Key Highlights
- The SEC and CFTC are planning to move into the same Washington, D.C., office complex, but they will remain separate agencies.
- Both agencies are working together to coordinate regulations, especially to reduce overlapping rules and gaps.
- They are holding a joint public event to align oversight of cryptocurrency and digital assets.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are discussing a plan that could place both regulators in the same office complex in Washington, D.C., near the U.S. Capitol.
People familiar with the talks said the idea is to move the CFTC into the building complex where the SEC already operates close to Union Station. The discussions have been ongoing since last year, and the move would likely not happen before 2027 if it goes ahead.
Working on different roles but same goal
Officials involved said the plan is about sharing space, not merging the two agencies. The U.S. General Services Administration, which manages federal government buildings and office space, is also part of the discussions about the possible relocation, Bloomberg reported.
From turf war to joint venture
For most of their history, the SEC and CFTC operated in separate orbits with overlapping edges. Under the Biden administration, the two agencies were widely seen as locked in a jurisdictional battle over crypto. Former CFTC Chair Rostin Behnam argued most cryptocurrencies were commodities under his agency’s purview, while former SEC Chair Gary Gensler maintained that nearly all tokens except Bitcoin were securities.
That dynamic reversed sharply in 2025. In September, then-CFTC Acting Chair Caroline Pham and SEC Chairman Paul Atkins declared the turf war over. By January 29, 2026, the shift became official when both agencies launched Project Crypto a joint initiative to develop a shared regulatory framework for digital assets. The launch event, held at CFTC headquarters and titled “SEC–CFTC Harmonization: U.S. Financial Leadership in the Crypto Era,” featured both chairmen pledging to eliminate duplicative rules and clarify jurisdictional boundaries.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig, who replaced Pham after his Senate confirmation in December 2025, addressed the coordination gap directly in a Bloomberg interview tied to the office space report. He stated that having two separate regulators makes sense, but that the historical lack of coordination between them does not. He added that both he and Atkins have been clear on the need to ensure their rules neither conflict nor leave gaps.
The CLARITY Act connection
The co-location talks are playing out against the backdrop of the CLARITY Act, the market structure bill that would formally define which agency oversees which digital assets. The House passed the bill in July 2025 with bipartisan support. It would designate most tokens as digital commodities under CFTC jurisdiction once their underlying blockchains reach a defined level of maturity, while the SEC would retain authority over initial capital formation and securities-like tokens.
The bill is currently stalled in the Senate over a dispute about whether stablecoin issuers should be permitted to pay yield to holders, a provision that has drawn opposition from traditional banking groups. Polymarket data shows approximately 70% odds the CLARITY Act passes in 2026, though the window narrows as November midterm elections approach.
If enacted, the CFTC would assume a significantly expanded role as the primary crypto regulator. However, the agency currently operates with roughly 650 full-time staff, compared to the SEC’s 4,000-plus. Legal experts have flagged this resource gap as a risk. One former SEC senior trial counsel noted that the CFTC is not currently equipped to take on the same scope of work the SEC handles. Co-locating the agencies could address some of these operational challenges through shared infrastructure and closer day-to-day coordination.
Merger talk has surfaced before but this time is different
Proposals to combine the SEC and CFTC have circulated for decades. The idea gained momentum after the 2008 financial crisis, when the complexity of derivatives trading exposed coordination failures between the two regulators. The Obama-era Treasury Department studied a potential merger, but the proposal died amid jurisdictional politics and congressional opposition.
What distinguishes the current moment is that the push is coming from the agency heads themselves, not just outside observers. SEC Chairman Atkins recently backed the idea of a full merger at the agency’s joint roundtable, a notable statement from a sitting chairman. While the current plan stops at co-location, the direction of travel is clear. The agencies are aligning their rules, sharing public events, and now potentially sharing a building. Each step reduces the distance between coordination and consolidation.
The broader political context adds weight. The Trump administration has moved aggressively to bring independent agencies under closer White House oversight, issuing executive orders that require political appointees to approve new regulations at agencies including the SEC and CFTC. The DOGE-driven push for government efficiency has also accelerated the consolidation of federal office space across Washington.
What It Means for the Crypto Industry
For the digital asset industry, the practical effect of the SEC and CFTC sharing a building may be minimal in the short term. Regulatory jurisdiction, enforcement posture, and rulemaking timelines are determined by legislation and agency leadership, not by office proximity.
However, the symbolic and operational significance should not be dismissed. The crypto industry spent years navigating conflicting guidance from two agencies that rarely communicated. The shift to joint frameworks, shared events, and now potentially shared offices represents a structural change in how Washington approaches digital asset oversight. If the CLARITY Act passes and the agencies continue to converge, the regulatory landscape for crypto in 2027 could look fundamentally different from the fragmented system that defined the past decade.
The CFTC’s current lease at its Washington headquarters has faced complications due to construction delays at a planned new location near Capitol Hill. The agency has not confirmed whether it will extend its existing lease while co-location discussions continue.
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