In brief
- Atkins was sworn in as SEC chair after a 52-44 Senate vote earlier this month confirmed his seat.
- The new chairman owns up to $6M in crypto and helped develop digital asset industry standards.
- Over 70 crypto ETF applications are in line for him to decide on as the SEC shifts from the Gensler era
Paul Atkins was officially sworn in as the 34th Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday, bringing a crypto-friendly approach that contrasts with his predecessor’s aggressive enforcement strategy.
Atkins vowed to push the SEC’s “mission to facilitate capital formation; maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets; and protect investors.”
In a testimony delivered before his Senate confirmation, Atkins said his time in public service and in the private sector allowed him to “see first-hand how regulations, including those of the SEC, affect markets and investors.”
Exactly 52 Republicans voted for his nomination, while 44 Democrats opposed.
Atkins’ private sector leadership includes founding Patomak Global Partners in 2009, developing standards for the digital asset industry. Atkins said he’d resign from Patomak within 90 days of confirmation.
Late last month, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) wrote to Atkins, demanding he clarify Patomak’s advisory role to crypto firms, including the now-defunct FTX exchange.
Paul Atkins, President Trump’s pick to lead the SEC, was officially confirmed by a full Senate vote Wednesday evening, with lawmakers mostly voting along party lines.
52 Republicans voted to confirm Atkins, a pro-crypto SEC veteran who has made reforming the agency’s digital assets policy a top priority. 44 Democrats opposed the nomination.
Atkins will succeed former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, who, under the Biden administration, attracted the ire of crypto leaders by suing or investigating almost…
Unclear regulation “creates uncertainty and inhibits innovation,” Atkins told the Senate. He promised to guide the SEC “through a rational, coherent, and principled approach.”
Atkins replaces Gary Gensler, who sued numerous crypto firms during the Biden era for alleged securities violations.
Previously acting Chair Mark Uyeda and Commissioner Hester Peirce have already moved to dismiss most of these, while also clearing meme coins and crypto mining from securities oversight.
Criticizing Biden-era regulations as “unclear, overly politicized, complicated, and burdensome,” Atkins has signaled a deregulatory approach to the market.
Wall Street’s best
Financial disclosures for his candidacy reveal Atkins holds up to $5 million in digital-asset investment firm Off the Chain Capital LLC, where he is a limited partner.
Atkins has a combined net worth of roughly $327 million, including assets and equities from his heiress wife, making him one of the wealthiest to hold the SEC chair in decades.
President Trump’s SEC picks, beyond Atkins, show a consistent pattern of selecting individuals with strong Wall Street connections and a track record of handling financial industry matters.
Crypto investment firm Unicoin is gearing up for a courtroom clash with Wall Street’s top cop, as the Securities and Exchange Commission has signaled plans to press ahead with its pursuit of the Miami-based company, Decrypt has learned.
According to co-founder Alex Konanykhin, the SEC’s Division of Enforcement gave Unicoin until April 18 to enter into settlement talks over allegations that the company knowingly violated both registration and antifraud provisions of federal securities law.
That…
In his first term, Trump picked Jay Clayton, who served at Sullivan & Cromwell, a prominent law firm with deep ties to Wall Street. At the law firm, Clayton represented top financial firms, including Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Bear Stearns, and UBS.
The Atkins-led SEC now faces decisions on over 70 crypto-related ETF applications, with crypto assets ranging from Solana and XRP to Dogecoin and MELANIA.
“Gonna be a wild year,” Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Balchunas said on X.
Edited by Sebastian Sinclair
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