Coinbase Case Continues Says Judge Failla But DeFi Gets New Momentum

Coinbase MTD

Coinbase MTD – decision

Yesterday, District Judge Katherine Failla rendered her decision on Coinbase’s motion-to-dismiss (MTD), which was filed last August, in the enforcement action the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought against the company last June.

See Judge Failla’s filing (PDF).

You may recall that Judge Failla dismissed the Uniswap case last fall – a fraud class-action lawsuit brought by 6 individual investors against the Uniswap protocol. Her decision at the time showed an embrace of principles of decentralization.

And even though the tone of January’s MTD hearing seemed to bode well for Coinbase and its MTD, the case was allowed to proceed except for one part where Judge Failla said, “…the Court agrees with Defendants that they are entitled to dismissal of the claim that Coinbase acts as an unregistered broker by making its Wallet application available to customers.”

Coinbase MTD – Coinbase reaction

Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal said about the decision, “Today, the Court decided that our SEC case will move forward on most of the claims, but dismissed the claims against Coinbase Wallet. We were prepared for this, and we look forward to uncovering more about the SEC’s internal views and discussions on crypto regulation…” Read his thread on X.

Grewal concluded on X: “Looking ahead, we remain confident in our legal arguments, we look forward to proving we’re right, we are eager for the opportunity to take discovery from the SEC for the first time, and we appreciate the Court’s continued consideration of our case…” Continue reading “Coinbase Case Continues Says Judge Failla But DeFi Gets New Momentum”

House Republicans Try To Pre-empt Ether Securities Designation By SEC; Sanctions, Enforcement Highlights

Is Ether a security?

Prometheum week

As we first discussed on Monday, it’s “Prometheum Week” on Capitol Hill even if many Members may be working from home.

Yesterday, Republican leaders on the House Agriculture and House Financial Services (HFS) Committees came out swinging in anticipation of a potential blow-up – ignited by digital asset securities platform Prometheum – between the SEC and the CFTC over the classification of the Ethereum token (ETH) as a security versus a commodity.

In a letter sent to the SEC Chair Gary Gensler, House Ag Chair Glenn “GT” Thompson (R, PA) and HFS Chair Patrick McHenry (R, NC), Reps. French Hill (R, AR), Dusty Johnson (R, SD), House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R, MN), and Rep. Warren Davidson (R, OH) headlined a list of 48 House Republicans wanting an explanation:

“Despite your insistence that most digital assets are ‘digital asset securities,’ that term continues to be undefined. Other regulators, intermediaries, and market participants disagree with your assertions, and have struggled to identify which digital assets are digital asset securities.”

The Members ask a series of questions trying to get to the bottom of the SEC’s and its Chair’s thinking on digital assets such as: “Is ETH a digital asset security? (…) If ETH is a digital asset security, please answer the following additional questions…”

Read the letter. Answers are due by April 9.

Democrats are nowhere to be found in the press release or the letter.  Prometheum is a threat to the House Republicans digital assets agenda, which Democratic leadership – from the White House to HFS Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D, CA) – likely knows. Read the press release.

what you should know: The April 9 deadline likely lands just in front of the rumored HFS SEC Oversight hearing next month (Politico). If the SEC Chair doesn’t supply adequate responses, will this be the moment for HFS Chair McHenry to use the subpoena card on Gensler that he threatened last October? Continue reading “House Republicans Try To Pre-empt Ether Securities Designation By SEC; Sanctions, Enforcement Highlights”

DeFi Education Fund Tries Pre-Empting The SEC; Unlocking Democratic Congress For Crypto

courts before Congress

lawsuit pre-empts SEC

Here’s a novel, industry approach to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s  (SEC) “regulation by enforcement” approach to digital assets: sue the SEC before they sue you.

Amanda Tuminelli, Chief Legal Officer of DeFi Education Fund, announced yesterday that her organization along with a digital assets and apparel startup Beba had formally sued the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Tuminelli said on X, “Today, DeFi Education Fund and Beba Collection
sued the SEC. It has everything to do with airdrops + stopping the SEC’s regulation by enforcement crusade against our industry.” See the complaint.

The complaint notes the startup’s beginnings and the two brothers, originally from East Africa, who had started a business in Waco, Texas, which featured local artisans and incorporated the use of digital asset tokens.

Axios covers the news and explains, “The [lawsuit] is part of an evolving legal strategy for the crypto industry that strikes back at what it believes is an unlawful pattern of enforcement actions, and seeks to compel the regulator to create a clear set of rules.” Read more.

what you should know: It’s a long road to hoe but this is another element of industry strategy in the United States: hammer out a regulatory framework through the courts if Congress and regulators aren’t cooperating. Continue reading “DeFi Education Fund Tries Pre-Empting The SEC; Unlocking Democratic Congress For Crypto”

Ether The Security May Debut This Week; House Republican Margin Complicates Crypto Bills

ETH as a security

Prometheum week

Prometheum co-CEO Aaron Kaplan let the world know in early February that his SEC-approved (with a “special purpose broker-dealer license) digital assets trading platform would likely roll out custody for Ether “security” tokens at the end of March. Well, here we are. And, Congress has left town. What a convenient moment for the SEC and its Chair Gary Gensler to nudge the little-known platform forward with its ETH “security” designation which would directly contradict the ETH “commodity” token overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and its Chair Rostin Behnam.

Both Behnam and Gensler are Democrats, but are representative of their caucus split when it comes to digital assets.

Generally speaking, Gensler is anti-crypto and seeks a strict securities agenda for digital assets whereas Behnam is pro-crypto and sees more nuance with digital assets beginning with unequivocal support for Bitcoin AND Ether as commodity tokens.

An early March House Agriculture Committee CFTC Oversight hearing led to a choreographed exchange between House Ag Chair Glenn “GT” Thompson (R, PA) and Chair Behnam which sounded the alarm that a Prometheum securities designation for Ether would bollocks up the works of the CFTC where it treats the token as a commodity.

So the question this week – the last week of March – is.. will Prometheum roll out its ETH security token custody? And also.. who will be the first client? Continue reading “Ether The Security May Debut This Week; House Republican Margin Complicates Crypto Bills”

UK Lawmaker Gloats As US Awaits Digital Assets Framework; Divided Government, Agencies

Digital assets in the UK

Redcoats are coming

At Blockworks’ Digital Assets Summit in London this week, Lord Chris Holmes, member of the UK House of Lords, was quoted as saying, “We have such an opportunity in the UK because we’ve seen what’s happening in the [European Union]…and indeed to a large extent what isn’t happening in the United States.” Cheeky! Blockworks’ Casey Wagner reports that British pols were clearly feeling the moment. Even the conference itself, originally scheduled for Washington D.C., was taking place in the UK. Read more.

what you should know: The British didn’t do well the last time they challenged us. But, we didn’t sit on our hands either.

divided government, agencies

In Tony Edward’s Thinking Crypto podcast, former Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chair Chris Giancarlo (R) responds to talk that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and CFTC are disagreeing about whether Ether is a security and commodity. Giancarlo says: “Let me say this… Thank goodness for the CFTC for the past 5 or 6 years because if the CFTC were not there holding the flame for innovation, we would only have the SEC and its relative indifference/antipathy/hostility to digital asset innovation.”

He continues: “Our founders of the United States – right or wrong – they very much believed in divided government. They felt that if government were arguing with itself, then our liberties would be safe. In a similar kind of way, that’s played out between the SEC and the CFTC. (…) But for it, we might have had a majority view coming out of the SEC dominating their approach to this…” Listen here. Continue reading “UK Lawmaker Gloats As US Awaits Digital Assets Framework; Divided Government, Agencies”

HFS Chair McHenry Warns SEC Chair Gensler; Ether Getting Closer Look By The SEC

Sen. Lummis at Coinbase event

Coinbase event – Chair McHenry

In Washington D.C. yesterday, Coinbase convened “Update The System” policy summit with the promise of showing policymakers use cases for crypto -or “onchain” as the company is promoting.

Republican House Financial Service Chair Patrick McHenry (R, NC) offered his input again on whether or not digital assets legislations could see the light of day in the remaining months of the 118th Congress. As he was at Tuesday’s Punchbowl News event, McHenry was guardedly optimistic on stablecoin legislation with the current plan including riding along “must-pass” legislation before the end of the year (presumably before the August recess).

McHenry told Coinbase’s policy chief Kara Calvert about the stablecoin possibilities (lightly edited for clarity):

“We need a legislative vehicle, we need a deadline. We can drive the stickier issues if we have a deadline. And so… ‘are we going to have legislative vehicles to get signed into law?’ I think that those chances have increased once we fund the government, which gives us the opportunity to land a product like a stablecoin bill. If we’re given that deadline. I do think there’s goodwill enough to to answer the President’s Executive Order on a need for a federal stablecoin legislation and further the work that Ranking Member [Maxine] Waters (D, CA) and I have been have been about for the last 20 months – we and our teams.”

McHenry explained his public view on why its taken so long to get a House floor vote on digital assets legislation:

“When I designed this plan, I didn’t anticipate that we were going to have the motion to vacate the Speaker in the fall…. that I would end up in the Speaker’s chair for three weeks…. all these various things that blew up the end of the year where I thought we’re gonna move our products. I didn’t anticipate the final four months of the year getting so jacked up – which they got very jacked up. And then it’s taken us three months to get our footing back. In those seven months, that’s when I wanted to have all of our actions taken care of.”

more tips:

    • Key U.S. Lawmaker McHenry Says House Has ‘Workable’ Stablecoin Bill – CoinDesk

what you should know: Given the House Floor vote plan, will a House Floor vote only take place for the must-pass on which the stablecoin bill will ride and/or will there be a separate vote on the stablecoin bill and digital asset market structure bills, for example? The value of a House Floor vote on the specific legislation such as stablecoins will be to reveal individual member support -or not. And, lurking in the reeds will be vigilant crypto Super PAC funds for Member’s November campaigns -or their opponents. Continue reading “HFS Chair McHenry Warns SEC Chair Gensler; Ether Getting Closer Look By The SEC”

McHenry Remains Guarded On Stablecoin Law Prospects; Today’s ‘SEC Overreach’ Hearing

stablecoins

stablecoin legislation

Yesterday at Punchbowl News’ “The Summit: The Digital Payments Economy” event in Washington, D.C., House Financial Services (HFS) Chair Patrick McHenry (R, NC) appeared in conversation with Punchbowl’s Jake Sherman and hinted at the way forward for the digital payment topic of the hour: stablecoins.

Chair McHenry was not overly optimistic about passage of stablecoin legislation – such as his “Clarity For Payment Stablecoins Act” [H.R.4766] – in the 118th Congress and said, “… I think we’re at an inflection point where we can land this ‘plane’ this year.. this year. But we [need] the broader context of Congress to get us that opening _ a legislative vehicle…”

McHenry continued and referenced Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s (D, NY) help with stablecoin legislation saying, “…the architecture is very similar for all of us… I think we would know how to resolve if given a deadline, and a way to get through the process…”

what you should know: The help of the Senate in facilitating passage of a stablecoin bill was explicit by McHenry, but the help of House Speaker Mike Johnson (R, LA) is likely needed, too.

today’s hearing – sanctions

Today’s House Financial Services (HFS) Capital Markets Subcommittee Hearing titled, “SEC Overreach: Examining the Need for Reform” will begin at 10 a.m. ET in Rayburn House Office Building.

See witnesses and livestream here. Continue reading “McHenry Remains Guarded On Stablecoin Law Prospects; Today’s ‘SEC Overreach’ Hearing”

SEC Cited For Abuse Of Power In DEBT Box Case; Fed Chair Bitcoin

sanctions

unprecedented sanctions

Fortune’s Leo Schwartz reported on X late yesterday that District Judge Robert Shelby, an Obama appointee, has sanctioned the SEC for a “gross abuse of power” in the DEBT Box lawsuit. Schwartz says Judge Shelby “found the agency misrepresented facts to obtain a restraining order against a Utah-based crypto firm.” Read more (subscription).

The Block notes that the SEC will have to pay DEBT Box’s legal costs and “sanctions.” But, is it all too little, too late for DEBT Box?

Retweeting the sanctions news, House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry (R, NC) didn’t hold back on X last night: “Chair [Gary] Gensler’s enforcement team’s egregious misconduct will have broad implications on SEC authority beyond his crypto crusade. Gensler requested more funding for enforcement last year, now a judge calls out the SEC’s abusive and deceptive legal practices. This must end.”

what you should know: But, is it all too little, too late for DEBT Box? The company’s business was destroyed due to the Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) put on it at the request of the SEC and approved by the Court. The biggest ramifications may be the political calculus going forward between Chair Gensler and Democratic leadership. Do they soften their digital assets stance?  The rumored April HFS oversight meeting with Chair Gensler ought to be good theater.

SEC overreach

A House Financial Services (HFS) Capital Markets Subcommittee hearing tomorrow titled, “SEC Overreach: Examining the Need for Reform” will be something to keep an eye on even though the focus is not digital assets, specifically. But, the just-announced DEBT Box outcome will no doubt be top-of-mind.

Overall, the House majority Republicans appear to be upping the ante against the SEC and its Chair Gary Gensler at the hearing with 12 new bills and another joint resolution devoted to reining in the securities agency. From the hearing memo: “This hearing will examine Chair Gensler’s approach to policymaking at the SEC, which has sparked significant concerns.”

See the hearing page. And, read the Committee Memorandum.

The list of witnesses to appear in front of the Subcommittee and its Chair Ann Wagner (R, MO) will include the following at least (more to come… Better Markets from Dem leadership, perhaps?): Jennifer Schulp, Director of Financial Regulation Studies, Cato Institute; David Burton, Senior Fellow, The Heritage Foundation; John Gulliver, Executive Director, Committee on Capital Markets Regulation.

what you should know: Last month, a Joint Resolution [H.J.R.109] rescinding the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) SAB 121 made it successfully out of an HFS markup with bipartisan support and rebuked the SEC for its overreach when it comes to crypto custody for traditional financial firms. A House Floor vote is next for the resolution as well as progress in the Senate. Continue reading “SEC Cited For Abuse Of Power In DEBT Box Case; Fed Chair Bitcoin”