The guidance supersedes the SEC's 2019 framework and represents a significant narrowing of the agency's prior position. It reflects court requirements for a "common enterprise" element and eases classification standards for secondary market transactions. The shift builds on litigation spanning 2023 to 2025, including the SEC's case against Ripple, which was dropped in 2025. The specific mechanics of how the SEC will apply this framework to borderline assets and token sales remain to be detailed in forthcoming staff guidance.
For practitioners, this guidance marks a material reversal of the SEC's historically aggressive enforcement posture. Assets previously targeted or uncertain now have explicit commodity status, reducing litigation risk and clarifying the compliance pathway for exchanges, issuers, and market participants. Attorneys advising on token offerings, secondary trading platforms, or institutional crypto products should recalibrate their securities law analysis accordingly and monitor SEC staff guidance for application details.