Brief Take:
- U.S. SEC and Binance have unanimously agreed to pause their court case for 60 days.
- The decision results from the creation of SEC’s crypto task force.
Binance and the United States Securities Exchange Commission have unanimously agreed to halt their ongoing court case for 60 days, after which they can still decide whether or not to extend it.
Binance, SEC requests for a 60-day wait
In the filing, lodged Monday, the regulatory body revealed that the request to keep the legal case on hold resulted from the new crypto task force established under the administration of the SEC’s acting chairman, Mark Uyeda.
Led by pro-crypto SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, the task force was set up to provide the needed “clarity on the application of the federal securities laws to the crypto asset market,” among other things.
“The work of this task force may impact and facilitate the potential resolution of this case,” the document reads. “Accordingly, the SEC proposed a brief stay to Defendants, and the Defendants agreed that a stay is appropriate.”
Binance troubles with the SEC began in June 2023, when the agency, under former chair Gary Gensler, unsealed 13 charges against the crypto exchange. Binance contested the SEC’s charges and got some dismissed a year later. However, most of the charges were still upheld.
Trump is restoring order in crypto with new SEC leadership
The SEC similarly went after several other crypto firms, including Coinbase and Kraken, which drew a lot of criticism against Gensler and the agency. The SEC’s enforcement approach to regulation saw many people in crypto support now-president Donald Trump, who had promised during his campaign to restore America’s leadership in digital assets.
Following Trump’s inauguration, the American framework began to take a new turn. Talks to “eliminating regulatory overreach” became the order of the day. Former Chair Gary Gensler left the SEC as Trump nominated pro-crypto Paul Atkins to chair the agency.
Atkins has yet to assume the role of SEC Chairman because his confirmation hearing before the Senate Banking Committee has not been scheduled.