SEC Targets 2025 Launch for Groundbreaking Crypto Innovation Exemption

Crypto markets brace for regulatory breakthrough as SEC pushes forward with innovation-friendly framework.
The Regulatory Shift
Wall Street's watchdog finally acknowledges what crypto enthusiasts have known for years—innovation waits for no regulator. The Securities and Exchange Commission plans to roll out a specialized exemption specifically designed for cryptocurrency projects by December 2025, marking a potential turning point for digital asset development in the United States.
Timeline Tension
While the 2025 deadline signals progress, it also highlights how slowly regulatory wheels turn compared to blockchain's lightning-fast evolution. Traditional finance veterans might call this 'measured progress'—crypto builders call it another three years of operating in regulatory purgatory.
The compliance crowd finally discovers what happens when you try to put blockchain in a box—it just creates another chain. The exemption can't come soon enough for an industry that's been building the future while regulators were still reading the manual.
OpenAI takes 10% stake as AMD commits massive GPU power
The big trigger behind this price explosion is AMD’s newly announced deal with OpenAI. The company behind ChatGPT is giving AMD a vote of confidence, and up to a 10% stake, in exchange for years’ worth of GPU rollout. The plan is to deploy 6 gigawatts of AMD Instinct GPUs over several years, which is a serious buildout (measured in gigawatts, not just chips), proving just how massive the AI infrastructure race has become.
Blayne Curtis, analyst at Jefferies, called it a “multi-generational opportunity” in a note to clients Monday night. He admitted the upgrade wasn’t even on the table before the announcement, but the deal “forced his hand.” His note said, “AMD will still have to hit milestones, but this is a strong validation of AMD’s AI roadmap and the level of AI demand in general.”
Blayne added that OpenAI has already been “on a spending spree,” cutting non-binding deals with Nvidia, Oracle, and Samsung/Hynix, all pointing to a massive land grab for compute capacity and energy-hungry data centers.
The agreement isn’t signed in blood, but the size and ambition show that OpenAI sees this as a long-haul investment in compute. And if the numbers hold up, AMD may find itself stealing even more share from Nvidia, especially as AI players look to diversify supplier exposure amid surging demand.
Investors split on AI profits while bubble fears grow
On CNBC’s “Halftime Report” Tuesday, Josh Brown from Ritholtz Wealth Management said he’s not blind to the bubble, but said people need to get over the idea that everything is hype. “Of course, there’s a bubble,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean there aren’t real projects that are going to have world-transforming outcomes.”
He warned against throwing all AI bets into the “speculative” bucket, saying investors should still take some of them seriously. At the same time, Brown didn’t deny things are getting frothy. “Anytime you have an environment where there’s this much enthusiasm for a new technology, and there are literally trillions of dollars being spent, not all of that spending is going to have a nice ROI at the end of the rainbow,” he said.
Tuesday’s broader market action reflected some of that tension. The Nasdaq Composite closed down 0.7%, even though it had just touched a fresh high the day before. Oracle led a wave of pullbacks in other AI-related names, like Nvidia, Western Digital, and SanDisk.
That MOVE came after The Information reported that Oracle’s cloud business saw slimmer-than-expected profit margins on Nvidia sales for the quarter ending in August.
That triggered fresh fears that while AI stocks might look unstoppable on the surface, revenue might not keep up. Brown added that when this bubble finally gives, it might just be a fizzle, not a crash. “Most of the time, you’ll just see certain names blow up, you’ll see valuations contract [and] you’ll see a couple of years of sluggish share price growth as we digest some of the excess,” he said. “It doesn’t always have to be the Nasdaq down 85%.”
And with OpenAI onboard and analysts gunning for $300 to $400 targets, traders aren’t easing off the gas.
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