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Coinbase Faces the SEC in Lengthy Court Hearing Over Crypto Regulation

Algoine News
Summary:
A lawsuit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) against crypto exchange Coinbase was discussed in a five-hour hearing with Judge Katherine Polk Failla. The judge examined the key arguments around cryptocurrency regulation and the role of the SEC, while clarifying the interpretation of the Howey test, which determines whether an asset classifies as an investment contract. SEC attorneys faced lengthy questioning, with the case often compared to recent court rulings against Ripple and Terraform Labs. Despite Coinbase's motion to dismiss, the SEC stood by their claim that Coinbase was attempting to redefine the Howey test and breach federal securities laws by trading certain tokens.
A hearing has taken place between Judge Katherine Polk Failla, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and Coinbase over the crypto exchange's request to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the SEC in June 2022. The nearly five-hour hearing provided a comprehensive breakdown of the core arguments made in court surrounding the realm of cryptocurrency, its assets, and the SEC's role in its regulation. The judge scrutinized the regulator’s case against the crypto exchange, prompting SEC attorneys to clarify why digital token issuance falls under the Howey test criteria, arguing the lawsuit was overly wide-ranging. The SEC believes that token purchasers are also making an investment decision based on the underlying network or ecosystem, suggesting that purchasing a token presents a value proposition. However, Coinbase’s legal team challenged this viewpoint, maintaining that Bitcoin — referred to as a commodity by a SEC attorney during the hearing — is also supported by a community and a network. Significantly, Judge Failla analyzed the concept of staking and secondary market transactions, as well as recent court cases involving crypto firms like Ripple and Terraform Labs. The SEC, represented by their legal team, professed that Coinbase is aiming to redefine the Howey test while trading crypto tokens that allow holder engagement in ecosystems, which are classified by the regulator as "common ventures." The SEC further accused the crypto exchange of personally applying the Howey test, leading to a mismatch in the understanding and eventual status of certain tokens. This varied interpretation over the Howey test, the SEC asserts, is a sufficient basis to deny the request for dismissal and advance the lawsuit. An unusual aspect of the hearing saw the judge bypassing pre-structured arguments, instead focusing on directing questions at the attorneys. Much of the initial two hours was concentrated on questioning the SEC lawyers. The SEC brought up a recent ruling against Terraform Labs for selling digital assets as securities without official registration, which, according to the SEC, strengthens its case against Coinbase. Although, Coinbase’s legal representation argued that the Terraform Labs case did not include secondary market transactions carried out on the Coinbase platform, and emphasized that the relationship between Terraform Labs and its investors was not public, unlike the transactions on their platform. Moreover, the Coinbase legal team discussed legal stipulations for investment contracts under US law, which demand a financial arrangement where money is invested in a business run by another party, and profits are expected in return. Coinbase holds that tokens traded on its platform may either lead to profits or simply serve a useful purpose. Judge Failla added that investors may purchase tokens because they perceive them as “cool” or because a friend recommended them. Coinbase made the point that, unlike stocks, ownership of tokens does not confer dividends or legal rights over a project. They compared this to the Ripple ruling from July 2023. This case ruled that the XRP token is not a security when sold via systems on exchanges, but is a security when sold to institutional investors, aligning with the Howey Test’s criteria. In Coinbase's opinion, anonymous transactions over its platform do not form an investment contract. The SEC lodged a lawsuit against Coinbase in June 2023, alleging that the crypto exchange breached federal securities laws. The regulator made the claim that 13 tokens listed on the exchange, including practical coins like Solana (SOL), Cardano (ADA), Polygon (MATIC) and others, were securities.

Published At

1/18/2024 1:47:21 AM

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