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As part of its ongoing effort to deliver clarity on the application of federal securities laws to digital assets, the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC's) Division of Trading and Markets today issued a staff statement on when crypto interfaces can legally operate without needing to obtain broker-dealer registration.
What's the Scoop?
- Frontend Clarity: According to recently released SEC staff guidance, crypto “user interfaces” (like wallets or apps) can legally operate without needing to register as broker-dealers, provided that the interface operates strictly in a non-custodial capacity. Among other things, interface providers cannot provide objective commentary on the execution routes it offers, cannot solicit investors to engage in specific crypto asset securities transactions, and cannot negotiate the terms of their users' transactions.
Phantom Precedent: Last month, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued a no-action letter in response to Phantom, clearing the self-custodial crypto wallet provider to facilitate regulated derivatives trades acting in a strictly frontend interface capacity without needing to register with the federal derivatives supervisor.
NEW 🚨: As part of Project Crypto, the Division of Trading and Markets issued a staff statement providing its views on broker-dealer registration requirements in connection with certain interfaces used to prepare transactions in crypto asset securities.https://t.co/8jCwFOJZcw pic.twitter.com/gmp7jbBhgV
— U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (@SECGov) April 13, 2026