Generative Data Intelligence

The Tower Trembles

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The SEC has launched definitive action against Binance and Coinbase. Welcome to the endgame of Crypto 1.0.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a crypto watcher who was necessarily surprised by the decision of Gary Gensler’s SEC to sue both Binance and Coinbase last week. If anything, the surprise is more that it’s taken this long to happen. Gensler has been many things since he became chair of the SEC – why don’t you try yelling some of them at the screen? – but coy about his intentions is not one of them.

To be sure, the Binance suit did not make Binance seem like a paragon of fiscal sobriety. And knowing what we do (or often don’t) about Binance, that checks out. The company is worth bajillions, has no fixed address and is roughly as transparent as a pit of asphalt.

But the Coinbase case is more vexing as, to hear them tell it, they’ve been trying to become a registered crypto exchange for years, but the SEC never quite got around to telling them how to do it. So, I guess, they should just shut down then?

So what exactly is Gensler up to? And what are the implications for crypto at large?

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He who shall not be named

Gary Gensler is a great bogeyman. The sheer speed and impact of crypto culture can often feel like pro-wrestling for nerds and Gary offers an ideal arch-villain for the writers to work with. “He used to be one of us and then he started working for them? The bastard. Hit him with the lid of that trash can.”

I’m not going to say I sympathise with Gensler (because I want to keep my job), but he is approaching his campaign with a fastidiousness that the “code is law” crowd simply has to admire. In Gary’s view, the SEC has a very specific brief and he has an obligation to apply the law as it stands to the entities in front of it. Hence using 80-year-old laws to try and corral a suite of financial technologies that have as much in common with stock trading in the post-war era as a little sniffle does with the Black Death.

The thing is, outside of the degenniest degens and a few crusted-on anarcho-BTC punks, pretty much everyone in the crypto space is clamouring for regulation and clarity these days. The issues cited by Gensler have been simmering away since the days of the 2017 mania and legislators have been talking about doing something about the whole mess ever since.

So, why has literally zero progress been made? Will we need to wait until the end of another bull cycle before something gets done? Or is Gary’s Big Swing a way of pushing the whole thing to a necessary crisis point?

In the end, the beginning

I say “the endgame of Crypto 1.0” because in many ways this feels like the slow end to an arc first begun in January 2009. For 14 years, crypto has been defined by its ability to ignore the laws of mere mortals. Cryptocurrency was finance as glimpsed through a fun house mirror that was riding the world’s most ludicrous rollercoaster. Chaos, anarchy, parody: these were the defining traits of the New Money.

Both insiders and outsiders called crypto the Wild West and its rugged, unforgiving nature was part and parcel of the frontier spirit which animated it. But history tells us that the pioneer regions of the real Wild West were all eventually subsumed into the United States. The law was imposed, order came and everyone got access to telephones and toilets and all the other fun benefits of modern society.

Few now would argue that this was a bad thing. Recognition brought with it stability and a more broadly shared prosperity. The outrageous winners, far more populous losers and ruthlessly exploited underclasses of the Old West were slowly replaced by a thriving middle class and a booming economy that, in California’s case, has become the fifth largest economy in the world.

Would a similar outcome for crypto be the worst thing? There may be fewer Lambos to go around, but that was never meant to be the point of it all. Perhaps this is how we finally start getting to that future of money we’ve long been promising.

Gensler gonna Gens

To be clear, these SEC motions don’t pose an existential risk to either Binance or Coinbase. There will be wrangling, there will be accusations and then, inevitably, there will be settlement. If either of them go down, it will be purely due to their own incompetence and/or criminal culpability.

But in coming for two bona fide giants of global crypto, Gensler has kickstarted a process that will end, one way or the other, with regulatory certainty. And even if the process leaves much to be desired, that can only be a positive for crypto.

Luke from CoinJar

CoinJar’s digital currency exchange services are operated in Australia by CoinJar Australia Pty Ltd ACN 648 570 807, a registered digital currency exchange provider with AUSTRAC; and in the United Kingdom by CoinJar UK Limited (company number 8905988), registered by the Financial Conduct Authority as a Cryptoasset Exchange Provider and Custodian Wallet Provider in the United Kingdom under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017, as amended (Firm Reference No. 928767). Like all investments, cryptoassets carry risk. Due to the potential volatility of the cryptoasset markets, the value of your investments may fall significantly and lead to total loss. Cryptoassets are complex and are unregulated in the UK, and you are unable to access the UK Financial Service Compensation Scheme or the UK Financial Ombudsman Service. We use third party banking, safekeeping and payment providers, and the failure of any of these providers could also lead to a loss of your assets. We recommend you obtain financial advice before making a decision to use your credit card to purchase cryptoassets or to invest in cryptoassets. Capital Gains Tax may be payable on profits.

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