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I'm about as "anti crypto" as they come, and I find the whole need/purpose for a Bitcoin spot ETF to be completely baffling (and I suspect most actual crypto enthusiasts would agree), but this seems like the right decision to me. I specifically agreed with this comment: "The SEC has been getting blasted for its regulation-by-enforcement approach to crypto." I understand the SEC's hostility to crypto, but what I don't understand is why they can't just provide clearer rules, up front, about what is OK and what is not, instead seeming to explicitly not provide clear guidance and then saying to companies after the fact "no no, that's too far" (in some cases - other cases were clearly fraudulent BS from the get go). I'm not a lawyer, and haven't been following the ins and outs of all of the crypto-SEC battles super closely, but I'd be curious if someone with more knowledge in the domain could comment on why the SEC hasn't been more proactive in defining rules. |
The industry that the SEC regulates is full of clever people who have a financial incentive to push rules as far as possible.
The concern is that if they provided a clear line between what is allowed and disallowed, that everyone will go right up to the line and then find creative ways to exploit how it’s defined.
The SEC prefers to keep the line fuzzy so that actors keep their behavior well on the “allowed” side.