In a move that could reshape how crypto is regulated in America, the CFTC just killed a 28-year-old rule that forced companies to stay silent after settling with regulators. It’s like the government finally admitting: “Maybe we shouldn’t have been telling people to shut up.”
By Maria Rodriguez | June 4, 2026
Here’s what just happened and why it matters for anyone holding crypto: the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) — one of the two main agencies that oversee financial markets in the US — officially scrapped its “No-Denial” policy. Since 1998, this rule forced any company that settled a case with the CFTC to never publicly deny the allegations, even after paying their fine. Think of it as a permanent gag order. You pay up, and then you’re not allowed to tell your side of the story. Ever.
CFTC Chairman Mike Selig called the policy “a relic of administrative overreach” and announced the agency is also seeking to vacate a $5 million settlement with crypto exchange Gemini, which they now say was “politically targeted” under previous leadership. Bitcoin is holding steady at $63,766, and XRP — now officially classified as a digital commodity — trades at $1.18.
What Was the “Gag Order” and Why Should You Care?
For nearly 30 years, if the CFTC (or the SEC, until recently) came after your company, you had two choices: fight them in court for years and risk going bankrupt from legal fees, or settle and sign a paper saying you “neither admit nor deny” the charges — and then promise to never, ever publicly deny them again.
For regular people and small crypto companies, this was devastating. Imagine being accused of something, paying a huge fine to make it go away, and then being legally barred from telling your customers “we didn’t actually do this.” That’s what thousands of companies dealt with for decades.
The CFTC now says this practice violated the First Amendment — the right to free speech. Selig argued that forcing a company to sign away its right to disagree with the government’s version of events is “antithetical to the American legal tradition.” By scrapping this rule, companies can now defend themselves publicly even after settling a case.
The Gemini Case: A Political Settlement Gets Undone
The most concrete example of this shift is the Gemini settlement. The CFTC is moving to throw out a $5 million penalty against the crypto exchange, admitting the original case didn’t have proper legal grounding. This isn’t just about one company — it’s a signal to the entire crypto industry, including Coinbase and Kraken, that the rules have fundamentally changed.
The legal groundwork was laid in May 2026 when the SEC, under Chairman Paul S. Atkins, made a similar move. Together, these two agencies are shifting from an “enforcement-first” approach — basically, sue first and ask questions later — to something that looks more like actual regulation with clear rules.
This shift also ties into the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, which just passed the Senate Banking Committee with a bipartisan 15–9 vote. That bill would give the CFTC clear authority over digital commodities like Ethereum ($1,778) and Solana ($70.09).
What Could Happen Next?
The “Great Unmasking.” Companies that were forced to settle under the old gag-order system may now revisit their cases or publicly tell their side of the story. We could see a flood of petitions to overturn old settlements.
More institutional money flowing into crypto. When regulators admit they were too aggressive, it reduces the “political risk” that’s kept big banks and pension funds away. The CFTC has already approved Bitcoin perpetual futures and 24/7 XRP futures on the CME. If the Clarity Act passes, we could see a proper regulatory framework for digital assets by the end of 2026.
Potential risks for regular investors. The SEC also just killed the Pattern Day Trading rule — which required $25,000 in your account to day-trade stocks. Some analysts worry that removing too many guardrails too fast could create a “Wild West” situation where regular people take on more risk than they realize.
The Timeline: How We Got Here
- March 2026 — The SEC and CFTC jointly classified the “Big Five” (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, Chainlink) as digital commodities.
- May 2026 — SEC Chairman Paul Atkins scrapped the SEC’s own gag-order policy.
- June 4, 2026 (Today) — CFTC kills the 1998 gag-order policy and moves to vacate the Gemini settlement.
- July 1, 2026 — The EU’s MiCA crypto regulation takes full effect, forcing global crypto companies to comply or face “immediate commercial risk.”
- August 31, 2026 — Deadline for the EU’s next round of crypto rules that could affect DeFi and staking.
What This Means for Your Money
The bottom line: crypto regulation in the US is going through its biggest shakeup in decades. The “sue first, ask questions later” era is ending. Companies can now defend themselves publicly, and regulators are being forced to build actual clear rules instead of relying on intimidation.
For investors, this is mostly good news. Clearer rules mean less uncertainty, which typically attracts more investment. Bitcoin holding at $63,766 despite recent ETF outflows suggests the market is already pricing in this “regulatory peace.” But the rapid removal of old rules without new ones fully in place means there’s a transition period where things could get bumpy.
The days of “blind settlements” are over. Whether that leads to a sustained bull run or a messy legal transition remains to be seen — but the game has undeniably changed.
The cryptocurrency market remains highly volatile. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
finally. the no-denial clause was basically agree you did nothing wrong but also shut up forever. glad CFTC is cleaning house, that $5M Gemini settlement was sketchy from the start
the timing with XRP at $1.18 is not coincidental. clearing the regulatory overhang was the bull case all along
XRP at $1.18 when the regulatory fog lifts is actually conservative. the real question is whether clarity sticks or the next admin reverses course
regulation by enforcement era officially dead? bout time. XRP holders have been screaming about this for years lmao
XRP bagholders finally eating good. but lets see if regulatory peace actually means anything concrete or if its just new leadership doing PR
not just XRP holders. every crypto company that settled with CFTC had to eat a lifetime gag order. the $5M Gemini settlement was peanuts compared to the silence tax