SEC Drops Clarity Bomb: Liquid Staking Not a Security, Says Division

Key Takeaways:
- The SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance has officially stated that Liquid Staking activities do not constitute securities transactions.
- Staking Receipt Tokens (LSTs) are also not considered securities, provided they meet specified criteria.
- This regulatory green light removes major compliance hurdles for Ethereum and Solana staking protocols and crypto ETF issuers.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has clarified that liquid staking – a cornerstone of decentralized finance – does not qualify as a securities offering under U.S. law. On August 5, 2025, a long-awaited opinion was issued by the agency Division of Corporation Finance providing long overdue clarity to a burgeoning industry that supports multi-billion-dollar ecosystems such as Ethereum and Solana.
Read More: SEC’s ‘Project Crypto’ Could Unleash Trillions: Super-Apps, Token Clarity, and a U.S. Crypto Boom?
SEC: Liquid Staking Activities Don’t Trigger Securities Regulations
The Statement That Changed the Stakes
The Division stated that activities involved in Liquid Staking do not fall under Section 2(a)(1) of the Securities Act or Section 3(a)(10) of the Exchange Act. That means liquid staking isn’t treated as an offer or sale of securities.
This includes:
- Depositing crypto assets with a protocol or third-party service.
- Receiving 1:1 Staking Receipt Tokens (LSTs) in return.
- Earning rewards and redeeming assets via the staking provider.
Importantly, users retain full ownership of their staked crypto, and any rewards or penalties accrued remain tied to the protocol’s algorithmic mechanisms not the managerial efforts of a third party, which is a key factor under the SEC’s Howey Test.
Ethereum ETFs, LSTs, and Market Impact
Are Liquid Staking Tokens the Missing Piece for Spot ETFs?
The decision may have massive consequences on prospective Solana and Ethereum spot ETFs, in particular, some aim to incorporate staking techniques. Companies such as Bitwise, VanEck, and Franklin Templeton have been interested in adding LSTs stETH, rETH, or jitoSOL to their portfolios to provide additional liquidity and yield.
“This was the last regulatory domino,” tweeted ETF expert Nate Geraci. “LSTs will now play a pivotal role in managing liquidity for ETH ETFs.”
Several industry coalitions, including the Solana Policy Institute and Multicoin Capital, recently urged the SEC to recognize Liquid Staking Tokens in upcoming ETF frameworks.
With the SEC’s new stance, those ETFs are one step closer to approval, especially if issuers can demonstrate that LSTs are used purely as liquidity tools – not investment vehicles.
What’s Included, What’s Not
The SEC statement covers both protocol-based and third-party Liquid Staking Providers, as long as:
- Depositors retain ownership.
- Providers don’t set returns or exercise discretion over staking amounts.
- Activities remain administrative (e.g., node selection, reward distribution).
Notably Excluded:
The statement does not protect activities that deviate from this structure. If a Liquid Staking Provider:
- Promises fixed returns,
- Engages in active management,
- Or adds complex financial wrappers,
…those actions could still trigger securities regulations.
Industry Reactions: Relief and Expansion
The clarity by SEC has been widely accepted by legal analysts and crypto stakeholders. Rebecca Rettig, Chief Legal Officer of Jito Labs has said that the decision echoes a sentiment advanced by many, the LST are not speculative assets but evidence of ownerships.
Marinade Finance, another top Solana staking protocol, also released a statement applauding the SEC’s position, suggesting that more retail users can now safely access staking yields.
Read More: SEC Pushes Crypto ETF Decisions Again, $100B Market Waits on Truth Social and Grayscale Rulings
Looking Ahead
As Project Crypto unfolds, this statement marks a pivotal shift in tone from the SEC – moving away from blanket enforcement and toward structured clarity. It could open doors to:
- Expanded DeFi integration in TradFi products
- ETF adoption of staking strategies
- Boosted participation in Ethereum’s proof-of-stake economy
With Liquid Staking now deemed securities-law-free (under precise parameters) the market has been given not just a breather but a huge step forward in legitimacy.
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