Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SEC sues company over currency token

- NATHANIEL POPPER

The Securities and Exchange Commission sued the company behind one of the most valuable cryptocurr­encies Tuesday, raising fundamenta­l questions about the viability of the token.

The SEC accused the San Francisco company, Ripple, of selling unregister­ed securities when it sold the digital token XRP to investors around the world.

The suit, filed in federal court in New York, also names Ripple’s current chief executive, Brad Garlinghou­se, and its former chief executive, Chris Larsen. The agency accused both men of selling the XRP token to enrich themselves despite knowing it had little actual use.

“Ripple sold XRP widely into the market, specifical­ly to individual­s who had no ‘use’ for XRP as Ripple has described such potential ‘uses’ and for the most part when no such uses even existed,” the complaint said.

Ripple had marketed XRP as a new kind of currency that would make it easier for banks and financial institutio­ns to transfer money around the world.

But the lawsuit says financial companies that tried XRP told Ripple that it was more expensive than the available alternativ­es. A few companies continued to use XRP because Ripple paid them to do so, the suit says.

XRP, like bitcoin and many other cryptocurr­encies, has been skyrocketi­ng in value recently. On Monday, XRP tokens were worth around $22 billion, making it the third most-valuable cryptocurr­ency after bitcoin and ether. The token had turned Larsen and Garlinghou­se into billionair­es.

But within hours of the lawsuit’s filing, the value of outstandin­g Ripple had fallen by more than $3 billion.

The suit says that to lock in their fortunes, Larsen and Garlinghou­se previously sold nearly 2 billion units of XRP that the company had given them.

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