Fidelity Investments has called on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to develop clearer regulatory guidelines for integrating cryptocurrencies into existing market structures. The push from one of the world's largest asset managers targets key areas including broker-dealer rules, custody frameworks, and on-chain settlement, adding institutional weight to an industry-wide demand for regulatory clarity.
What Fidelity Is Asking the SEC to Do
Fidelity submitted its recommendations to the SEC's crypto task force, pressing the agency to provide clarity on on-chain settlement and define how digital assets fit within the existing securities regulatory framework. The firm specifically flagged the need for workable rules around broker-dealer registration, custody requirements, and the treatment of tokenized securities.
Fidelity — Total Customer Assets
$5.8 Trillion
Fidelity is one of the world's largest asset managers, giving its call for SEC crypto market structure clarity significant institutional weight.
The recommendations are notable given the scale of Fidelity's operations. With approximately $5.8 trillion in total customer assets and an established Digital Assets division that already offers institutional crypto custody and spot Bitcoin ETF products, Fidelity is not making an abstract request. It is asking for rules that would directly govern its own expanding crypto business.
Fidelity's filing urged the SEC to create clear crypto rules for broker-dealers, arguing that existing regulations were designed for traditional securities and do not adequately address the unique characteristics of digital assets. The firm pointed to custody and trading as areas where current ambiguity creates operational uncertainty for financial institutions seeking to participate in crypto markets.
Why Market Structure Clarity Is the Central Issue for Crypto
The regulatory gap Fidelity is highlighting is not abstract. Market structure rules determine how assets are traded, settled, and custodied at the institutional level. Without clear guidance on whether specific crypto assets fall under securities law, commodities law, or something else entirely, large financial firms face compliance risks that limit their participation.
Broker-dealer registration is a core example. Traditional broker-dealers operate under well-defined SEC rules governing capital requirements, customer protection, and reporting. Applying those same rules to firms handling crypto assets raises unresolved questions about custody standards, particularly for assets that exist on decentralized blockchains rather than within centralized clearinghouses.
Fidelity is not alone in pushing for this clarity. Other major institutional players, including Franklin Templeton, which has highlighted the real-world utility of assets like XRP, have similarly argued that clear rules would accelerate institutional adoption rather than hinder it. The pattern is consistent: large asset managers want to offer crypto products but need regulatory certainty before scaling those offerings.
The firm's emphasis on tokenized securities is also significant. Tokenization, the process of representing traditional financial instruments like bonds or equities on a blockchain, is an area where Fidelity sees particular urgency for regulatory clarity. Without defined rules, the line between a tokenized security and a crypto asset remains legally blurred, creating risk for issuers and intermediaries alike.
Where the SEC Stands and What Comes Next
The SEC's crypto task force, which received Fidelity's submission, was established to gather industry input on how the agency should approach digital asset regulation. The task force has solicited comment from a range of stakeholders, and Fidelity's letter is one of several from major financial institutions pushing for clearer frameworks.
Congressional activity adds another layer. Crypto market structure legislation, building on earlier efforts like the FIT21 bill, has been a recurring topic in 2026. Any SEC rulemaking will likely need to align with or defer to whatever framework Congress ultimately passes, creating a parallel track that Fidelity and others are watching closely.
The broader regulatory environment has shifted in recent months. The SEC has moved away from enforcement-first approaches in some areas, though the pace of formal rulemaking on crypto market structure has been slower than the industry has demanded. Fidelity's filing adds pressure from a firm the SEC cannot easily dismiss, given its scale and its existing regulated presence in both traditional and digital asset markets.
For institutional investors tracking how regulation shapes large-scale Bitcoin accumulation by companies like Strategy, the outcome of these regulatory conversations will directly affect which firms can hold, trade, and custody crypto assets on behalf of clients. It will also determine how quickly products like tokenized securities can move from pilot stage to mainstream adoption.
Whether the SEC responds with formal rulemaking, additional guidance, or defers to Congressional action remains an open question. What is clear is that the largest players in traditional finance are no longer waiting on the sidelines. They are actively telling regulators what rules they need, and in markets already sensitive to geopolitical and macro uncertainty, the regulatory trajectory matters as much as any single price movement.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.