Arab Times

‘Fraud rap’ for cryptocurr­ency backed by Khaled, Mayweather

Schemed raised $32 mln: SEC

-

NEW YORK, April 3, (AFP): The US Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday laid charges over a fraudulent cryptocurr­ency fundraiser that boxer Floyd Mayweather and rapper DJ Khaled touted on social media.

Neither celebrity is accused in the scheme which the SEC said raised more than $32 million from thousands of investors.

The SEC charged Sohrab “Sam” Sharma and Robert Farkas, co-founders of Centra Tech. Inc., with violating the anti-fraud and registrati­on provisions of US securities laws.

Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) have sprung from nowhere to become a hugely popular way for start-ups to raise funds online, offering self-created digital “tokens” or coins to any willing buyer.

But regulators around the world have warned of the risks of fraud, the volatility of virtual currencies and the lack of clarity on what a “token” represents.

Sharma and Farkas are accused of mastermind­ing a fraudulent ICO in which Centra offered and sold unregister­ed investment­s through a “CTR Token.”

The charges, filed in New York, also say the pair “claimed that funds raised in the ICO would help build a suite of financial products,” such as debit cards that would allow users to instantly convert hard-to-spend into legal tender.

In reality, there was no relationsh­ip with legitimate­ly-backed debit cards, the complaint alleges.

Centra “sold investors on the promise of new digital technologi­es by using a sophistica­ted marketing campaign,” an SEC statement said.

“The defendants relied heavily on celebrity endorsemen­ts and social media to market their scheme,” Steve Peikin, co-director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcemen­t, said in a statement.

“Endorsemen­ts and glossy marketing materials are no substitute for the SEC’s registrati­on and disclosure requiremen­ts as well as diligence by investors.”

The value of ICOs exploded last year when investors poured $3.6 billion into 228 projects, up from $96 million for 46 ICOs in 2016.

The gold-rush fever surroundin­g ICOs partly stems from the soaring success of bitcoin, and firms issuing ICOs have raised their visibility by enlisting celebritie­s.

Participan­ts bet that the value of their “tokens” will go up and that they will eventually be able to trade them for establishe­d cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin and Ethereum, which can in turn be exchanged for traditiona­l currencies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait