November 24, 2024
Coinbase offers a fiery response to the SEC's threat of enforcement action
The crypto exchange unleashed the latest salvo against the regulator in an arguably existential battle over Coinbase's business model.

Brian Armstrong, co-founder and chief executive officer of Coinbase Inc., speaks during the Singapore Fintech Festival, in Singapore, on Friday, Nov. 4, 2022. 

Bryan van der Beek | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Crypto exchange

Separately, Grewal told CNBC, “At the time when we went public we had detailed discussions with the SEC about the very aspects of our business that are now — two years later — the subject of the Wells notice. Nothing has changed.”

The SEC indicated to Coinbase in a March wells notice that its spot trading, staking, custody and institutional trading businesses were at risk. The SEC’s warning to Coinbase noted that the regulator would allege Coinbase was offering and selling unregistered securities, in violation of federal law. The SEC has used unregistered offering and sale violations to force other crypto exchanges to close services in the U.S., including the crypto exchange Kraken’s staking-as-a-service product.

If the SEC succeeded, it could force Coinbase to close down those units. To date, the SEC has never approved a crypto-asset entity as an national securities exchange, despite an extensive dialogue with Coinbase over the years.

Executives at the crypto firm have signaled for months that the Coinbase is ready to grapple with the SEC in an existential case not just for Coinbase but the future of the crypto industry in the U.S. at large.

Coinbase noted that the company’s years-long efforts to cooperate with SEC securities staff produced no concerns from SEC staffers until recently. Coinbase also noted that the SEC could have denied the company permission to go public in 2021, when it reviewed Coinbase’s S-1 filing.

Perhaps most consequentially for the rest of the U.S. crypto industry, Coinbase also argues that proposed charges rely on “flawed and untested” theories involving investment contracts, spot markets, and custody services.

Securities lawyers rely on something known as the Howey test, from a Supreme Court case where the SEC sued an Florida orange grove operator for a leaseback and profit-sharing arrangement involving the sale of oranges.

The four elements required to determine whether transactions constitute investment contracts: an investment, in common enterprise, and reasonable expectation of profit, from derived from the work of others.

Coinbase is a secondary market, meaning that investors buy and sell assets that they already own rather than purchasing them directly from an issuer. The Nasdaq and the NYSE are also secondary markets for U.S. equities. Courts have already been reluctant to extend “Howey’s reach to include the secondary trading of assets where no issuer is involved,” Coinbase’s response noted.

Coinbase also issued a point-by-point repudiation of Howey’s applicability to the exchange’s staking service. “Coinbase’s retail staking services fail all four prongs of the Howey test,” Coinbase’s response said.

Coinbase is represented by Sullivan & Cromwell.

“The SEC generally does not acknowledge the existence or non-existence of any investigation unless or until charges are filed,” a spokesperson for the SEC told CNBC.

“Coinbase has never wanted to litigate with the Commission. The Commission should not want to litigate either,” Coinbase wrote in its response. “Litigation will put the Commission’s own actions on trial,” Coinbase said, and “erode public trust cultivated over decades.

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