Citadel Securities just dropped a letter to the SEC making its position crystal clear: DeFi protocols should play by the same rules as everyone else on Wall Street, or they shouldn't be playing at all.
The market-making giant told regulators that decentralized finance platforms dealing in tokenized U.S. equities shouldn't get special treatment or broad exemptions from federal exchange definitions. If it walks like an exchange and quacks like an exchange, Citadel says, it's an exchange.
Why Citadel Says DeFi Looks Like Traditional Finance
Citadel's argument hinges on how these platforms actually work. The firm pointed out that DeFi protocols match buyers and sellers using non-discretionary algorithms, which fits squarely within the statutory definition of an exchange. And when participants earn transaction-based compensation? That makes them broker-dealers, according to Citadel's reading of the law.
The company warned that carving out exemptions for DeFi would create two conflicting regulatory frameworks for identical securities, violating the Exchange Act's technology-neutral principles. Same asset, same rules—that's the pitch.
The Case for Market Integrity
Citadel doubled down on concerns about market quality. The firm argued that exemptions could undermine fair access, post-trade transparency, market surveillance, and anti-front-running protections. Rather than quick regulatory workarounds, Citadel urged the SEC to use formal rulemaking that maintains oversight.
The message was straightforward: tokenization has a future, but only if existing investor protections aren't sacrificed along the way. DeFi exchanges need to meet the same standards as traditional venues to preserve market stability, Citadel said.
Crypto Leaders Call It a Power Play
The crypto world wasn't about to let that slide. Uniswap (UNI) founder Hayden Adams fired back, saying Citadel has been lobbying against DeFi for years. He accused the firm of trying to kneecap open-source systems that lower barriers to liquidity creation.
Adams found it particularly rich that Citadel raised "fair access" concerns, given its massive footprint in traditional market making. He framed the letter as a defensive move against decentralized competition threatening legacy trading structures.
Blockchain Association CEO Summer Mersinger also pushed back hard. She said Citadel's interpretation has no basis in the Exchange Act, judicial precedent, or Commission practice. Developers building software shouldn't be regulated like custodial financial intermediaries, she argued.
The Stakes for U.S. Innovation
Mersinger warned that treating developers as broker-dealers would damage U.S. competitiveness and drive innovation offshore, without delivering any real investor protection benefits. Industry leaders are urging the SEC to reject proposals that treat writing code as financial intermediation.
What happens next is anyone's guess. The SEC has shown interest in tightening oversight of tokenized assets, but hasn't tipped its hand on whether it favors exemptions or full regulatory treatment. For now, the battle lines are drawn between Wall Street's biggest players and crypto's decentralized vision.