Cryptocurrency

US regulator takes aim at every crypto except Bitcoin


Cryptocurrency

The chair of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission has said that every cryptocurrency except for Bitcoin should be considered as a security.

Gary Gensler told New York Magazine that projects “are securities because there’s a group in the middle and the public is anticipating profits based on that group”.

This would bring them under its remit.

The news was welcomed by MicroStrategy co-founder and executive chairman Michael Saylor, a well-known Bitcoin maximalist.

“Consensus is building that everything in the #Crypto industry other than #Bitcoin is a security, destined to be regulated by the SEC,” he tweeted. “This makes BTC the only crypto-asset suitable for use as global money.”

However Jake Chervinsky, a lawyer and policy lead at Blockchain Association, indicated that to follow through on this would be impractical for the SEC.

“Chair Gensler may have prejudged that every digital asset aside from bitcoin is a security, but his opinion is not the law,” he tweeted.

“The SEC lacks authority to regulate any of them until and unless it proves its case in court. For each asset, every single one, individually, one at a time.”

Gabriel Shapiro, general counsel at investment firm Delphi Labs, said that if Gensler had his way,  more than 12,300 tokens – worth around $663 billion – would become illegal.

“SEC registration is not only too expensive for most token creators — there is also no clear path for registration of tokens,” he tweeted.

“What is the plan here? Since registration is not feasible, it can only be everyone pays huge fines, stops working on the protocols, destroys all dev premines, and delists from trading. That would mean 12,305 lawsuits.

“What is the plan? We are all wondering, and billions of American [dollars] are at risk.”

SME cybersecurity firm raises £12.75m

Cryptocurrency shorts

Ukraine has received $70m in crypto donations since the start of Russia’s invasion a year ago – including $28.9m in Ether, $22.8m in Bitcoin and $11.6m in Tether.

India’s plan to coordinate global crypto regulation, aired during the recent G20 meeting, has won backing from the International Monetary Fund and United States. It says it does not advocate an outright ban, but the IMF will not rule that out as an option.

The European Commission has launched a blockchain regulatory sandbox “to facilitate the dialogue between regulators and innovators for private and public sector use cases… legal advice and regulatory guidance will be provided in a safe and confidential environment”. The sandbox will host 20 blockchain startups every year until 2026. Applicants will be chosen by academic experts from European universities.

Smart electricity storage firm plugs into £3.8m investment

Crypto prices

The overall market cap of the 22,600 coins is at $1.07 trillion at the time of writing (7am UK), down from 1.09tn on Friday morning.

For round-ups of recent cryptocurrency news developments, click here.

For valuations of the top 100 coins by market cap in US dollars, plus 24-hour price change, see below.



Source link

Leave a Response