Springfield News-Sun

Government cracks down on the crypto industry

- David Yaffe-bellany

SAN FRANCISCO — Cryptocurr­ency executives hoped 2023 would herald a new beginning after a year of disastrous setbacks. Instead, the industry has found itself on the receiving end of an aggressive government crackdown.

Last month, the Securities and Exchange Commission levied fines and other penalties against crypto lending firms, while federal banking officials issued policy statements that appeared calculated to make it harder for crypto companies to participat­e in the mainstream finance system.

In the past few days, the pace has accelerate­d. Two high-profile crypto firms — including a popular exchange where people buy and sell digital coins — came under intense pressure from state and federal regulators. After announcing a settlement with the exchange, the SEC also fined a crypto promoter and sued a startup that issued digital coins, for a total of three enforcemen­ts in just over a week.

The actions are likely a prelude to a protracted spell of legal wrangling, as regulators respond to the market turmoil that caused prominent crypto companies to file for bankruptcy last year and cost investors billions of dollars. And the enforcemen­t signals a growing urgency in Washington to address the threat posed by cryptocurr­encies, an experiment­al technology that enables new forms of financial speculatio­n.

“I’ve been referring to it as the crypto carpet bombing,” said Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Associatio­n, a crypto industry trade group. “Every couple hours we hear of some new enforcemen­t action.”

For years, regulators were criticized for failing to come to grips with the crypto industry, even as it grew into a multitrill­ion-dollar business. In November, the FTX crypto exchange, once regarded as one of the most reliable firms in the freewheeli­ng industry, failed practicall­y overnight, and its founder, Sam Bankman-fried, was charged with orchestrat­ing a yearslong fraud.

That put regulators under intense pressure to act. Crypto companies have long existed in a legal gray area, with legislator­s and government officials debating how they should be classified for regulation. The industry’s growth has outstrippe­d the slow-moving federal bureaucrac­ies that oversee the other parts of the finance industry, like traditiona­l banks and publicly traded companies.

After FTX filed for bankruptcy in November, the SEC, the Justice Department and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, another regulator, all brought cases against Bankman-fried and two of his top lieutenant­s.

But the activity against the broader industry picked up last month when the SEC fined crypto lender Nexo $45 million and charged one of its competitor­s, Genesis, with offering unregister­ed securities.

This month, the SEC announced a settlement with the Kraken crypto exchange that removed one of its popular investment products from the U.S. market, which could have broad ramificati­ons for the industry. The agency also sent Paxos, a company that issues so-called stablecoin­s pegged to the U.S. dollar, a warning of a potential lawsuit over securities violations.

Last week, the SEC sued Terraform Labs, the company that developed the digital coins Luna and Terrausd, which collapsed last spring and triggered a broader meltdown in cryptocurr­ency prices. On Friday, the agency announced that former NBA star Paul Pierce had agreed to pay $1.4 million to settle charges that he marketed a cryptocurr­ency without the proper disclosure­s.

Beyond the SEC, three top financial regulators sent a letter to banking organizati­ons last month, warning them to exercise caution in their dealings with cryptocurr­encies. Also last month, the Federal Reserve denied an applicatio­n from Custodia Bank, a crypto company, to join the central bank’s payment system.

The enforcemen­t wave has caused outrage and anxiety in the crypto industry. Some industry advocates have labeled the government efforts “Operation Choke Point 2.0,” alluding to a law enforcemen­t campaign in the 2010s to prevent banks from working with certain businesses.

One industry lawyer said he was advising executives to prepare for as long as five years of high-stakes, expensive litigation with the government. Crypto companies have privately traded tips on which law firms to hire to handle government lawsuits, said the lawyer, who requested anonymity to describe sensitive legal discussion­s.

“What’s happening today is a coordinate­d effort that cuts across multiple agencies and seemingly reflects a unitary view that the entire crypto industry needs to be restrained,” said Paul Grewal, the chief legal officer of Coinbase, the largest U.S. crypto exchange. “It’s important for the crypto industry to prepare itself for a long fight.”

Representa­tives for the SEC and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., a banking regulator, declined to comment. Other federal banking regulators did not respond to requests for comment.

Since virtually its inception, the crypto industry has drawn scrutiny from regulators. And in 2021, as the market soared to record heights, some officials in Washington sounded the alarm. Gary Gensler, chair of the SEC, has argued that the vast majority of cryptocurr­encies are securities, like shares traded on the stock market, and should be subject to the same strict regulation­s. His office spent months building cases against crypto firms, some of which are now coming to fruition.

The SEC’S $30 million settlement with Kraken, one of the largest U.S. exchanges, alarmed crypto enthusiast­s. Kraken agreed to stop offering a service known as “staking,” which allows investors to earn interest on their crypto savings and has been lucrative for the industry.

The enthusiast­s fear that the SEC might move to block other crypto firms from offering similar services.

 ?? JEFFERSON SIEGEL / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sam Bankman-fried (left) founder of the FTX cryptocurr­ency exchange, leaves a federal court in Manhattan after his release on a $250 million bond on Dec. 22. A series of enforcemen­t actions by state and federal agencies mark the beginning of what’s likely to become a prolonged period of legal wrangling for the cryptocurr­ency industry.
JEFFERSON SIEGEL / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sam Bankman-fried (left) founder of the FTX cryptocurr­ency exchange, leaves a federal court in Manhattan after his release on a $250 million bond on Dec. 22. A series of enforcemen­t actions by state and federal agencies mark the beginning of what’s likely to become a prolonged period of legal wrangling for the cryptocurr­ency industry.

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