The SEC’s attacks on the cryptocurrency industry have resulted in a significant response, with a U.S. court behind it

SEC

Recent times have been difficult for cryptocurrency exchanges operating in the United States. Both Binance and Coinbase have been sued for violating rules on trading unregistered securities, under the guises of many leading cryptocurrencies. However, the latter entity won the court’s favor in its case.

Offensive against SEC action

Judge Cheryl Ann Krause, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, issued an ultimatum to the Securities and Exchange Commission, giving it seven days to clarify its position on the petition filed by cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase. This is a decisive action by the court to gain clarity on the creation of regulations for digital assets and securities.

Coinbase, in July 2022, publicly petitioned the SEC to seek clarification from the Commission on key rules governing digital securities. In response, in April 2023, the SEC issued a warning to the exchange, stating that certain products offered by Coinbase were unregistered securities. As a result, the exchange decided to file a complaint with the Administrative Procedure Act, aimed at forcing a response from the Commission to its petition.

Coinbase demands clear guidelines

Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase, decided to comment on the situation on Twitter, expressing his position on the SEC’s response to the rulemaking petition. He wrote thus: “If the SEC responds to our petition in the negative, they are legally obligated to explain it to us, as we have the right to challenge this ‘no’ in court.” His words show Coinbase’s determination to defend its interests and rights.

He also pointed out the importance of setting rules and regulations before taking enforcement action, comparing it to traffic regulations that must be put in place and followed. Grewal stressed that rulemaking is key to ensuring clarity and protecting the interests of all parties.

SEC attacks Coinbase and Binance

The court order, which came in the wake of a growing legal conflict between the SEC and Coinbase. On Tuesday, June 6, the US Securities and Exchange Commission accused Coinbase of violating licensing rules and offering unregistered securities through its staking service.

Just a day earlier, a similar lawsuit was filed against Binance US. An offshoot of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange was sued for allowing trading in unregistered securities, under the forms of coins such as BNB, SOL, ADA, MATIC, ATOM, SAND, MANA, AXS and COTI.

Disclaimer: Blockbulletin does not take accountability of investments based on the information of the website. We highly advice readers to make extensive research prior to any invest

Share this article

More news

All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Learn

Bitcoin blocks

What are Bitcoin blocks?

Bitcoin (BTC) is currently one of the most popular digital currencies in the world. How does it differ from the…
Bitcoin forks

Bitcoin forks

Bitcoin’s history, although short, is quite bumpy. The reason for this is not only the dynamic price movements or the…
Ripple

What is XRP?

XRP is one of the top cryptocurrencies on the market. A project with a long and also quite controversial history…
What is Vechain VET

What is Vechain (VET)

The next cryptocurrency we take under the microscope is VeChain (VET). We will take a look at what sets it…
what is uniswap uni

What is Uniswap (UNI)?

In the article titled “What is Binance Coin (BNB),” we illustrated an exchange that, for the purpose of its business,…
Terra LUNA

What is Terra (LUNA)?

This time we take a look at another project that dived deep into the hearts of investors. What exactly is…
What is Stellar Lumens XLM

What is Stellar Lumens (XLM)

Some projects in the cryptocurrency world, although independent, are interrelated. One example is Litecoin, commonly referred to as Bitcoin’s little…
All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Analyses

All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Latest news

All articles loaded
No more articles to load