SEC vs. Ripple: How a 90-Year-Old Legal Test Just Threw Crypto Regulation Into Chaos
The SEC’s obsession with applying the ancient Howey Test to Ripple’s XRP has backfired—spectacularly. A federal judge just shredded the agency’s logic, exposing the glaring disconnect between Depression-era securities law and 21st-century digital assets.
Here’s why this ruling changes everything (and why Wall Street’s compliance drones are sweating).
The Howey Test Hits a Wall
Judge Torres’ landmark decision draws a line between institutional sales (which flunk Howey) and programmatic sales (which don’t). Translation: the SEC’s one-size-fits-all enforcement strategy just got kneecapped.
Ripple’s Partial Win, Crypto’s Full Validation
XRP isn’t a security when traded on exchanges. This precedent could gut dozens of other SEC cases—and force Gary Gensler to actually write clear rules instead of ruling by lawsuit.
The Irony Is Delicious
The SEC spent years weaponizing a 90-year-old precedent designed for Florida orange groves. Now that same precedent is being used to defend algorithmic trading. Maybe next they’ll apply railroad regulations to SpaceX.
One thing’s clear: the era of regulation-by-enforcement is ending. Whether the SEC adapts or gets left behind depends on if they can out-stubborn a bull market.