SEC Concludes Certain Protocol Staking Activities Are Not Securities Offerings
SEC Concludes Certain Protocol Staking Activities Are Not Securities Offerings
On May 29, 2025, the Staff of the Division of Corporation Finance (the “Staff”) of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a statement[1] (the “Staking Statement”) concluding that certain protocol staking activities are not securities offerings subject to SEC jurisdiction.
“Staking” is a process that allows holders of crypto assets to earn rewards in exchange for helping to secure a proof of stake (PoS) blockchain network. PoS blockchain networks employ a “consensus mechanism” which enables the distributed network of unrelated computers (“nodes”) that maintain the peer-to-peer network to agree on the “state” of the network, without the need for a trusted third-party intermediary. As part of this mechanism, the node operators lock up (“stake”) the network’s native digital assets, and in turn may be selected as “validators” who participate in the network’s operation, including the validation of new transactions in the network. These crypto assets may be forfeited if the validator acts dishonestly. In exchange for securing the network, validators earn rewards in the form of additional crypto assets, creating an economic incentive for network participation.
In addition to staking crypto assets themselves (“self-staking” or “solo-staking”), participants may grant validation rights to a third party to stake on their behalf, while retaining custody and ownership of such assets (“self-custodial staking”). Participants may also grant validation rights and custody, while retaining ownership, to a third party to stake on their behalf (“custodial staking”).
The Staking Statement specifically addresses staking activities involving crypto assets that are intrinsically linked to the programmatic functioning of a public, permissionless network and used for participating in such network’s consensus mechanism or network security (“Covered Crypto Assets”). Notably, the Staking Statement does not cover assets that have “intrinsic economic properties or rights, such as generating a passive yield of conveying rights to future income, profits, or assets of a business enterprise.”[5]
The Staking Statement applies to the following activities (together, “Protocol Staking Activities”):
The Staking Statement relies on the Howey test to determine whether the Protocol Staking Activities constitute “investment contracts” subject to U.S. securities laws and registration requirements. Under the Howey test, an investment contract security is formed if there is an investment of money in a common enterprise premised on a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others.[6] Longstanding case law distinguishes the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others from those which are merely administrative or ministerial, whereby the latter is insufficient under Howey. The Staff’s analysis is derived largely from this distinction.
The Staff clarified that where the facts vary from those presented in the Staking Statement, a definitive determination as to whether the specific Protocol Staking Activity involves the offer and sale of a security would require an analysis of the facts.
The Staking Statement follows recent guidance from the Staff stating that certain proof-of-work protocol mining activities are not securities transactions,[7] as well as guidance from SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets addressing FAQs relating to crypto asset activities and distributed ledger technology[8] and the withdrawal[9] of the 2019 Joint Staff Statement[10] on broker-dealer custody of digital assets.
Although not binding, the Staking Statement is yet another development demonstrating the SEC’s shift toward providing less regulation of crypto assets. Market participants should expect continued movement in crypto regulation as the SEC Crypto Task Force works to develop a hospitable regulatory framework for crypto assets.
U.S. SEC Issues Statement on Stablecoins
[1] See Statement on Certain Protocol Staking Activities (May 29, 2025) (the “Staking Statement”).
[2] SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
[3] See Response to Staff Statement on Protocol Staking Activities: Stake it Till You Make It? (May 29, 2025).
[4] See Providing Security is not a “Security” – Division of Corporation Finance’s Statement on Protocol Staking (May 29, 2025).
[5] See the Staking Statement, footnote 3.
[6] United Housing Found., Inc. v. Forman, 421 U.S. 837, 852 (1975).
[7] See Division of Corporation Finance, Statement on Certain Proof-of-Work Mining Activities (Mar. 20, 2025).
[8] See Division of Trading and Markets: Frequently Asked Questions Relating to Crypto Asset Activities and Distributed Ledger Technology (May 15, 2025).
[9] See Withdrawal of Joint Staff Statement on Broker-Dealer Custody of Digital Asset Securities, Division of Trading and Markets, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Office of General Counsel, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (May 15, 2025).
[10] See Joint Staff Statement on Broker-Dealer Custody of Digital Asset Securities, Division of Trading and Markets, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Office of General Counsel, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (July 8, 2019; Withdrawn May 15, 2025).