The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is preparing to propose a crypto rule as soon as this month that would make fundraising easier for startups, according to CoinDesk. The proposal would focus on easing how crypto companies raise money under U.S. securities rules.
The development matters because fundraising has been a central pressure point for crypto startups operating in the United States. A clearer or more accessible framework could affect how early-stage companies structure token-related financing and approach compliance.
The report indicates the proposal would come from the SEC, the main U.S. securities regulator, placing it within the broader policy debate over how digital asset businesses should be supervised. Any proposed rule would still need to move through the agency’s formal process before becoming final.
For crypto markets and founders, the key issue is whether the SEC’s approach gives companies more predictable options without removing investor protections. The details of the proposal, including eligibility, disclosure requirements, and limits on fundraising activity, were not specified in the supplied source material.
Until the SEC publishes the proposal, the practical impact remains uncertain. The report nevertheless signals that U.S. crypto policy could see a near-term rulemaking effort aimed specifically at startup capital formation.