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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Mark Uyeda Takes Over the SEC as the Agency Awaits Paul Atkins' Confirmation

Jan 21, 2025 at 06:01 am

Acting Chair Uyeda, who has been a clear supporter of relaxing the regulator's pursuit of the crypto industry, once served Atkins as a counsel at the agency.

Mark Uyeda Takes Over the SEC as the Agency Awaits Paul Atkins' Confirmation

Commissioner Mark Uyeda will take over running the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as the agency awaits the Senate confirmation on President Donald Trump's pick for the permanent role.

Acting Chair Uyeda, who has been a clear supporter of relaxing the regulator's pursuit of the crypto industry alongside fellow Republican Commissioner Hester Peirce, once served Atkins as a counsel at the agency. Atkins, who was formally nominated hours after Trump was sworn in on Monday, is a former commissioner who has developed ties to crypto in his Washington consulting business.

Uyeda has expressed his own strong views about the SEC's role regarding digital assets. He's routinely criticized the commission's majority on moves to rein in crypto, like the so-called Staff Accounting Bulletin 121 (SAB 121) that made it difficult for banks to maintain digital assets clients. He's said he favors getting rid of it — a move that's now within his authority.

The change of chairs hasn't yet been officially announced at the agency, though the remaining commissioners — including Peirce and Caroline Crenshaw — issued a joint statement on former Chair Gary Gensler's exit.

"Although as Commissioners we approached policy issues from different perspectives, there was always dignity in our differences," the commissioners said. "Chair Gensler has been committed to bipartisan engagement and a respectful exchange of ideas, which has helped facilitate our service to the American public."

Gensler had previously announced he would resign at noon on Jan. 20 — the same time Trump was sworn into office.

Gensler became the chief government antagonist for the crypto industry in recent years. He pursued enforcement cases, pushed controversial crypto accounting policy, favored tough rule proposals that threatened the industry's business model and blocked — for a time — the establishment of spot crypto exchange traded funds (ETFs). On the latter point, a court ruling against the agency forced Gensler's hand, and he eventually voted with the commission's Republicans to clear the path for ETFs.

His agency argued in court that existing law was sufficient to categorize and regulate crypto assets. That stance was favored by some federal judges and opposed by others, and the central questions are still working its way through the courts.

Uyeda's SEC, for however long his tenure lasts, is absent virtually all senior legal officials that worked under Gensler, including in the enforcement division and the general counsel's office.

The acting chairman has the full authority of the office, but people in that position sometimes choose to defer to the incoming chair and wait on big decisions.

At the SEC's sister agency, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Republican Commissioner Caroline Pham has been lifted to the acting chair role there, though Trump hasn't yet named a permanent successor to the outgoing Democrat chair, Rostin Behnam.

Unlike the CFTC, which currently has a 2-2 split between the parties, the SEC's Republicans outnumber the lone Democrat 2-1.

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