Deep Tide TechFlow News, February 10 — SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda spoke at the 2026 Asset Management Derivatives Forum, highlighting the progress of government bond clearing rules implementation and the development of tokenization in the securities market.
The SEC has approved the registration of two new clearinghouses, CME Securities Clearing and ICE Clear Credit, providing market participants with more clearing options. Data from the Office of Financial Research indicates that if the rules are implemented eight months before 2025, the average global systemically important bank in the U.S. could free up $34.5 billion in asset-liability space.
Regarding tokenization, Uyeda stated that the SEC has stopped primarily using enforcement to express viewpoints and is instead promoting limited-scope pilots through regulatory guidance and exemption orders. He emphasized that SEC rules should remain technologically neutral, focus on outcomes rather than processes, and ensure appropriate investor protection measures.
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SEC Commissioner Uyeda: Tokenization of securities markets requires technology-neutral regulation; enforcement-led approaches have been discontinued
Deep Tide TechFlow News, February 10 — SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda spoke at the 2026 Asset Management Derivatives Forum, highlighting the progress of government bond clearing rules implementation and the development of tokenization in the securities market.
The SEC has approved the registration of two new clearinghouses, CME Securities Clearing and ICE Clear Credit, providing market participants with more clearing options. Data from the Office of Financial Research indicates that if the rules are implemented eight months before 2025, the average global systemically important bank in the U.S. could free up $34.5 billion in asset-liability space.
Regarding tokenization, Uyeda stated that the SEC has stopped primarily using enforcement to express viewpoints and is instead promoting limited-scope pilots through regulatory guidance and exemption orders. He emphasized that SEC rules should remain technologically neutral, focus on outcomes rather than processes, and ensure appropriate investor protection measures.