In a continued support for crypto, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have jointly confirmed that registered exchanges can now facilitate spot crypto trading under existing law.
The joint statement, released Tuesday, clarifies that platforms such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), Nasdaq, CBOE, and CME face no legal barriers to listing select digital asset products.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins hailed the move as a turning point, emphasizing that “market participants should have the freedom to choose where they trade spot crypto assets.” CFTC Acting Chair Caroline Pham echoed his sentiment, noting that the era of mixed signals on crypto regulation “is over”.
Until now, uncertainty around regulatory guidance forced many U.S. exchanges to avoid spot crypto listings, even as global rivals advanced. The new framework provides long-awaited clarity, allowing spot Bitcoin and Ethereum trading to sit alongside traditional equities and futures.
Regulators also stressed the importance of transparent pricing and clearing mechanisms to safeguard investor trust.
For everyday traders, spot crypto means instant ownership of digital assets at market price, making the process more straightforward than derivatives trading. Analysts believe this clarity could attract institutional players, deepen liquidity, and accelerate mainstream adoption.
By acting together, the agencies are signaling Washington’s determination to make the U.S. a global hub for regulated crypto markets.
Industry leaders see this as a watershed moment. According to Alexander Blume, CEO of Two Prime Digital Assets, “This effectively gives U.S. exchanges the green light to support spot trading in top digital assets, connecting crypto with markets where trillions already flow.”
With the SEC and CFTC aligned, U.S. exchanges now have a clearer path to expand offerings, bringing crypto closer to Wall Street and signaling the start of a new era for DeFi.
Cover image from ChatGPT, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview