The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has issued new guidance that could speed up the approval timeline for pending crypto ETFs, setting the stage for another wave of launches as demand for regulated digital-asset products increases.
The update, published yesterday, shows how issuers can rely on automatic effectiveness under Section 8(a) after removing delaying amendments, an approach several crypto ETF applicants used during the government shutdown.
Today, Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas called the move a potential accelerator for filings that were stuck in regulatory limbo. "Some of those crypto ETFs that didn’t do the 8-A thing will try and push out as soon as they can," he said, pointing to Bitwise’s XRP ETF as next in line.
A Backlog Meets a Booming Market
During the shutdown, issuers filed more than 900 registration statements, leaving the SEC with a heavy backlog. The Division of Corporation Finance now says it will process filings in the order received and confirms:
- •Statements without delaying amendments will go effective automatically after 20 days.
- •Issuers may request acceleration once the staff resumes normal operations.
- •Post-effective amendments filed during the closure will be declared effective unless issuers opt out.
This shift comes as crypto ETFs dominate the market’s momentum, with dozens of filings, from XRP to Solana, waiting for approval.
Canary’s XRP ETF Debut Adds Pressure
The new guidance landed less than 24 hours after Canary Capital’s XRPC ETF launched with sizable volume. XRPC pulled in $46 million before the closing bell, prompting analysts to call it one of 2025’s strongest ETF debuts.
The market’s reaction has increased expectations that other issuers (including Bitwise, 21Shares, and CoinShares) may now try to fast-track their own XRP, SOL, and cross-asset filings under the new SEC guidance.
Project Crypto Sets the Backdrop
Thursday’s filing update comes on the heels of the SEC’s major policy shift under Project Crypto, unveiled earlier in the day. The initiative establishes the first formal token taxonomy, distinguishes non-securities from tokenized securities, and clarifies when investment contracts end.
The SEC’s clearer asset definitions and faster filing mechanics point to a shift away from improvised enforcement toward more structured rulemaking. For ETF issuers, the change reduces procedural friction and offers more predictable timelines for getting products to market.
What Happens Next
Issuers now face a simple decision: amend filings to remove delaying language and let the 20-day clock run, or request acceleration where appropriate. Analysts expect a burst of new effectiveness notices beginning late November.
With XRP ETFs already trading and several more in the queue, the updated guidance could trigger one of the fastest expansions of digital-asset ETFs the U.S. market has seen.
For investors, the question isn’t whether more crypto ETFs are coming, but how rapidly they will arrive.

