0
0

The post Crypto Giants Push Back Against Citadel as SEC DeFi Rules Spark Industry Showdown appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
A group of major crypto and DeFi organizations has pushed back strongly against Citadel Securities after the firm urged the US SEC to tighten oversight on decentralized finance, especially around tokenized securities. The response came in the form of a joint letter sent to the SEC by the DeFi Education Fund, Andreessen Horowitz, The Digital Chamber, the Uniswap Foundation, and others. They argue that Citadel’s view misunderstands how DeFi actually works and could lead to rules that are difficult to apply in practice.
The disagreement started after Citadel asked the SEC to clearly identify and regulate all intermediaries involved in trading tokenized US equities. Citadel claimed that many DeFi protocols act like traditional exchanges or brokers and should follow the same registration rules. According to Citadel, failing to do so could weaken investor protections and create unfair differences between traditional finance firms and on-chain platforms.
Crypto advocates say Citadel’s argument stretches existing securities laws too far. In their letter, they said that labeling software tools or blockchain infrastructure as intermediaries is misleading. They stressed that most DeFi platforms do not control user funds and do not act as middlemen. Instead, users keep control of their own assets, and transactions happen directly on-chain. Because of this, applying traditional registration rules could end up targeting developers and builders who never touch customer money.
Moreover, the debate comes as the SEC continues to talk about supporting innovation while enforcing existing laws. SEC Chair Paul Atkins has said the agency wants to help new technologies fit within current rules rather than block progress. Tokenization, which puts assets like stocks and bonds on blockchains, has gained attention as a way to modernize markets, but it also raises new regulatory questions that are still being worked through.
Crypto analyst Walter Peppenberg argues that Citadel’s recent push for stricter SEC rules on DeFi is not about protecting investors but about protecting its own business. He says Citadel, which makes billions from traditional market-making, feels threatened by DeFi because it removes middlemen and lets users trade directly. According to him, the DeFi coalition rightly pushed back, calling Citadel’s claims misleading. Analyst adds that the timing looks desperate, especially as the current U.S. political and regulatory climate is becoming more open to crypto and DeFi developers, exposing how nervous legacy finance is about losing control.
However, Citadel has pushed back on the criticism, saying it supports tokenization and digital finance but does not want investor protections weakened. Company representatives said that innovation does not require lowering standards that have long supported US markets. They also warned that giving broad exemptions to DeFi could harm investors if risks are not properly addressed.
Stay ahead with breaking news, expert analysis, and real-time updates on the latest trends in Bitcoin, altcoins, DeFi, NFTs, and more.
Citadel says some DeFi platforms act like exchanges or brokers and should follow the same rules to protect investors and ensure fair markets.
Tokenized securities are real-world assets like stocks issued on blockchains, aiming to make trading faster, cheaper, and more transparent.
The SEC says it wants to balance investor protection with innovation, exploring how new technologies can work within existing laws.
0
0
Securely connect the portfolio you’re using to start.