Liquid staking just got approved by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. In a staff statement released Tuesday, the agency clarified that this type of staking does not require securities law disclosures, offering the industry a degree of legal clarity it has long sought.
The statement, published by the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance, addresses how liquid staking works when users deposit crypto assets with a third-party provider in exchange for "receipt tokens." These tokens can be used in decentralized finance (DeFi) while the original assets remain staked on proof-of-stake blockchains.
No Entrepreneurial Effort Means No Security
This is not formal rulemaking or binding legal guidance. Instead, it reflects how the agency is currently viewing the issue and suggests that those who follow the described practices likely won’t face enforcement.
The SEC drew a line between what constitutes a securities offering and what doesn't by focusing on the role of staking providers. According to the statement, these providers act merely as agents executing staking on behalf of depositors. They don’t exercise managerial control or make decisions about how the deposited assets are used.
This framing echoes previous guidance on custodial staking arrangements. In both cases, the lack of provider discretion over user assets appears to be a decisive factor in avoiding securitiesregulation.
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The announcement caused a mild uptick in tokens tied to popular liquid staking platforms such as Lido, Jito, and Rocket Pool. However, the gains were short-lived, and the tokens ended the day lower, according to data from CoinGecko.
Despite the muted price response, the market appears to welcome the legal breathing room. According to DeFi data aggregator DefiLlama, liquid staking accounts for nearly $67 billion in total value locked across blockchains, with Lido alone responsible for $31.7 billion.
More Clarity, Less Enforcement Risk
Tuesday’s statement adds to a growing patchwork of SEC communications on staking. While earlier notes focused on protocol staking, this one zooms in on the mechanics of liquid staking—especially around reward distribution, token minting, and slashing.
For now, crypto firms and users engaged in liquid staking can breathe a little easier. But the lack of formal rulemaking means the relief could be temporary, depending on future enforcement actions or changes in agency leadership.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
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