As crypto’s sheriff prepares to hang up his spurs, SEC Chair Gary Gensler took the opportunity to separate Bitcoin from the rest of the herd.
Commissioner Mark Uyeda will take over running the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as the agency awaits the Senate confirmation on
Some crypto firms worry that the agency's harsh enforcement actions may still impact them months or years into a new administration.
Securities and Exchange Commission chair Gary Gensler is not backing down from his views about the cryptocurrency industry as he prepares to walk out the door, saying 'many in the crypto field are not complying with our time tested laws.
A new report from the financial insights firm Cornerstone Research claims that Gary Gensler slowed down crypto enforcement actions in his final year as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair.
"Arbitrary" and "capricious" will forever characterize Gary Gensler's tenure at the helm of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, a couple of words used in two crucial rebukes by U.S. courts. Why it matters: The former Goldman partner and veteran regulator established the crypto industry as enemy number one from the outset of his term in 2021.
Gary Gensler, the SEC chair everyone loves to hate—or hate to love—is on his way out, leaving behind a trail of lawsuits, crypto crackdowns, and some very opinionated quotes. In his final interview before stepping down,
SEC leadership transition marks Gensler's departure; Atkins to lead with pro-business focus, especially in crypto regulation.
The newly inaugurated Trump White House taps the contrarian commissioner as temporary head amid a slew of walk-outs from the agency.
Gary Gensler defended his legacy as SEC Chair, citing the agency's focus on regulating the $60 trillion U.S. equity market and addressing systemic issues.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission’s crypto-related enforcement actions dropped by 30% in the last year under former Chair Gary Gensler, a report has found. The agency launched just 33 crypto-related actions in its last year under Gensler,
SEC rescinds controversial SAB 121, replacing it with crypto-friendly SAB 122 to ease burdens on banks and crypto firms.