The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) sued U.S crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) on allegations of violating federal securities law, a day after filling a similar suit against Binance.
According to the SEC, Coinbase has operated as an unregistered broker, exchange and clearing agency simultaneously, arguing that it solicited customers, handled orders, allowed for bids and acted as an intermediary all at once. The suit named Coinbase, Inc. and Coinbase Global, Inc. as defendants, but did not name founder and CEO Brian Armstrong or any other executive.
“The Coinbase Platform merges three functions that are typically separated in traditional securities markets – those of brokers, exchanges, and clearing agencies,” the SEC suit said. “Yet, Coinbase has never registered with the SEC as a broker, national securities exchange, or clearing agency, thus evading the disclosure regime that Congress has established for our securities markets.”
The entire crypto market and Coinbase’s premarket stock price fell on news of the suit.
Coinbase knew some of the cryptos it made available to U.S. customers may have checked the boxes for securities, the SEC argued, pointing to its Crypto Ratings Council effort, which the exchange spearheaded in 2019 to try and create an informal system to assess whether a cryptocurrency was a security.
“During this period, Coinbase made available on the Coinbase Platform crypto assets with high ‘risk’ scores under the CRC framework it had adopted,” the SEC said. “In other words, to realize exponential growth of the Coinbase Platform and boost its own trading profits, Coinbase made the strategic business decision to add crypto assets to the Coinbase Platform even where it recognized the crypto assets had the characteristics of securities.”
The SEC identified solana (SOL), cardano (ADA), polygon (MATIC), sandbox (SAND), filecoin (FIL) and other tokens as securities.
The suit went on to allege that Coinbase “identified ‘problematic statements'” by issuers, meaning anything an issuer said that might mean the issued token was a security.
The SEC also pointed to Coinbase’s public registration statement, noting that in its risk factors section, it acknowledged that some of the assets it listed may be securities.
The SEC first warned Coinbase it might sue the exchange earlier this year, sending a Wells Notice, which Coinbase responded to in April.