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SEC Chair Atkins Says the Quiet Part Out Loud on Crypto Surveillance

On December 15, 2025, the SEC's Crypto Task Force held a roundtable on financial privacy. SEC Chair Paul Atkins said crypto could become a "powerful financial surveillance tool."

That mattered because it came from the SEC chair. He was describing the system built around public blockchains, KYCKnow Your Customer rules require users to submit identity information such as passports, selfies, addresses, or phone numbers before accessing a service.Glossary → exchanges, and tracing firms.

He also said the SEC sees a path that preserves privacy. The fight is no longer about whether surveillance exists. It is about how much regulators will allow.

What this is not: The SEC did not announce a ban on Monero, Zcash, or any other privacy coinA cryptocurrency designed to reduce transaction traceability through built-in privacy features such as shielded pools, ring signatures, or stealth addresses.Glossary →. Atkins said the agency sees a path that does not require users to surrender privacy. No coin-specific enforcement action was announced.

What this is: The top US securities regulator said, on the record, that transparent-ledger crypto can function as mass financial surveillance. The policy fight now turns on how much privacy the system will allow.

Dec 15 2025
ROUNDTABLE DATE
SEC Crypto Task Force
$100M+
CHAINALYSIS CONTRACTS
US government spend
$687
XMR ATH
CoinTelegraph, Jan 2026
None
XMR BAN ANNOUNCED
SEC Dec 2025 roundtable

What "Financial Surveillance Tool" Means

Atkins' phrase was not rhetorical. It describes how the current stack works.

How crypto becomes a financial surveillance tool
LayerHow it enables surveillanceKey actors
Public blockchainEvery transaction is permanent and readableBitcoin, Ethereum, most altcoins
Chain analyticsWallet clustering, tracing, and risk scoringChainalysis, Elliptic, TRM Labs
KYC on/off rampsConnects on-chain addresses to real identitiesCoinbase, Kraken, regulated exchanges
SARA Suspicious Activity Report is a confidential filing sent by banks or financial intermediaries to regulators when they believe a transaction may be suspicious.Glossary → filingSuspicious activity reports flow to FinCENThe US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is the Treasury bureau that receives SARs, issues AML guidance, and pressures crypto businesses into surveillance compliance.Glossary →Banks, exchanges, KYC providers including Persona
OFACThe US Office of Foreign Assets Control administers sanctions lists and restrictions that many banks, exchanges, and crypto services enforce worldwide.Glossary → sanctionsWallet blocklists and frozen accessUS Treasury / OFAC
Government contractsFederal agencies buy tracing servicesIRS-CI, FBI, DEA, ICE

Put those layers together and you get something banks never had at this scale. A public ledger keeps the record forever. KYC gives the record a name. Analytics tools make the record searchable.

This is not a future scenario. It is live infrastructure. The government has spent more than $100 million with Chainalysis alone. Atkins was naming a machine that is already running.

The Developer Liability Problem

The same roundtable also touched the question hanging over privacy software since the Tornado Cash case: can developers be punished for writing code that protects financial privacy?

CryptoSlate called the meeting a "do-or-die" moment for privacy developers. That was not hype. Prosecutors already showed they are willing to treat privacy infrastructure as criminal conduct, even when the tool is open source and non-custodial.

The December 2025 roundtable tried to draw lines around that risk. Where does lawful privacy code end? When does developer liability begin? The SEC did not issue formal guidance, but Atkins' language suggests this leadership is not looking to outlaw privacy coin development across the board.

The Tornado Cash precedent still matters. The roundtable did not erase the legal risk created by that prosecution. US developers working on privacy tools still operate in a gray zone until courts or regulators draw clearer lines.

Why This Admission Matters

The key fact is not the technical claim. Privacy researchers have made it for years. The key fact is that the SEC chair said it in public.

Under Gary Gensler, the SEC focused on enforcement and securities law. Privacy and surveillance barely entered the public frame. Atkins has taken a different tack. At minimum, he is willing to admit that crypto regulation has privacy costs.

That matters because honest rules start with an honest description of the system. Public-chain crypto without real privacy safeguards does not drift toward surveillance. It produces surveillance by default.

No-KYC advocates have said that for over a decade. Now the SEC chair has said it too.

Markets Heard It

Traders read the roundtable as good news for privacy coins. No ban was announced, and the SEC sounded open to accommodation.

Monero hit $687 on January 13, 2026, according to CoinTelegraph. Zcash also moved up into 2026. The move suggests the market had priced in a much worse outcome than the one it got.

If the SEC had come out of the roundtable ready to attack privacy coins directly, that price action likely would not have happened. The market heard breathing room.

What This Means in Practice

The roundtable clarified a few things for anyone trying to protect financial privacy.

  • Privacy coins are not banned. Monero and Zcash remain legal to hold and use in the US.
  • Public-chain crypto is surveillance-friendly. That is now a mainstream regulatory statement, not a fringe warning.
  • Exchange compliance keeps expanding. SAR pipelines and chain analytics are still growing, even if the SEC softens on privacy coins.
  • Developer liability is still unsettled. The roundtable did not close the book on Tornado Cash.

What You Can Do

1
Use privacy coins when privacy matters. Monero's default privacy blocks the tracing model described above. Shielded Zcash can do much of the same. Compare Monero vs. Zcash for your use case.
2
Buy privacy coins without KYC. If you buy XMR or ZEC through a KYC exchange, your identity gets tied to the coins at entry. Use no-KYC P2P markets or atomic swaps instead. How to buy Monero without KYC.
3
Use no-KYC venues for swaps. Non-custodial swap tools and P2P DEXes do not collect identity data or feed the tracing pipeline. Haveno DEX is a non-custodial Monero-native exchange with no KYC requirement.
4
Know what Bitcoin exposes. Bitcoin is not private by default. CoinJoinA Bitcoin privacy technique where multiple users combine inputs and outputs into one transaction to make ownership links harder to analyze.Glossary → can help, but it takes care and often triggers scrutiny at regulated exchanges. Monero's privacy is built into the protocol.
5
Watch developer liability cases. If you build privacy software, this legal fight matters directly. The roundtable was a signal, not a shield.

The Longer View

Atkins' statement will keep getting quoted because it fixed the issue in plain words. The dominant form of crypto can also be a tool for watching users at scale.

The response is not to reject crypto. It is to use tools that actually protect privacy and to avoid KYC links that turn transaction history into identity records.

The tools exist. The market noticed. The regulatory window is still open, at least for now.


Source: The Block, December 15 2025; CryptoSlate roundtable coverage; CoinTelegraph XMR price data January 2026. Cunicula receives no funding from government agencies, political organizations, or financial services companies.

Follow the Money

Crypto surveillance is also a business. Compliance firms grow when rules expand. Atkins moved from regulator to consultant and back.

$Crypto compliance industry, who profits from SEC enforcement
SEC enforcement
$4.68B in penalties since 2013. New rules create more spending on compliance tools and services.
Compliance winners
Chainalysis, TRM Labs, and Elliptic all benefit when tracing and screening become standard.
Revolving door
Atkins: SEC to Patomak Global Partners, which advised financial firms on SEC rules, then back as SEC Chair in 2025.
Net effect
The same system that writes rules also creates demand for the firms that sell compliance and surveillance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the SEC going to ban Monero or Zcash?

No. The December 2025 SEC roundtable did not announce a ban on Monero, Zcash, or any other privacy coin. Atkins said the agency sees a path that keeps both privacy and national security concerns in view. The discussion focused on privacy rules and developer liability, not a crackdown on those assets themselves.

Can the government track Bitcoin and crypto transactions?

Yes. Bitcoin and most public-chain assets are traceable. Firms such as Chainalysis, Elliptic, and TRM Labs map wallets, follow flows, and connect on-chain activity to real identities once KYC enters the path. Privacy coins such as Monero and shielded Zcash are built to resist that kind of tracing.

What did SEC Chair Atkins say about crypto privacy?

At the December 15, 2025 SEC Crypto Task Force roundtable, Paul Atkins said crypto could become a powerful financial surveillance tool. He also said the SEC sees a way forward that does not require users to give up privacy. That points to a rules debate over how much privacy to permit, not a push to outlaw it outright.

Are privacy coins legal in the US in 2026?

Yes. In early 2026, Monero and Zcash remain legal to hold and use in the United States. They are not OFAC-sanctioned assets. Some regulated exchanges have removed them, and the legal risk for developers is still unclear, but ownership and use are not banned.

What is Chainalysis and how does the government use it?

Chainalysis is a New York blockchain analytics company. It sells tracing tools, wallet clustering, and risk scoring to agencies and financial firms. Agencies including the IRS-CI, FBI, DEA, and OFAC use those tools in investigations, sanctions work, and compliance screening.