In November 2024, the SEC celebrated 583 enforcement actions and a record $8.2 billion in remedies, saying crypto was proof it could keep pace with emerging threats. This week, the same agency published a 2025 review calling that approach a mistake.
The new report said prior resources were misapplied, criticized the pursuit of “media headlines,” and described the past year as a “necessary course correction” that included dismissing seven crypto registration-related cases.
While this is a clear sign that the SEC is easing up on crypto, the report also carries a silent admission. We see now that it's publicly disowning the enforcement strategy it was bragging about just over a year ago.
What the SEC was selling in 2024 and what changed in 2025
The fiscal 2024 review was triumphant by design.
The SEC reported 583 total enforcement actions and said the $8.2 billion in monetary remedies it gathered that year was the highest in the agency's history. It said its enforcement division was keeping pace with emerging threats and listed crypto prominently among them. The Terraform Labs and Do Kwon case, which alone accounted for roughly 56% of the year's total remedies, was treated as a signature achievement and as proof that the SEC could take on complex, high-profile defendants and win.
None of that language was even slightly subdued. The 2024 report presented volume and dollar totals as evidence of institutional vigor, positioning large case counts and massive dollar figures as the metrics that defended its relevance.
Crypto enforcement wasn't a side project the SEC worked on alongside other industries; it was the flagship. That context is essential to understanding what happened next, because every one of those metrics is now being used against it.
The fiscal 2025 review looks like a document written by a different agency.
The SEC reported 456 enforcement actions, a decline of more than 20% from the prior year. The headline monetary relief figure is $17.9 billion, but that number is misleading in ways the agency itself acknowledged. It's inflated by long-running Stanford litigation and by money credited against other judgments rather than collected fresh. Strip those items out, and the real fiscal 2025 total lands at about $2.7 billion: $1.4 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest, plus $1.3 billion in civil penalties.
What makes the report bigger than a set of smaller numbers is the words framing them.
The SEC presented the decline as a deliberate correction, arguing that prior enforcement leadership spent too much time on cases designed to generate volume and attract media attention rather than cases tied to direct, measurable investor harm.
That's a foundational critique that treats the old approach as conceptually wrong rather than just less productive. The current SEC is effectively arguing that its predecessor's favorite metrics overstated real enforcement value, which makes this one of the most important institutional claims we've seen in a while.
The crypto piece is the clearest illustration of that shift, even if it isn't the whole of it.
The fiscal 2025 report said seven crypto registration-related cases were dismissed and grouped them alongside off-channel communications cases and certain “dealer” enforcement actions as examples of a regime that prioritized case volume over direct investor protection. The language is pointed: these cases are described as part of a broader misallocation of resources, not deprioritized matters that were allowed to wind down.
That framing aligns with a string of high-profile retreats over the past year.
The SEC dismissed its civil enforcement action against Coinbase in early 2025, voluntarily dropped its lawsuit against Binance a few months later, and closed its investigation into Robinhood's crypto arm with no action at all. A new crypto task force was also created to shift the agency's stance from punishing firms for failing to register toward clarifying what registration actually requires.
Taken individually, each of those developments could be read as a routine change in enforcement appetite. Taken together, and now ratified in the agency's own annual report, they represent something considerably more ambitious. The SEC, which once used crypto to signal toughness, is now using it to signal restraint.
A reset with consequences
The enforcement shift we're now seeing from the SEC doesn't exist in a vacuum.
The enforcement division has been contending with significant leadership churn and staffing losses, including the resignation of its enforcement director and an 18% drop in division staff during fiscal 2025. While some of that is normal transition-year friction, enforcement experts quoted by Reuters saw the decline as evidence of a deeper strategic reset reflecting the current administration's broader skepticism of regulation-by-enforcement across multiple agencies.
The report's release was followed by the appointment of David Woodcock, a Gibson Dunn partner and former SEC regional office director, as the new head of enforcement. Woodcock replaces Margaret Ryan, who, according to Reuters, lasted just six months in the role before resigning over clashes with agency leadership about the program's direction, showing the course correction hasn't been frictionless even within the SEC's own ranks.
That context connects the SEC's self-criticism to a wider argument playing out in Washington, one about whether the entire model of using enforcement actions as a first-resort regulatory tool, filing cases to establish legal precedent rather than waiting for Congress or rulemaking to clarify the rules, was ever really appropriate. The current SEC is betting that it wasn't, and it's willing to say so in writing.
There's an irony worth sitting with. In November 2024, high case counts and massive remedies totals were the metrics the SEC chose to prove it was doing its job well. By April 2026, lower case counts and smaller dollar figures serve the same purpose.
The agency changed the definition of success and applied that new definition retroactively to discredit the work it was celebrating less than two years ago.
Whether the reframing is justified will play out over the coming years as the effects of lighter enforcement become measurable. But the document itself is remarkable: a federal regulator using its own annual report to argue against the logic of its own recent past.
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