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After Binance, SEC Sues Coinbase over Illegal Operation of Crypto Exchange

Date:

The
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged Coinbase, the largest
cryptocurrency exchange in the United States, with operating an illegal trading
platform that offered unregistered crypto asset securities. The securities
watchdog also accused the platform of running a digital asset
staking-as-a-service programme without authorization.

In a
complaint filed before a US district court in New York, SEC
further alleged that Coinbase combines the functions of an exchange, brokerage and
clearing agency–which are separated under US laws–without registering to
engage in these activities.

“All the
while, Coinbase has earned billions of dollars in revenues by, among other
things, collecting transaction fees from investors whom Coinbase has deprived
of the disclosures and protections that registration entails and thus exposed
to significant risk,” SEC explained in its complaint.

The lawsuit
against Coinbase comes a day after the regulator charged Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange
by trading volume, before a district court in Columbia for allegedly operating an illegal exchange, offering unregistered crypto
asset securities to investors and commingling customers’ funds. Also, Coinbase in late March received a Wells Notice from the regulator, notifying the
Nasdaq-listed crypto exchange that it has been violating the US securities law
by offering unregistered crypto asset securities.

More Allegations

In its
complaint, SEC alleged that Coinbase since at least 2019 has been offering
unregistered securities through its staking-as-a-service programme. Crypto
staking involves participation in the validation of transactions on a
blockchain that uses a proof-of-stake consensus mechanism in order to earn
rewards.

Furthermore,
the securities watchdog claimed that Coinbase since at least 2016 understood a
Supreme Court that determined when crypto assets is an
investment contract subject to US securities laws. It added that the exchange has been offering crypto asset securities despite claiming for years that
it was striving for compliance with the decision.

“As
alleged in our complaint, Coinbase was fully aware of the applicability of the
federal securities laws to its business activities, but deliberately refused to
follow them,” Gurbir Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement,
said in a statement. “While Coinbase’s calculated decisions may have allowed it
to earn billions, it’s done so at the expense of investors by depriving them of
the protections to which they are entitled.”

In the statement, SEC said it is seeking injunctive relief, disgorgement of
ill-gotten gains plus interest, penalties, and other equitable relief, from the
case.

Coinbase
Operates ‘Business as Usual’

Meanwhile, Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer (CLO) and General Counsel,
in a statement said the crypto exchange has demonstrated commitment to compliance. He
accused the SEC of relying on ‘an enforcement-only approach’ without clear
rules for the crypto industry.

In April, Coinbase sued the SEC for failing to respond to its July 2022 petition that asked the US securities watchdog to
provide guidance for the cryptocurrency industry using its formal rulemaking
process. The petition was filed in the same month reports first emerged that the SEC was probing Coinbase over alleged unregistered crypto asset
securities.

“The
solution is legislation that allows fair rules for the road to be developed
transparently and applied equally, not litigation,” Grewal said, speaking on SEC’s new lawsuit. “In the meantime, we’ll continue to operate our business as
usual.”

Over the last few months, SEC has continued to crackdown on cryptocurrency exchanges in the United States, arguing that their crypto offerings are unregistered securities. As a result, crypto firms such as Kraken, Bittrex, Gemini
and Genesis
, have been at loggerheads with the regulator.

Citi chooses NetDania; FMA warns against imposter; read today’s news nuggets.

The
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged Coinbase, the largest
cryptocurrency exchange in the United States, with operating an illegal trading
platform that offered unregistered crypto asset securities. The securities
watchdog also accused the platform of running a digital asset
staking-as-a-service programme without authorization.

In a
complaint filed before a US district court in New York, SEC
further alleged that Coinbase combines the functions of an exchange, brokerage and
clearing agency–which are separated under US laws–without registering to
engage in these activities.

“All the
while, Coinbase has earned billions of dollars in revenues by, among other
things, collecting transaction fees from investors whom Coinbase has deprived
of the disclosures and protections that registration entails and thus exposed
to significant risk,” SEC explained in its complaint.

The lawsuit
against Coinbase comes a day after the regulator charged Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange
by trading volume, before a district court in Columbia for allegedly operating an illegal exchange, offering unregistered crypto
asset securities to investors and commingling customers’ funds. Also, Coinbase in late March received a Wells Notice from the regulator, notifying the
Nasdaq-listed crypto exchange that it has been violating the US securities law
by offering unregistered crypto asset securities.

More Allegations

In its
complaint, SEC alleged that Coinbase since at least 2019 has been offering
unregistered securities through its staking-as-a-service programme. Crypto
staking involves participation in the validation of transactions on a
blockchain that uses a proof-of-stake consensus mechanism in order to earn
rewards.

Furthermore,
the securities watchdog claimed that Coinbase since at least 2016 understood a
Supreme Court that determined when crypto assets is an
investment contract subject to US securities laws. It added that the exchange has been offering crypto asset securities despite claiming for years that
it was striving for compliance with the decision.

“As
alleged in our complaint, Coinbase was fully aware of the applicability of the
federal securities laws to its business activities, but deliberately refused to
follow them,” Gurbir Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement,
said in a statement. “While Coinbase’s calculated decisions may have allowed it
to earn billions, it’s done so at the expense of investors by depriving them of
the protections to which they are entitled.”

In the statement, SEC said it is seeking injunctive relief, disgorgement of
ill-gotten gains plus interest, penalties, and other equitable relief, from the
case.

Coinbase
Operates ‘Business as Usual’

Meanwhile, Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer (CLO) and General Counsel,
in a statement said the crypto exchange has demonstrated commitment to compliance. He
accused the SEC of relying on ‘an enforcement-only approach’ without clear
rules for the crypto industry.

In April, Coinbase sued the SEC for failing to respond to its July 2022 petition that asked the US securities watchdog to
provide guidance for the cryptocurrency industry using its formal rulemaking
process. The petition was filed in the same month reports first emerged that the SEC was probing Coinbase over alleged unregistered crypto asset
securities.

“The
solution is legislation that allows fair rules for the road to be developed
transparently and applied equally, not litigation,” Grewal said, speaking on SEC’s new lawsuit. “In the meantime, we’ll continue to operate our business as
usual.”

Over the last few months, SEC has continued to crackdown on cryptocurrency exchanges in the United States, arguing that their crypto offerings are unregistered securities. As a result, crypto firms such as Kraken, Bittrex, Gemini
and Genesis
, have been at loggerheads with the regulator.

Citi chooses NetDania; FMA warns against imposter; read today’s news nuggets.

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