The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) will work more closely together to supervise financial markets and digital assets. Recently, they signed a memorandum of understanding to better align their rulemaking, supervision, and enforcement activities in areas where their authority overlaps.
The officials from both agencies said the pact addresses long-standing problems from a fragmented regulatory system. Separate regulations, duplicated registration processes, and jurisdictional disputes have long confused companies in the financial and digital asset markets.
On March 11, 2026, in a statement, Paul Atkins, the chairman of the SEC, said that “overlapping rules with the CFTC have slowed innovation and caused some companies to go abroad.” Better coordination may result in a “clearer landscape for financial firms and digital asset businesses.”

The regulators have launched a “Joint Harmonization Initiative” for the harmonization of rules in areas like product definition, clearing, reporting, and trading venue oversight.
The goal of the new initiative is to have a more consistent regulatory system and to have smoother financial market oversight. Additionally, the initiative will also explore how digital assets and new technology should be regulated.
Under the deal, the agencies will also clarify how financial products and crypto assets are categorized, clear and enhance the margin structures, and ease the reporting process for funds and intermediaries.
The regulators will be focused on developing a fit-for-purpose system of regulation for crypto assets and other new technologies.
With joint interpretations and coordination of policies, the SEC and CFTC can set the stage for a unified system in the future, especially if Congress acts on broader legislation related to the structure of the crypto markets.
However, market participants view a closer cooperation between U.S. agencies as a potential game-changer for the digital asset market. Steven Wu, who is the COO of Clearpool, says that the ambiguity surrounding the classification of tokens and the agencies’ authority has been a significant barrier for crypto product development.
Wu argues that if firms are not aware of which financial regulator an asset falls under, it becomes hard to launch financial products with certainty. Better alignment of the SEC/CFTC would help create a more predictable environment.
Wu stated that boundaries between spot markets, derivatives, and tokenized assets have become blurred. Consequently, a growing number of firms need regulatory approvals from both regulators, in some cases through separate processes for similar activities.
If coordination between the agencies increases, Wu believes it may reduce redundant procedures and simplify the process for compliant companies.
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The new pact may be beneficial for large financial institutions entering crypto. According to Samar Sen, who is the head of international markets at Talos, “Institutions rarely fit neatly into a single category in today’s digital asset markets.”
Most firms engage in multiple activities of spot trading, derivatives, and tokenized financial products at the same time, and this poses an operational challenge because of different regulatory requirements and reporting systems.
Sen stated that “tighter cooperation between the SEC and CFTC could reduce complexity, align rules, help firms avoid duplicative processes, and clarify which regulations apply.”
Industry watchers believe the deal may encourage companies considering a move to reconsider staying in the U.S. If the regulatory situation becomes clearer and more efficient, companies developing new financial and crypto products may benefit from the compliance.
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