SEC crypto trading roundtable to include crypto giants Uniswap, Coinbase
# SEC to Host High-Profile Roundtable on Crypto Trading Regulation with Uniswap, Coinbase, and Other Industry Leaders
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has announced a lineup of executives from leading crypto and financial institutions who will participate in an upcoming roundtable aimed at shaping future regulations for crypto trading.
Scheduled for **April 11**, the event is titled **"Between a Block and a Hard Place: Tailoring Regulation for Crypto Trading"** and marks the second installment in the SEC’s five-part **“Spring Sprint Toward Crypto Clarity”** series. These discussions are being led by the SEC’s newly established **Crypto Task Force**.
### Industry Heavyweights to Join the Conversation
Among the key participants are:
- **Katherine Minarik**, Chief Legal Officer at Uniswap Labs
- **Chelsea Pizzola**, Associate General Counsel at Cumberland DRW
- **Gregory Tusar**, Vice President of Institutional Product at Coinbase
- **Jon Herrick**, Chief Product Officer at the New York Stock Exchange
- **Austin Reid**, Business Lead at FalconX
- **Richard Johnson**, CEO of Texture Capital
- **Christine Parlour**, Chair of Finance at the University of California, Berkeley
These firms have all previously drawn the attention of the SEC. Under the Biden administration, the agency filed lawsuits against **Coinbase** in June and **Cumberland DRW** in October 2023, alleging securities violations. Both cases were dropped earlier this year under the Trump administration. **Uniswap Labs** also faced a potential enforcement action in April 2024, which was quietly closed without further action in February 2025.
### Moderated by Legal Experts, Guided by SEC Leadership
The roundtable will be moderated by **Nicholas Losurdo**, a partner at law firm Goodwin Procter. Additional participants include:
- **Dave Lauer**, Co-founder of We the Investors
- **Tyler Gellasch**, CEO of the Healthy Markets Association
Representing the SEC will be:
- **Acting Chair Mark Uyeda**
- **Crypto Task Force Chief of Staff Richard Gabbert**
- **Commissioners Caroline Crenshaw and Hester Peirce**
### A Push for Clarity and Reform Under the Trump Administration
This event follows a **March 21 roundtable** focused on the legal classification of crypto assets. Three more sessions are scheduled to explore crypto **custody**, **tokenization**, and **decentralized finance (DeFi)**.
The roundtables come as the SEC shifts course under President Donald Trump’s administration, which is actively working to **streamline crypto oversight**. Acting Chair **Mark Uyeda** has initiated a review of several previous staff statements related to digital assets—an effort influenced by Trump’s executive order on deregulation and recommendations from the **Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)**, now led by Elon Musk.
In an April 5 statement posted on X (formerly Twitter), Uyeda revealed the SEC is reviewing **seven staff-issued statements**, five of which directly concern cryptocurrency.
> “The purpose of this review is to identify staff statements that should be modified or rescinded consistent with current agency priorities,” said Uyeda.
### Key Crypto-Related Guidance Under Review
The SEC’s review includes:
- A **2019 guidance** from the Strategic Hub for Innovation and Financial Technology interpreting crypto sales under the Howey Test
- A **May 2021** statement cautioning investors about Bitcoin futures exposure
- A **November 2020** request for feedback on state-chartered banks as crypto custodians
- A **December 2022** advisory urging disclosure updates due to crypto firm bankruptcies
- A **February 2021** alert from the Division of Examinations highlighting investor risks related to digital asset trading
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### Final Thoughts
As the SEC continues its evolving approach to crypto regulation, the April 11 roundtable is expected to play a critical role in shaping future policy. With top industry voices and government officials at the table, this discussion could mark a turning point in how U.S. crypto markets are governed moving forward.