Coinbase Crypto Exchange, US SEC Lock Horns in US Court Over Digital Assets as Securities

A federal judge in Manhattan on Wednesday grilled Coinbase and the US securities regulator about their divergent views on whether and when digital assets are securities, in a case closely watched by the cryptocurrency industry.

Coinbase has asked the court to dismiss the Securities and Exchange Commission’s lawsuit alleging the largest US crypto exchange is flouting its rules.

Judge Katherine Polk Failla on Wednesday heard arguments from both sides, focusing her questions on the legal precedent defining securities, and the attributes of several crypto tokens traded on Coinbase and elsewhere that the regulator has deemed investment contracts.

Failla did not decide the matter from the bench, noting she was still weighing some questions after the more than four-hour hearing.

The judge’s ruling is likely to have implications for digital assets by helping to clarify the SEC’s jurisdiction over the sector.

The case is one of a slew the SEC has brought against the crypto sector. The agency focused initially on companies selling digital tokens, but under the leadership of chair Gary Gensler has targeted firms offering trading platforms and clearing activity, and acting as broker-dealers.

The SEC sued Coinbase in June, saying the firm facilitated trading of at least 13 crypto tokens, including Solana, Cardano and Polygon, which it said should have been registered as securities.

The Securities Act of 1933 outlined a definition of the term “security,” yet many experts rely on a US Supreme Court case to determine if an investment product constitutes a security. A key test is whether people are contracting to invest in a common enterprise with the expectation of profit.

Coinbase, the world’s largest publicly traded cryptocurrency exchange, has argued that crypto assets, unlike stocks and bonds, do not meet that definition of an investment contract, a position held by the vast majority of the crypto industry.

Lawyers for the SEC argued that securities differ from purchases of collectibles like baseball cards or even Beanie Babies, referencing a 1990s trend in which Americans bought the dolls with the expectations they would rise in value.

Patrick Costello, SEC assistant chief litigation counsel, argued that the crypto tokens at the heart of the case support a larger “enterprise,” making them akin to an investment contract.

“When the value of the network or the ecosystem increases, so does the value of the (associated) token,” he said.

Still, Failla told SEC attorneys she was “concerned” that the agency was asking her to “broaden the definition of what constitutes a security.”

The SEC said buyers of digital assets, even on secondary markets such as Coinbase’s platform, were purchasing the tokens as investments akin to stock shares or bonds.

But Coinbase’s lawyers disagreed, noting that buyers of such tokens were not signing contracts entitling them to proceeds of a common enterprise.

“I’ll tell you this: I think there would have been a lot of surprise to find that an investment contract didn’t have anything to do with a contract,” said William Savitt, a lawyer for Coinbase.

The judge appeared dismissive of Coinbase’s argument that the lawsuit implicates the so-called major questions doctrine. That legal principle is based on a Supreme Court ruling that says federal agencies cannot regulate without specific congressional authorization.

The SEC in its lawsuit also targeted Coinbase’s “staking” program, in which it pools assets to verify activity on blockchain networks and takes commissions, in exchange for “rewards” to customers. The SEC said that program should have been registered with the agency.

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Dollar Steady, Bitcoin Holds Gains Ahead of Expected Spot ETF Approval

A decline in US consumer inflation expectations kept the dollar rally in check on Tuesday as traders reaffirmed their bets for a slew of Federal Reserve rate cuts this year.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin held near its strongest level since April 2022 on growing anticipation the Securities and Exchange Commission will imminently approve spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETF).

The New York Fed’s latest Survey of Consumer Expectations showed on Monday that US consumers’ projection of inflation over the short run fell to the lowest level in nearly three years in December.

A reading on US inflation is due later in the week, which will likely provide further clarity on how much room the Fed has to ease rates this year.

“The big story… the catalyst, was the data regarding inflation expectations going forward,” said Kyle Rodda, a senior financial market analyst at Capital.com.

“While it’s still a tight labour market, we’re still seeing those sort of disinflationary impulses in the United States, which again raises the probability that the Fed will have capacity to cut rates fairly soon.”

Futures point to around 135 basis points worth of easing priced in for the Fed this year, with approximately a 60 percent chance that they start cutting in March.

“The market is still trying to find its feet in terms of the trajectory and timing of the first US rate cut,” said Kamal Sharma, senior G10 FX strategist at Bank of America, who expects the Fed to start cutting rates at the March meeting.

“Our base case scenario is for a soft landing, lower dollar, bull steepening and that broadly should be supportive of risk assets more generally,” Sharma added.

The US dollar index , which measures the currency against a basket of six currencies, was little changed at 102.32, having risen 1 percent last week.

The euro last stood at $1.0947, away from its recent three-week low of $1.0877, while sterling slipped 0.1 percent to $1.2737.

In Asia, data on Tuesday showed core inflation in Japan’s capital slowed for the second straight month in December, taking some pressure off the Bank of Japan to rush into exiting ultra-loose monetary policy.

The yen was little changed following the release, and was last at 143.90 per dollar.

The Aussie last bought $0.6703, away from its three-week low of $0.6641 hit last Friday. The kiwi slipped 0.2 percent to $0.6243 but remained some distance away from Friday’s three-week trough of $0.6182.

Elsewhere, bitcoin stood at $46,713 (roughly Rs. 38.8 lakh), after having scaled a 21-month top of $47,281 (roughly Rs. 39.3 lakh) in the previous session.

A raft of investment managers had on Monday disclosed the fees they plan to charge for their proposed spot bitcoin ETFs, in another step toward approval this week by the US securities regulator.

“Investor expectations are justifiably high,” said eToro global markets strategist Ben Laidler, citing increased engagement from the SEC.

“This suggests downside to a disappointing result, and some may be tempted to even ‘sell the news’ on a positive outcome,” Laidler added.

Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, fell 1.4 percent to $2,299 (roughly Rs. 1.9 lakh).

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US SEC Denies Coinbase Petition Seeking New Crypto Rules for Digital Assets Sector

The US Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday denied a petition by Coinbase Global seeking new rules from the agency for the digital asset sector, which the country’s largest crypto exchange said it plans to challenge in court.

The five-member commission, in a 3-2 vote, said it would not propose new rules because it fundamentally disagreed that current regulations are “unworkable” for the crypto sphere, as Coinbase has argued. The firm later notified an appeals court that it plans to seek judicial review of the SEC’s decision.

The dispute was the latest in a broader tug-of-war between the crypto sector and the top U.S. markets regulator, which has repeatedly said most crypto tokens are securities and subject to its jurisdiction. The agency has sued several crypto companies, including Coinbase, for listing and trading crypto tokens which it says should be registered as securities.

“Existing laws and regulations apply to the crypto securities markets,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said in a separate statement supporting the decision.

Coinbase disputed that assertion.

“No one looking fairly at our industry thinks the law is clear or that there isn’t more work to do,” chief legal officer Paul Grewal said in a statement. “We should be working together to create laws and rules that will benefit consumers and US innovation”.

Shortly thereafter, Coinbase notified a federal court of appeals in Philadelphia of its plans to seek review of the SEC’s denial.

In 2022, the company pressed the SEC to create a bespoke set of rules for the crypto sector, arguing that existing U.S. securities laws are inadequate. In April, Coinbase appealed to a judge to force the SEC to respond to the petition.

The court said it would not force the agency to act, given the SEC had said it would respond to Coinbase’s petition.

Crypto firms have said they want a clearer idea of when the SEC views a digital asset to be a security.

In his statement on Friday, Gensler argued that in asking the SEC to write rules, Coinbase had acknowledged the SEC’s authority over the crypto sector, something the crypto exchange has refuted in the past.

Republican SEC Commissioners Hester Peirce and Mark Uyeda said in a joint statement that they disagreed with the decision.

“In our view, the Petition raises issues presented by new technologies and other innovations, and addressing these important issues is a core part of being a responsible regulator,” they said.

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Crypto Trading Platform Kraken Sued by US SEC, Company CEO Denies Allegations

Kraken, the crypto trading platform based in the US, has found itself under legal scanner in the US. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of the US has sued Kraken for operating its business without having registered it officially. The next few days could be tumultuous for the international crypto sector with this probe being initiated against Kraken and with Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao admitted to having flouted US’ anti-money laundering laws this week.

In Kraken’s case, the SEC believes that the trading platform has minted millions of dollars between 2018 and 2023 — all of which classify as illegal earnings.

“The SEC alleges that Kraken intertwines the traditional services of an exchange, broker, dealer, and clearing agency without having registered any of those functions with the Commission as required by law,” said an official statement from the SEC.

The SEC is concerned that Kraken’s failure to register its operations kept its users unprotected against market risks. In addition, Kraken also kept users from market protections like inspection by the SEC and safeguards against conflicts of interest.

“We allege that Kraken made a business decision to reap hundreds of millions of dollars from investors rather than coming into compliance with the securities laws. That decision resulted in a business model rife with conflicts of interest that placed investors’ funds at risk,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

Meanwhile, Dave Ripley, the CEO of Kraken has denied SEC’s allegations via a post on X. Ripley also claimed that there is no clear path to register with the SEC, calling its allegations ‘factually incorrect’.

Team Kraken has also posted an official blog post stating that it strongly disagrees with the SEC and that the laws of the US are on its side.

The SEC, for now, has filed an official complaint against Kraken in a federal district court in San Francisco, US. It now seeks a remedy that would restrain other crypto players to do so. In addition, the SEC is also demanding disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus interest along with penalties.

Founded in the US back in 2011, Kraken claims to be serving to over 10 million users from different parts of the world.

In the last day, the value of Kraken’s native Basic Attention Token (BAT) dropped by 6.40 percent. It is currently trading at the price point of 0.2034 (roughly Rs. 16.95) as per CoinMarketCap.


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SEC Wrong to Deny Grayscale Spot Bitcoin ETF Proposal: US Court

The US securities regulator was wrong to reject an application from Grayscale Investments to create a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund, a federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday, in a landmark victory that could pave the way for the first product of its kind.

A three-judge panel of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in Washington said the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) failed to fully explain its reasoning when denying Grayscale’s product and should review its decision.

The price of bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, was last up more than 6 percent at $27,858 (roughly Rs. 23,04,400) following the news.

A spot bitcoin ETF would track its underlying market price, giving investors exposure to the digital asset without having to buy the currency. The SEC has denied all proposed bitcoin ETFs, including Grayscale’s, saying they do not meet its bar for preventing market manipulation.

While the ruling does not mean Grayscale’s ETF is automatically approved, it is a big boost for the decade-long industry effort to advance a bitcoin ETF product.

The court decision is a “historic milestone for American investors,” Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein said in a statement.

A Grayscale spokeswoman added that the company was reviewing the details and would pursue “next steps with the SEC.”

The SEC has 45 days to appeal the ruling. An agency spokesperson said it was reviewing the court’s decision in order to determine next steps.

The cryptocurrency industry was quick to hail the ruling. Several other asset managers, including BlackRock, Fidelity and Invesco, have similar filings pending with the SEC for a spot bitcoin ETF.

“This ruling is not just about Grayscale or Bitcoin, it sets a precedent for the broader crypto industry,” said Ji Kim, general counsel and head of global policy at the Crypto Council for Innovation.

Crypto Win

The SEC rejected Grayscale’s application for a spot bitcoin ETF in June 2022, arguing the proposal did not meet anti-fraud and investor protection standards. It cited the same reason in its denial of dozens of other applications for similar products, including those from Fidelity and VanEck.

Grayscale sued the SEC, arguing that because the agency previously approved certain surveillance agreements to prevent fraud in bitcoin futures-based ETFs, the same setup should also be satisfactory for Grayscale’s spot fund since both spot and futures funds rely on bitcoin’s price.

The court said in its ruling that the SEC failed to explain why it disagreed with Grayscale’s assertion that the bitcoin spot and futures markets are 99.9 percent correlated.

“The Commission’s unexplained discounting of the obvious financial and mathematical relationship between the spot and futures markets falls short of the standard for reasoned decisionmaking,” the court said in its opinion, which was filed by Judge Neomi Rao of the DC Court of Appeals.

The ruling is the second major legal victory for the crypto industry in recent weeks, after a judge ruled in July, in a case brought by the SEC, that Ripple Labs did not violate federal laws by selling its XRP token on public exchanges. The SEC has said it plans to appeal that finding.

If the SEC appeals the Grayscale ruling, the case would go either to the U.S. Supreme Court or a review by the entire DC appeals court.

If the SEC chooses not to appeal, the court would issue a mandate specifying how its decision should be executed. That could include instructing the SEC to approve the application, or to revisit Grayscale’s application, in which case the SEC could still reject the proposal on other grounds.

It remains to be seen how the ruling might affect proposals submitted in June by BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, and several other firms to offer spot bitcoin ETFs. The SEC has yet to deliver a decision on those applications.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


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Binance Reportedly Saw Monthly Illegal Crypto Transactions Worth $90 Billion in Banned China Market

Binance users traded $90 billion (roughly Rs. 7,42,800 crore) of cryptocurrency-related assets in a single month in China, where cryptocurrency trading has been illegal since 2021, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday citing internal figures and current and former employees of the exchange.

The transactions made China Binance’s biggest market by far, accounting for 20 percent of volume worldwide, excluding trades made by a subset of very large traders, the WSJ said. The newspaper did not specify the month during which the transactions were made.

Binance’s origins lie in China, though the world’s largest crypto exchange withdrew from mainland China in 2017 during a regulatory crackdown. It did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for a comment on the Journal report.

“The Binance.com website is blocked in China and is not accessible to China-based users,” a company spokesman told the WSJ.

The exchange has also been under the scrutiny of US regulators like the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The CFTC sued Binance for operating what it said was an “illegal” exchange and a “sham” compliance program, while the SEC sued Binance and CEO Changpeng Zhao saying that Binance artificially inflated its trading volumes, diverted customer funds, failed to restrict US customers from its platform and misled investors about its market surveillance controls.

The exchange is also under investigation by the US Justice Department over possible money-laundering and sanctions violations, Reuters has reported.

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Coinbase Chief Brian Armstrong to Meet US Lawmakers to Discuss Crypto Future

Brian Armstrong, the CEO of Coinbase crypto exchange, is looking to meet with policymakers from the US. The agenda of Armstrong’s rendezvous with the Democrats revolves around opening discussions on the future of the digital assets sector in the US. Valued at $1.2 trillion (roughly Rs. 98,47,344 crore) as of Tuesday, July 18, the crypto sector is largely unregulated around the world and is infamous for its volatile nature that poses financial risks to its investor community.

Armstrong, is his meeting, is expected to address topics like crypto taxes, concerns around privacy and data collection, as well as the current industrial climate around crypto in the US, an Aljazeera report said, citing an anonymous New Democrat Coalition spokesperson. The date of this meeting remains undisclosed.

The development comes after Coinbase has been in a scuffle with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) since earlier this year. The SEC has alleged that the exchange along with its competitor Binance, had failed to disclose and register their complete operational portfolio with the federal agency.

On the other hand, crypto exchanges have argued that crypto tokens are not securities and hence should not fall under the oversight of the SEC.

Since the US does not have a concrete rulebook to govern the crypto sector, the Web3 industry players as well as community members are often running into legal and financial troubles, that hinders the growth of the overall sector.

Last month, Republican representative Patrick McHenry, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee had said that in the coming weeks, he intended to hold a committee vote on a comprehensive bill concerned with governing the cryptocurrency sector.

Meanwhile, the crypto sector has received scepticism in the US Senate by senior members including Senators Sherrod Brown and Elizabeth Warren.

As of February 2023, a report by Coinbase estimated that 20 percent of US residents, that make for around 50 million people, owned cryptocurrencies. For most Americans, the interest towards cryptocurrencies is on the rise because they feel that the global financial system unfairly favours the interests of the powerful.


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Nasdaq Refiles BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF Application With SEC: Details

Nasdaq refiled an application with the U.S. securities regulator to list an exchange-traded fund by BlackRock that will reflect the price of bitcoin to add additional details, according to a filing made public on Monday.

The refreshed filing, submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Thursday, said that Coinbase Global will provide market surveillance in support of the proposed ETF from the world’s largest asset manager.

The move comes after the regulator reportedly had concerns over the initial filings by Nasdaq as being unclear and incomplete. It had flagged similar concerns to Cboe related to a filing from Fidelity.

The digital asset space is looking to regain popularity after a bruising 2022 that saw several crypto ventures collapse, including the spectacular implosion of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX.

The SEC last month sued Coinbase for failing to register as an exchange. According to Cboe’s Fidelity bitcoin ETF filing, the company’s platform represented roughly half of U.S. dollar-bitcoin trading in May.

Coinbase said in a letter filed last month in Manhattan federal court that it will ask a judge to toss the SEC lawsuit, arguing the regulator lacks authority to pursue civil claims because the crypto assets trading on its platform are not “investment contracts”, and thus not securities.

The SEC has rejected dozens of spot bitcoin ETF applications in recent years, including one from Fidelity in January 2022.

In all the cases, it said the filings did not meet the standards designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative practices and protect investors and the public interest.

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Coinbase CEO Says the Crypto Exchange Has Been Always Transparent With US SEC

Coinbase Global’s CEO Brian Armstrong said on Wednesday that the crypto exchange has a long history of being transparent with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Armstrong was speaking in an interview with CNBC, a day after the company was sued by the US securities regulator on allegations it failed to register as an exchange.

“The SEC allowed us to become a public company … so, its not great to have a regulator come back and say, actually, we changed our mind,” Armstrong said.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleged Coinbase traded at least 13 crypto assets that are securities that should have been registered, including tokens such as Solana, Cardano and Polygon.

Coinbase shares rebounded on Wednesday to rise nearly 1 percent to $52.03 (nearly Rs. 4,000).

The stock has declined about 20 percent since the SEC sued Coinbase and rival Binance alleging securities law violations, wiping roughly $3 billion (nearly Rs. 24,800 crore) from Coinbase’s market value.

Short sellers have raked in roughly $463 million (nearly. Rs. 3,800 crore) in paper profits betting against Coinbase over the past two sessions, according to data from analytics firm Ortex.

Meanwhile, the US Securities and Exchange Commission have accused the company of operating illegally because it failed to register as an exchange. The lawsuit is the SEC’s second in two days against a major crypto exchange, following its case against Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, and founder Changpeng Zhao.

Crypto companies say the SEC rules are unclear, and that the agency is overreaching by trying to regulate them. On the other hand, ten US states led by California also on Tuesday accused Coinbase of securities law violations concerning its staking rewards program.

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Activision Blizzard Agrees to Pay $35 Million to Settle Workforce Allegations

Activision Blizzard has agreed to pay $35 million (nearly Rs. 290 crore) to settle allegations over the video game maker’s handling of workplace complaints and violations of whistleblower protection rules, US financial regulators said on Friday.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said the company knew employee retention issues were “a particularly important risk in its business” but did not have adequate measures in place to manage workplace misconduct complaints between 2018 and 2021.

The company, which makes the popular Call of Duty game, also required employees between 2016 and 2021 to tell the company if the SEC contacted them for information — a violation of whistleblower protection rules, the agency said in a statement.

Activision Blizzard failed to implement necessary controls to collect and review employee complaints about workplace misconduct, which left it without the means to determine whether larger issues existed that needed to be disclosed to investors,” said Jason Burt, who heads the SEC’s Denver office, said in a statement.

Representatives for the Santa Monica, California-based video game developer and publishing company, in a statement, said they were “pleased to have amicably resolved this matter” and had “enhanced” their workplace reporting and contract language.

Microsoft, which makes Xbox, had made a $69 billion (nearly Rs. 5,66,500 crore) bid to acquire Activision Blizzard, but the Federal Trade Commission asked a judge in December to block the transaction. EU authorities as also examining the deal. The FTC, which enforces antitrust law, argued that the deal would give Microsoft’s Xbox exclusive access to Activision games, leaving Nintendo consoles and Sony’s PlayStation out in the cold.

Michael Chappell, the FTC administrative law judge, will rule on the deal after hearings set for August 2023.

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