The SEC vs. Coinbase battle started last night over its lending product resurfaces the complex question - WTF is the framework for classifying a "security"? A 1946 Supreme Court case gives us an important foundation.pic.twitter.com/gWZS8QldAa
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In a June 2018 CNBC interview, SEC Chair Jay Clayton said Bitcoin was NOT a security. "Cryptocurrencies are replacements for sovereign currencies, replace the dollar, the euro, the yen with bitcoin. That type of currency is not a security."https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2018/06/06/sec-chairman-clayton-says-agency-wont-change-definition-of-a-security.html …
Okay, but what about other crypto assets? Stablecoins for example? Gary Gensler has been vocal in his opinion that stablecoins ARE securities. "These platforms are implicated by the securities laws and must work within our securities regime."https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/sec-chair-hints-some-stablecoins-are-securities-2021-07-21 …
Hold on a second there. Bitcoin is treated as a commodity today, putting it under CFTC jurisdiction. Why are stablecoins any different? The CFTC argues, nothing really:pic.twitter.com/oZUQetCeUP
The CFTC vs. SEC battle over jurisdiction is far from over, and will get more intense as new crypto use cases form. One such use case is lending, which is where Coinbase enters the equation.
Coinbase wants to launch a crypto lending feature. The SEC says "no, crypto lending is a security." CB disagrees. If CB does take the SEC to court (which I think is likely), it will force the agency to reveal more detailed specifics about why it argues this point.
My guess is the SEC will turn to the Howey Test and argue crypto lending profits are "derived from the efforts of others". This is where the entire legal battle lies, and I honestly don't know how it will be resolved. The CFTC will surely have something to say here as well.
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