulemaking.
The startup exemption would let projects raise up to a defined amount over four years with softer disclosure requirements. The fundraising exemption would let issuers raise a defined amount over 12 months while still being able to use other exemptions from federal securities registration. Both are designed to make fundraising easier for crypto projects.






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