The Staff clarifies that protocol staking does not qualify as a security under the Howey test, clearing the way for market participants to engage in staking.

By Jenny CieplakZachary FallonYvette D. ValdezStephen P. Wink, Naim Culhaci, Adam Bruce Fovent, Donald Thompson, and Deric Behar

On May

The Staff’s most recent actions continue to set the stage for notice-and-comment rulemaking long-awaited by the digital asset industry.

By Zachary Fallon, Stephen P. Wink, Naim Culhaci, Donald Thompson, and Deric Behar

On May 15, 2025, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (Commission or SEC) Division of Trading and Markets (the Staff)

The proposed legislation will bring cryptoassets into the full scope of UK financial services regulation and enable the UK’s future cryptoasset regime.

By Stuart Davis and Gabriel Lakeman

On 29 April, UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves unveiled draft legislation aimed at regulating cryptoassets at the International Fintech Growth Summit (IFGS) in London, sponsored by Latham & Watkins.

The proposed legislation will bring cryptoassets (including stablecoins) and cryptoasset-related activities in scope of the UK regulatory perimeter, providing the fundamental legislative framework for the UK’s future financial services regime for cryptoassets. When implemented, firms issuing stablecoins, operating cryptoasset trading platforms, and providing custody, brokerage, or dealing services will require full authorisation to conduct activity in the UK.1