
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on June 2, 2026, published its Draft Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2026 through 2030, placing digital assets at the center of a broad regulatory reset under Chairman Paul S. Atkins.
The plan, which is open for public comment through July 2, 2026, charts a course that the agency says will return the SEC to its core three-part mission: protecting investors, maintaining fair and efficient markets, and facilitating capital formation.
Chairman Atkins described the release as “a new day at the SEC,” one aimed at unwinding what his administration views as regulatory overreach from prior years.
The plan is organized around three goals: renewing regulatory policy to support innovation and capital formation, shifting enforcement practices toward established legal violations rather than expansive agency action, and optimizing internal operations through technology and organizational reform.
Atkins said the Commission “will not stray” from its foundational mandate set by Congress in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Crypto gets an SEC shout out
Perhaps the most consequential section of the plan is its treatment of blockchain and cryptocurrency. The document states that “crypto asset technologies have the potential to revolutionize America’s financial infrastructure and deliver new optionality, efficiencies, cost reductions, transparency, and risk mitigation for the benefit of all Americans.”
The SEC frames this not as a caveat, but as a rationale for building a clearer, more coherent framework that gives innovators legal certainty while preserving investor protection.
Objective 1.1 of the plan calls for the SEC to provide “a firm regulatory foundation for digital assets and distributed ledger technologies through a rational, coherent, and principled approach.”
This includes clarifying the boundaries of securities law as they apply to digital assets, enabling compliant capital formation through tokenized offerings, and supporting what the document calls “onchain financial infrastructure.”
The plan also commits to resolving jurisdictional overlap between the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — a long-standing point of friction for the crypto industry .
Beyond digital assets, the plan targets capital formation barriers for small businesses and early-stage companies. It calls for modernizing Regulation A, streamlining shelf registration, and reducing disclosure complexity so entrepreneurs can tap both public and private markets with fewer regulatory obstacles.
On enforcement, the SEC signals a shift away from what critics have called regulation-by-enforcement — particularly the approach taken toward crypto firms in recent years.
The new plan instructs staff to focus on “fraud and manipulation” rather than expanding regulatory reach through ad hoc actions, and states that success in enforcement should be measured by deterrence and market clarity, not by case volume or fine totals.
Tech overhaul on the horizon
The third goal of the plan addresses internal operations, with a focus on modernizing the SEC’s decades-old EDGAR filing system and rolling out artificial intelligence across agency functions. The document notes that AI and blockchain could “improve oversight, reduce costs, and unlock new efficiencies” inside the commission itself.
The agency oversees approximately $207 trillion in annual U.S. equity trading and holds roughly 19 terabytes of disclosure data on EDGAR — systems the plan acknowledges need meaningful upgrades.




