In a significant development within the financial sector, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has decided to drop its appeal against the court ruling that invalidated its proposed “dealer rule.” This decision marks a substantial victory for the Blockchain Association (BA), the Crypto Freedom Alliance of Texas (CFAT), and the broader cryptocurrency industry, which had strongly opposed the regulation.
The dealer rule, initially introduced by the SEC in February 2024, sought to mandate that firms engaging in frequent securities trading register as dealers. At the time, former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler had indicated that several firms were effectively operating as market makers without adhering to registration requirements. He had also expressed concerns that this situation could leave both investors and markets vulnerable.
Legal Challenge and Court Ruling
The SEC’s proposal to broaden the definition of a “dealer” to include entities trading both U.S. securities and crypto assets faced strong opposition from the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry. Critics argued that the regulatory agency was exceeding its authority and that the rule could stifle innovation in digital markets. In response, BA and CFAT initiated a lawsuit on April 3, 2024, challenging the SEC’s regulatory overreach.
The case reached a turning point in November 2024 when the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas ruled in favor of the plaintiffs. The court determined that the SEC had overstepped its legal boundaries in attempting to impose the new dealer requirements. Although the SEC initially appealed this ruling in January 2025, the agency has now officially withdrawn its appeal as of February 19, 2025.
Implications for Crypto Regulation
Following the SEC’s decision, industry leaders viewed the move as a positive shift in the agency’s stance on cryptocurrency regulation. Blockchain Association CEO Kristin Smith suggested that the agency’s willingness to drop the case could signal a departure from the previous administration’s adversarial approach to crypto oversight. Similarly, Marisa Coppel, the association’s Head of Legal, emphasized that the ruling reinforced the need to prevent excessive regulatory intervention.
The decision comes amid a broader trend of legal setbacks for the SEC in its efforts to regulate the cryptocurrency sector. The agency has faced multiple challenges in its enforcement actions, including a landmark ruling in 2023 when a federal judge determined that Ripple Labs had not violated securities laws by selling its XRP token on public exchanges. This ruling significantly limited the SEC’s ability to classify cryptocurrencies as securities.
A Shifting Regulatory Landscape
During former Chair Gary Gensler’s tenure, the SEC aggressively pursued litigation against major digital asset exchanges, including Coinbase, Binance, and Kraken, arguing that these platforms were facilitating the trade of unregistered securities. The agency sought legal precedent to support its broader stance that numerous digital assets should fall under securities laws.
With a new administration in place and a pro-crypto leadership under President Trump, the cryptocurrency industry remains hopeful for a more collaborative regulatory environment. Many stakeholders anticipate that future policies will reflect a more balanced and informed perspective on digital assets.
The withdrawal of the dealer rule lawsuit has been met with approval across the crypto industry, with companies such as Ripple Labs, which had been entangled in prolonged SEC litigation, seeing the decision as a positive step forward. As regulatory discussions evolve, the industry remains watchful of how the SEC’s approach to digital assets will continue to shift in the coming years.