What You Need to Know
- The SEC alleges that Coinbase for years evaded its rules by letting users trade crypto tokens that were actually unregistered securities.
The Securities and Exchange Commission widened its sweeping crackdown on crypto by accusing Coinbase Global Inc. of running an illegal exchange, a move that could make it harder for the industry to operate and for U.S. citizens to trade.
In a 101-page lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court in New York, the SEC alleged that Coinbase for years evaded its rules by letting users trade numerous crypto tokens that were actually unregistered securities.
Just a day earlier, the regulator sued rival Binance Holdings Ltd., alleging a slew of violations.
The SEC moved against Coinbase, the biggest U.S. crypto exchange, after Chair Gary Gensler repeatedly argued that most tokens are subject to his agency’s oversight and that swaths of the industry have been breaking the law.
At the same time, U.S. regulators warned banks to steer clear of crypto because of potential risks to the financial system, making it harder for U.S. citizens to invest.
See: SEC Sues Binance and CEO for Breaking Securities Rules
The SEC’s civil lawsuit stands out because of Coinbase’s high profile in the U.S., and its status as a publicly traded company.
The stock tumbled as much as 20% in New York trading, shaving about $1.5 billion off the company’s market capitalization. The shares were down 12.7% to $51.24 at 2:17 p.m. in New York.
The case against Coinbase, coupled with Monday’s against Binance, forms a one-two punch against the industry. The SEC alleged Binance, the world’s largest crypto platform, and its chief executive, Changpeng Zhao, mishandled customer funds, misled investors and regulators, and broke securities rules.
“The SEC under Gensler is dead set on enforcing rules that, if followed, would kill off almost all of crypto,” Omid Malekan, adjunct professor at Columbia Business School who has consulted on crypto, said in a text message.
Gensler Crackdown
Gensler said in an interview on Bloomberg Television that the SEC worked with 10 states to bring its complaint against Coinbase. He cast the agency’s efforts to clamp down on crypto as one of both investor protection and U.S. market integrity.
“Why should the New York Stock Exchange or broker dealers we all know and respect be undermined by this other corner of the capital markets, which is sort of saying, thumbing their nose and saying ‘Catch us if you can’?,” he told Bloomberg’s David Westin.
Coinbase was co-founded in 2012 by Brian Armstrong, its chief executive officer. He wasn’t accused of wrongdoing in the SEC’s complaint.