The Philippine Star

Coinbase, SEC on collision course for ‘existentia­l’ clash over crypto

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NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Coinbase debuted on the US stock market on April 14, 2021 – the same day US senators confirmed Gary Gensler to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the country’s top markets regulator.

Gensler, who has called the crypto sector a “Wild West” riddled with fraud, is now embroiled in a battle with the world’s largest publicly traded crypto firm over a core debate: whether digital assets are investment contracts akin to stocks or bonds that should be regulated by the SEC.

Friction between crypto proponents and the regulator have been brewing under Gensler’s leadership, with both sides growing increasing­ly loud in their criticisms.

The escalating tension exploded into public view on Wednesday when Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and the company’s chief legal officer Paul Grewal posted online that the firm had been told that SEC staff intend to recommend enforcemen­t action, adding that Coinbase was willing to fight it in court.

Coinbase shares have tumbled 12 percent since Wednesday’s disclosure.

SEC and Coinbase spokespeop­le declined to comment. For months, the two have been in discussion­s over regulation and the agency’s investigat­ion into Coinbase, according to two sources.

In July, the firm disclosed an SEC probe into its asset listing processes, staking programs and yield-generating products.

Discussion­s between the SEC and Coinbase broke down in recent weeks, with one source saying the two sides had moved “further apart.” The SEC appears to be going after Coinbase’s entire business as operating outside of US laws, the source said.

The crypto industry believes it operates in a regulatory gray area not governed by existing US securities laws – and that new legislatio­n is needed to regulate the industry.

“We continue to think rulemaking and legislatio­n are better tools for defining the law for our industry than enforcemen­t actions,” Coinbase’s Grewal said on Wednesday. “But if necessary, we welcome the opportunit­y for Coinbase and the broader crypto community to get clarity in court.”

Prior to Gensler’s arrival, the SEC engaged in targeted enforcemen­t, but the Democratic chair has ratcheted up focus on crypto platforms themselves. The SEC’s crackdown on crypto gathered pace after November’s collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX exchange.

Gensler has raised questions over whether crypto firms rely on a business model that is fundamenta­lly non-compliant with the law, adding that crypto intermedia­ries provide a range of functions, such as operating as an exchange, broker-dealer, clearing agent and custodian, that should be regulated by the SEC.

“This is probably existentia­l for Coinbase,” said Joshua White, a finance professor at Vanderbilt University. “It’s perhaps existentia­l for the industry, at least in the US.”

The SEC on Thursday issued an investor alert warning that firms offering crypto asset securities may not be complying with US laws.

Kristin Smith, the CEO of the Blockchain Associatio­n, voiced the crypto industry associatio­n’s support for Coinbase, noting: “The SEC doesn’t make the law – it only makes allegation­s, which ultimately must be tested in the courts.”

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