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Three years after writing a $45 million check and exiting the world’s largest capital market, Nexo is back in the United States. But this isn’t a simple relaunch it’s a structural rewrite.
The difference between 2023 and 2026 isn’t just timing. It’s architecture.
Back then, the issue centered on Nexo’s Earn Interest Product (EIP). Today, the comeback hinges on licensed partners, regulated intermediaries and a compliance-by-design model anchored by Bakkt.
This shift may define the next era of centralized crypto lending in America.
Why Nexo Left in 2023
In January 2023, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Nexo with offering unregistered securities through its Earn Interest Product. Regulators argued that the yield-bearing accounts functioned as investment contracts and therefore required registration.
Nexo agreed to:
Pay $45 million in combined federal and state penalties
Cease offering the product to US investors
Exit the US retail lending market
The company neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing, but the message from regulators was clear: retail crypto yield programs would face securities scrutiny.
This action was part of a broader post-2022 lending crackdown. Industry failures exposed liquidity mismatches, rehypothecation risks and opaque return generation. “Earn” products were no longer viewed as simple savings alternatives they were being examined as securities offerings.
What Actually Changed in 2026
Nexo’s return is not about reviving the old Earn model. It’s about redesigning how the product is delivered.
Instead of directly issuing yield products to US customers, Nexo now operates through licensed US partners. Where required, services are structured with SEC-registered investment advisers and regulated intermediaries.
The key distinction:
Old model: Direct-to-consumer yield issuance
New model: Partner-led, compliance-embedded infrastructure
This structural separation is crucial. Rather than functioning as the issuer of an investment product, Nexo positions itself within a regulated ecosystem.
The Earn Interest Product that triggered the 2023 order has been phased out for US users.
The Bakkt Partnership: Compliance as Infrastructure
The collaboration with Bakkt is central to this comeback.
Bakkt is a publicly traded US crypto firm with multiple regulatory licenses. By leveraging regulated entities for trading, custody or advisory functions, Nexo shifts from being the direct product issuer to operating through a compliance layer.
In practice, that means:
Custody may reside with licensed entities
Advisory components may involve SEC-registered structures
Regulatory supervision may span multiple jurisdictions
This model distributes responsibility across regulated intermediaries addressing the structural objections regulators raised in 2023.
Crypto-Backed Loans: The Core Offering
The new US strategy emphasizes crypto-backed loans rather than unsecured yield promises.
How it works:
Users deposit digital assets as collateral
They borrow against that collateral
Liquidation triggers automatically if loan-to-value thresholds are breached
Unlike unsecured lending models that collapsed in 2022, collateralized structures provide real-time risk management via automated liquidation systems.
However, crypto’s 24/7 volatility makes these systems far more dynamic than traditional margin lending.
A Softer but Still Fragmented Regulatory Climate
The enforcement landscape has evolved since 2023. Under the administration of Donald Trump, the SEC has scaled back or resolved several crypto-related enforcement cases.
That doesn’t mean oversight disappeared.
US crypto compliance remains fragmented across:
Federal securities regulation
State securities regulators
Money transmitter licensing
Consumer lending laws
A product structured to satisfy federal securities rules may still face state-level scrutiny.
The difference now is tone less aggressive crackdown, more structured readjustment.
What US Users Must Evaluate Before Participating
A “compliant structure” does not equal “risk-free.”
Before using any crypto-backed loan or yield-style product, users should examine:
1. Legal Counterparty
Are you contracting with Nexo directly, or a licensed US entity?
2. Custody Framework
Who holds the assets? Under what regulatory regime?
3. Revenue Generation
Are returns generated via lending, staking, market-making or other strategies?
4. Liquidation Mechanics
What is the loan-to-value threshold?
How quickly can liquidation occur?
What fees apply?
5. Disclosure Quality
Look for:
Rehypothecation clauses
Conflict-of-interest statements
Jurisdiction and dispute terms
Risk disclosures
Unlike banks, most crypto lenders do not carry federal deposit insurance. Protection depends heavily on contractual clarity and custody structure.
The Bigger Industry Signal
Nexo’s reentry may represent Phase 3 of centralized crypto lending in the US:
Phase 1 (Pre-2023): Direct retail yield, minimal registration
Phase 2 (2023–2025): Enforcement, exits and restructuring
Phase 3 (2026 onward): Partner-led, regulated infrastructure models
If this compliance-embedded framework proves durable, other international crypto firms may follow the same blueprint rather than attempting direct issuance models.
The Real Shift: It’s About the Wrapper
The economics haven’t changed. Users still want:
Yield on idle digital assets
Liquidity without selling crypto
Capital efficiency
What changed is the wrapper around those services.
Instead of testing the boundaries of securities law, Nexo’s model integrates into regulated rails from the outset.
The long-term question is not whether crypto-backed lending can exist in the US it can.