March 22, 2025 by Mishal Ali
Key Takeaways
- Ripple pushes back against SEC’s regulatory ambiguity.
- Calls for clear crypto rules aligned with existing laws.
- Emphasizes Congress’s role in defining market structure.
Ripple has replied formally to a request for public comment on crypto taxonomy regulations made by SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, urging the agency’s Crypto Task Force to emphasize regulatory clarity.
The company asserts that earlier administrations at the SEC have fostered uncertainty over clarity, stalling innovation and driving blockchain businesses out of the U.S.
Today, @Ripple submitted its response to Commissioner @HesterPeirce’s Feb. 21 statement: “There must be some way out of here,” calling for public input on crypto taxonomy rules.
That Dylan lyric continues: “There’s too much confusion, I can’t get no relief.” The prior…
Ripple’s open letter highlights the necessity for strictly abiding by statute-mandated limits and not overstepping on defining digital assets as securities. The company is convinced that the strategy of the SEC has undermined its publicly stated mission, with conflicting and unnecessarily burdensome guidance.
Ripple believes that crypto regulations must originate with Congress, not with the SEC. The response indicates that the SEC does not have jurisdiction over most digital currencies and should focus on enforcing laws where it has jurisdiction, not on trying to expand its jurisdiction through ambiguous acts of enforcement.
Regulatory Overreach and Distorted Standards
Ripple is accusing the SEC of distorting long-standing legal definitions, particularly the application of the Howey Test to decide whether an asset qualifies as an investment contract.
The response argues that previous SEC leadership misused this test for categorizing many digital assets as securities, even where there are not fundamental characteristics such as binding agreements or profit-participation requirements.
The company maintains that a proper interpretation of the Securities Act entails a clear issuer explicitly making promises to investors. Instead, the SEC has widened its definition to cover even secondary market transactions as sales of securities, which creates unnecessary regulatory barriers.
Ripple warns that not only has this approach created uncertainty , but also discouraged blockchain projects from launching or expanding in the U.S.
Furthermore, Ripple also supports the latest statement issued by the SEC on meme coins, which clarified that these are not securities according to federal laws.
That, according to Ripple, is a matter of clear guidance that the Crypto Task Force must adopt for all digital currencies. Such clear regulation must be grounded on existing laws and not on constructed norms that destabilize markets.
Ripple Calls for Congressional Leadership
Ripple advocates for a regulatory framework that keeps digital asset transactions distinct from traditional securities. It calls on the SEC to break away from past misconceptions and enact legislation that will foster innovation.
The company refers to Commissioner Peirce’s Token Safe Harbor Proposal as a potential solution, allowing blockchain projects to develop without being deemed securities too quickly.
The letter also stresses that blockchain technology calls for regulatory clarity, not undue restrictions. Ripple urges Congress to step up and create digital asset legislation so that crypto regulations are grounded on legal precedents rather than altering enforcement strategies.
It also proposes regulatory sandboxes for testing financial products in a controlled environment, a system that has proven successful in places like the UK, Switzerland, and Singapore.
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