The Howey test struggles to classify decentralized crypto networks and modern token designs.
Functional token utility should matter more than speculative trading expectations.
The United States financial regulatory landscape stands at a
critical juncture. With the recent passage of key stablecoin legislation, the
GENIUS Act in July 2025, and the ongoing, highly anticipated debate over comprehensive
market structure bills like the CLARITY Act in early 2026, the nation is
opening up to the crypto economy.
This momentum, coupled with a discernible
shift in administrative posture from enforcement-heavy to innovation-friendly,
signals a new era for digital assets.
Why the Howey Test No Longer Fits Crypto
The cornerstone of U.S. securities law, the 1946 Howey test, remains an anachronistic and ill-suited tool for the nuances
of a rapidly evolving, often decentralized technological paradigm.
It is
my firm opinion that relying solely on this decades-old precedent for a
modern, multi-trillion-dollar global market is a fool’s errand that
stifles innovation while failing to provide genuine investor protection. A new,
crypto-centric framework is not just a regulatory desire; it is an economic
necessity.
An Orange Grove Test Meets Decentralized Finance
The original Howey test, born from a dispute over orange groves
in Florida, determines a security if there is an investment of money in a
common enterprise with a reasonable expectation of profits derived solely from
the efforts of others.
This framework, while flexible in its time, struggles to
capture the essence of decentralized finance (DeFi), where the efforts of
others are often distributed among countless, sometimes anonymous, participants,
governed by immutable code rather than a central corporation.
Legal Uncertainty and the Cost to Institutional Adoption
The current approach fosters an environment where an asset
may be considered a security at launch but a commodity later. This legal gray
area is what most institutional investors fear to tread, thus hindering
mainstream adoption and keeping the U.S. from cementing its crypto capital
status.
Drawing on proposals such as Commissioner Hester Peirce’s
safe harbor and the functional token taxonomy advanced by industry leaders, I
propose a crypto-centric regulatory framework built around four core rules. The
goal is to promote U.S. innovation while preserving investor protection.
Rule One: The Decentralization Threshold
A modern framework must establish a clear, verifiable
standard for decentralization. Once a network or protocol meets this threshold,
it should exit securities law oversight and fall under a commodity framework,
likely overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
Rather than
relying on vague claims of “no central party,” regulators should assess
measurable factors such as token ownership dispersion, the number of
independent validators, and the immutability of smart contracts.
For example, if
no single entity, including the founding team, controls more than a defined
share—such as 20%—of governance tokens or validation power, the project would
qualify. This provides a predictable path from launch to decentralization,
addressing one of the industry’s most persistent legal uncertainties.
Does the Howey test still apply to crypto in 2025?
Rule Two: Functional Utility Versus Speculative Intent
The framework should prioritize a token’s actual use within
a live network over speculative expectations. Tokens that serve clear,
consumptive purposes—such as paying network fees, accessing services, or
participating in on-chain governance—should be treated differently from passive
investment instruments.
This functional approach better reflects how crypto
networks operate and reduces the risk of utility tokens being swept into
securities litigation solely due to secondary-market trading behavior.
Rule Three: Transparency and On-Chain Disclosure
Investor protection should be achieved through standardized,
on-chain disclosures rather than traditional prospectuses. Projects should
provide machine-readable information on audits, token supply and distribution,
governance structures, and material risks.
This “code is law, disclosure is
compliance” model aligns with the transparency of public blockchains and builds
on disclosure principles embedded in the CLARITY Act.
JUST IN: Senator Cynthia Lummis says "most digital assets are not legally securities under the Howey test. The US is behind other countries in creating laws for digital assets. Stablecoins will bring our payment system into the 21st century." 🇺🇸 #Cardano$ADApic.twitter.com/YrfKY9G1Os
Rule Four: Intermediary Liability and Consumer Safeguards
Regulation should focus on centralized intermediaries where
most retail users interact. The GENIUS Act sets a useful precedent through
reserve requirements and AML obligations. Strong oversight of exchanges and
service providers can protect consumers without constraining decentralized
innovation.
A Narrow Window to Get Crypto Regulation Right
The U.S. is at a pivotal moment. The current legislative momentum offers a rare chance to get this right. By moving
beyond the archaic limitations of the Howey test and embracing a bespoke,
forward-thinking framework, we can provide the regulatory clarity the market
craves, protect investors, and ensure America remains a global leader in the
digital financial revolution.
Sticking to the old ways in a new world is a
path to irrelevance, and that is a price the U.S. economy cannot afford to pay.
The United States financial regulatory landscape stands at a
critical juncture. With the recent passage of key stablecoin legislation, the
GENIUS Act in July 2025, and the ongoing, highly anticipated debate over comprehensive
market structure bills like the CLARITY Act in early 2026, the nation is
opening up to the crypto economy.
This momentum, coupled with a discernible
shift in administrative posture from enforcement-heavy to innovation-friendly,
signals a new era for digital assets.
Why the Howey Test No Longer Fits Crypto
The cornerstone of U.S. securities law, the 1946 Howey test, remains an anachronistic and ill-suited tool for the nuances
of a rapidly evolving, often decentralized technological paradigm.
It is
my firm opinion that relying solely on this decades-old precedent for a
modern, multi-trillion-dollar global market is a fool’s errand that
stifles innovation while failing to provide genuine investor protection. A new,
crypto-centric framework is not just a regulatory desire; it is an economic
necessity.
An Orange Grove Test Meets Decentralized Finance
The original Howey test, born from a dispute over orange groves
in Florida, determines a security if there is an investment of money in a
common enterprise with a reasonable expectation of profits derived solely from
the efforts of others.
This framework, while flexible in its time, struggles to
capture the essence of decentralized finance (DeFi), where the efforts of
others are often distributed among countless, sometimes anonymous, participants,
governed by immutable code rather than a central corporation.
Legal Uncertainty and the Cost to Institutional Adoption
The current approach fosters an environment where an asset
may be considered a security at launch but a commodity later. This legal gray
area is what most institutional investors fear to tread, thus hindering
mainstream adoption and keeping the U.S. from cementing its crypto capital
status.
Drawing on proposals such as Commissioner Hester Peirce’s
safe harbor and the functional token taxonomy advanced by industry leaders, I
propose a crypto-centric regulatory framework built around four core rules. The
goal is to promote U.S. innovation while preserving investor protection.
Rule One: The Decentralization Threshold
A modern framework must establish a clear, verifiable
standard for decentralization. Once a network or protocol meets this threshold,
it should exit securities law oversight and fall under a commodity framework,
likely overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
Rather than
relying on vague claims of “no central party,” regulators should assess
measurable factors such as token ownership dispersion, the number of
independent validators, and the immutability of smart contracts.
For example, if
no single entity, including the founding team, controls more than a defined
share—such as 20%—of governance tokens or validation power, the project would
qualify. This provides a predictable path from launch to decentralization,
addressing one of the industry’s most persistent legal uncertainties.
Does the Howey test still apply to crypto in 2025?
Rule Two: Functional Utility Versus Speculative Intent
The framework should prioritize a token’s actual use within
a live network over speculative expectations. Tokens that serve clear,
consumptive purposes—such as paying network fees, accessing services, or
participating in on-chain governance—should be treated differently from passive
investment instruments.
This functional approach better reflects how crypto
networks operate and reduces the risk of utility tokens being swept into
securities litigation solely due to secondary-market trading behavior.
Rule Three: Transparency and On-Chain Disclosure
Investor protection should be achieved through standardized,
on-chain disclosures rather than traditional prospectuses. Projects should
provide machine-readable information on audits, token supply and distribution,
governance structures, and material risks.
This “code is law, disclosure is
compliance” model aligns with the transparency of public blockchains and builds
on disclosure principles embedded in the CLARITY Act.
JUST IN: Senator Cynthia Lummis says "most digital assets are not legally securities under the Howey test. The US is behind other countries in creating laws for digital assets. Stablecoins will bring our payment system into the 21st century." 🇺🇸 #Cardano$ADApic.twitter.com/YrfKY9G1Os
Rule Four: Intermediary Liability and Consumer Safeguards
Regulation should focus on centralized intermediaries where
most retail users interact. The GENIUS Act sets a useful precedent through
reserve requirements and AML obligations. Strong oversight of exchanges and
service providers can protect consumers without constraining decentralized
innovation.
A Narrow Window to Get Crypto Regulation Right
The U.S. is at a pivotal moment. The current legislative momentum offers a rare chance to get this right. By moving
beyond the archaic limitations of the Howey test and embracing a bespoke,
forward-thinking framework, we can provide the regulatory clarity the market
craves, protect investors, and ensure America remains a global leader in the
digital financial revolution.
Sticking to the old ways in a new world is a
path to irrelevance, and that is a price the U.S. economy cannot afford to pay.
Anndy Lian is an all-rounded business strategist in Asia. He has provided advisory across a variety of industries for local, international, public listed companies and governments. He is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur, book author, investor, board member and keynote speaker.
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