Key Highlights
- The SEC has concluded its review of the Zcash Foundation and does not plan to recommend enforcement action.
- The inquiry stemmed from an SEC subpoena issued on August 31, 2023, tied to “Certain Crypto Asset Offerings (SF-04569).”
- The update comes as Zcash faces renewed attention following recent developer shake-ups.
The Zcash Foundation, the nonprofit tied to the privacy-focused Zcash ecosystem, said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has closed its investigation and does not intend to recommend enforcement action.
The Foundation shared the update on Wednesday, confirming the matter traces back to an SEC subpoena received on August 31, 2023, under an inquiry labeled “In the Matter of Certain Crypto Asset Offerings (SF-04569).”
While the notice is narrow in scope and applies only to the Foundation’s role in that specific inquiry, it removes a lingering question mark for a project that sits in the regulatory crosshairs more often than most, simply because privacy is its core feature set.
What the SEC closure means for Zcash
For Zcash watchers, the practical shift is straightforward: one less open file. Even when probes end quietly, the uncertainty can weigh on partnerships, listings, and institutional appetite, especially for privacy-oriented assets that already face uneven treatment across jurisdictions.
The Foundation said it will remain focused on “privacy-preserving financial infrastructure,” framing the outcome as consistent with its approach to compliance and transparency.
Market and industry impact
Zcash has recently seen renewed discussion after former Electric Coin Company (ECC) developers split to build CashZ, a wallet effort that positions itself as a continuation of the Zashi codebase rather than a new chain or token. The split briefly rattled sentiment and put governance dynamics back in the spotlight.
For the broader market, the industry is slowly accumulating examples where U.S. regulatory pressure doesn’t always end in charges, an outcome that can calm risk narratives, even if it doesn’t rewrite the rules overnight.
Why it matters
The SEC’s decision not to pursue enforcement against the Zcash Foundation closes a regulatory thread dating back to 2023. It won’t end the privacy-versus-compliance debate, but it does reduce near-term uncertainty around one of crypto’s oldest privacy projects.
Zcash (ZEC) was trading at $442.30 on CoinMarketCap, still down -89.69% from its all-time high. Its market cap rose to $7.28 billion (+13.63%), while 24-hour trading volume climbed to $801.97 million (+24.07%), suggesting activity picked up alongside the latest headlines.
The update comes as the SEC continues to tighten oversight of crypto disclosures, custody, and market structure. For privacy-focused projects like Zcash, the closed inquiry provides rare breathing room amid tightening U.S. oversight.
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