Over the past 24 hours, digital-asset legal risk has clustered around three themes: (1) how existing securities laws apply to “tokenized securities” in the United States, (2) sanctions and financial-crime enforcement expectations for cryptoasset firms in the United Kingdom, and (3) tightening scrutiny of consumer-facing crypto advertising and financial-promotion messaging in the UK. Together, these developments reinforce a consistent direction of travel: regulators are prioritizing clarity on instrument classification, faster and more transparent enforcement pathways, and higher marketing standards where retail audiences are involved.
On January 28, 2026, staff from the SEC’s Divisions of Corporation Finance, Investment Management, and Trading and Markets published a statement describing how federal securities laws apply when a “security” is formatted as, or represented by, a crypto asset and recorded on a crypto network (a “tokenized security”). (sec.gov)
Key points for legal and compliance teams:
Practical takeaway: the statement reads as an invitation for market participants to map their product structures to established securities-law categories (including security entitlements and structured “linked” exposures), and to engage the SEC on registration, exemptive, or no-action pathways where needed. (sec.gov)
On January 29, 2026, the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) published a consultation response and outlined a revised enforcement framework intended to support compliance and increase transparency and speed in sanctions enforcement. (ofsi.blog.gov.uk)
Notable elements include:
While OFSI’s framework is not crypto-specific, it is directly relevant to cryptoasset firms that touch sanctioned jurisdictions, sanctioned persons, or high-risk typologies. It signals a compliance environment where early engagement, self-reporting, and remediation posture may materially affect outcomes.
On January 28, 2026, OFSI highlighted a multi-agency operational effort targeting sanctions offences involving cryptoassets, including collaboration via a pilot initiative (the “Crypto Cash Fusion Cell”) bringing together OFSI, law enforcement, HMRC, the FCA and others. (ofsi.blog.gov.uk) The post underscores an enforcement expectation that cryptoassets used to evade sanctions will be treated no differently than traditional currencies, and points firms to OFSI’s threat assessment material on cryptoasset-sector sanctions compliance. (ofsi.blog.gov.uk)
In a memorandum disposition filed January 27, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed summary judgment for Ripple on federal Securities Act Section 12(a)(1) claims, holding that the three-year statute of repose in Section 13 barred the claims.
The panel concluded that, on the record before it, XRP had been “bona fide offered to the public” as early as 2013, and that the plaintiff failed to raise a material factual issue that later distributions (including 2017 releases from escrow-like arrangements) constituted a separate offering that would restart the repose period. The court also rejected proposed theories it viewed as ill-suited to the statute of repose and emphasized the certainty function of repose.
Scope note: the disposition states it is not for publication and is not precedent except as provided by Ninth Circuit rules, and the appellate decision is limited to claims included in the district court’s Rule 54(b) certification.
The UK Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) banned a series of Coinbase adverts on the basis that they irresponsibly suggested crypto could be a solution to cost-of-living pressures and failed to adequately communicate risk, reflecting continued scrutiny of consumer-facing crypto promotions. (The Guardian) While not a court action, it is a meaningful enforcement signal for firms marketing digital-asset services to UK consumers, particularly on “risk trivialization” and “complex products presented as simple solutions.” (The Guardian)
The SEC staff statement increases the compliance premium on precise structural characterization. Firms should be able to explain, in plain terms, whether the token is:
For exchanges, broker-dealers, ATS operators, and custodians, this taxonomy has direct downstream effects on: registration posture, customer disclosures, custody/control frameworks, books-and-records, and conflicts/agency disclosures.
OFSI’s messaging, together with the multi-agency “fusion cell” approach, supports a view that sanctions compliance in crypto is moving beyond policy documents into rapid triage, intelligence-led inquiries, and coordinated disruption. (ofsi.blog.gov.uk)
Compliance teams should stress-test:
The ASA decision reinforces that crypto advertising risk is not limited to formal “financial promotions” rules. Consumer-protection bodies can and do intervene where messaging implies crypto is a practical fix for economic hardship or underplays volatility and loss risk. (The Guardian)
Firms operating in, or targeting, the UK should review:
Key items to watch next:
This article was originally published as Crypto Law Briefing: SEC Tokenization Guidance, UK Sanctions and Ads Crackdown on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

