Crypto assets shrug off SEC scrutiny, recovering from June lows

After years of lackluster enforcement, the SEC is finally cracking down — and the market doesn’t care

article-image

Bigc Studio/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

Since early June, the SEC has been on the warpath, targeting a number of companies key to the crypto economy and declaring that a host of digital assets are unregistered securities.

Despite the aggressive posturing, the market has largely rallied in the wake of regulatory storm clouds, pushing the total cryptocurrency market cap up 13.3% since June 6, with numerous assets dubbed securities recovering from monthly lows. 

The SEC on June 5 announced charges against a number of Binance entities, as well as charges against Binance founder Changpeng Zhao. The next day, the regulator also sued Coinbase, alleging the publicly traded company was operating an unlicensed securities exchange — taking aim at perhaps the two most important centralized crypto companies in a 24-hour span.

Between the Coinbase and Binance complaints, the SEC argued that a total of 18 non-stablecoin assets were securities. 

Chart by David Canellis

Prior to the complaints, the SEC had been largely reluctant to signal which digital assets the regulator does and does not believe to be securities.

The persistent unwillingness of SEC officials to state whether the second largest crypto asset, ether (ETH), is a security is one particularly egregious example

Not to mention that observers pointed out that the assets the SEC claimed were securities in the complaints coincided nearly-perfectly with the assets listed on Coinbase and Binance’s homepages

Regardless of the perhaps arbitrary, perhaps slapdash, nature of the SEC’s assessment, markets responded negatively in the short term, with prices for large caps such as ATOM and BNB dropping 18% and 24%, respectively, in the days after the complaint.

Meanwhile, Coinbase stock — which the SEC permitted to be listed on American exchanges April 2021 as a registered security, despite later concluding Coinbase was operating as an unregistered securities exchange — likewise faltered, falling as much as 18% in premarket trading June 6. 

Partial recovery

Since June 6 lows, however, nearly half of affected assets have fully recovered, with the cohort of 19 assets in the green 70 basis points on average at the time of publication.  

Leading the way: SOL and Coinbase’s COIN, up 27% and 51%, respectively. 

Laggards BNB and SAND, meanwhile, dragged the basket down, remaining 18.5% and 12.6% in the red. Eleven of the 19 remain negative since the complaints, with 10 within a 5% margin of their June 6 price. 

On Thursday, the SEC charged Celsius Network Limited with fraud and unregistered securities sales. Despite Celsius undergoing an already-lengthy bankruptcy process, and now facing a $4.7 billion FTC fine, CEL has improbably rallied nearly 20%. 

Later the same day, a New York judge ruled in a long-standing lawsuit from the SEC that Ripple’s XRP cannot be considered a security in secondary sales on exchanges, but simultaneously that institutional sales of XRP could be considered securities offerings.

In total — adding Celsius’ CEL and XRP to a basket of equally-weighted COIN and the assets the SEC recently labeled securities — the “post SEC enforcement index” would be up 3.5% from the announcement of SEC action against each asset as well as the ruling on XRP. 

In short, as the market digests recent SEC actions, enforcement appears increasingly toothless — at least when it comes to impacting digital asset prices.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

Industry City | Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Brooklyn, NY

SUN - MON, JUN. 22 - 23, 2025

Blockworks and Cracked Labs are teaming up for the third installment of the Permissionless Hackathon, happening June 22–23, 2025 in Brooklyn, NY. This is a 36-hour IRL builder sprint where developers, designers, and creatives ship real projects solving real problems across […]

recent research

Research

article-image

The Ethereum Foundation’s newly-formed Protocol division — leaner, led by EF veterans — sets the stage for the chain’s next major hard fork

article-image

The gap between cryptography breakthroughs is shortening

article-image

The Solana Attestation Service acts like a passport, letting wallets verify their permissions without doxxing the user

article-image

New legal developments and renewed US-China tensions have traders wondering if a “TACO Tuesday” is in the cards this week

article-image

The ETF Store president Nate Geraci expects the SEC to approve spot solana ETFs — and staking within SOL and ether ETFs — in 2025

article-image

Yuga cofounder Greg Solano says it’s time to be thoughtful, ‘but also kinda fucking ruthless’