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SEC Chairman Gensler Advocates for Cryptocurrency Market Regulation
Cryptocurrency proponents tout the technology’s potentially “transformative” nature and its position as an arguably more stable store of value when compared with fiat money. [1] Yet SEC Chairman Gary Gensler cautioned crypto investors against an overly rosy view of the technology during a speech at the Penn Law Capital Markets Association Annual Conference this week. Instead, Gensler advocated for investor caution, along with a much broader regulatory and enforcement role for the SEC in cryptocurrency markets. [2]
Before sharing his view of the SEC’s role in crypto markets, Chairman Gensler first compared the technology to that of the dotcom bubble in 2000 and subprime lenders leading up to the 2008 financial crisis. His message: the flurry of attention on crypto and related innovations does little to vouch for its long-term viability or success. Instead, as was borne out in 2000 and again in 2008, cryptocurrency could indeed be a technology destined for failure.
The SEC’s role then, in Gensler’s view, is to protect investors from the potential financial blowback of such a failure. While Gensler lauded the spirit of entrepreneurship common in the United States, he also argued that the SEC should approach crypto regulation in a “technology neutral” way. In so doing, the SEC could carry out their mission to protect investors, facilitate capital formation, and maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets, while still allowing crypto markets to flourish.
Gensler chose to focus on three discrete areas in which the SEC might appropriately step in with a regulatory scheme: crypto trading and lending platforms, stablecoins, and crypto tokens.
First, on the topic of crypto trading and lending platforms, Gensler noted the importance of these platforms being registered, thus allowing regulation in a similar manner to regulation of traditional securities exchanges. Gensler argued that in light of the functional similarities between “traditional regulated exchanges” and crypto platforms, investors on crypto platforms deserve similar regulatory protections. Such investor protections, Gensler noted, in turn promote investor confidence, which allows markets to work.
According to Gensler, stablecoins, which can be likened to bank deposits or money market funds, pose their own differing set of potential policy considerations. Stablecoins are rarely used in commerce, are not a legal tender, and are not issued by any central government.
As a result, stablecoins may impact monetary policy and financial stability within larger markets, may facilitate illicit activity, and may put U.S. investors at risk of losses created by unique conflicts of interest. Such conflicts arise because many of the platforms on which stablecoins are traded also physically own the stablecoins they trade.
Finally, Gensler approached the topic of the SEC’s regulation of all other crypto tokens. Most notably, Gensler stated that most crypto tokens are “securities” or “investment contracts” under U.S. law, thus necessitating registration by the SEC pursuant to existing federal securities laws.
The U.S. Supreme Court has held that an investment contract, or security, exists “when there is the investment of money in a common enterprise with a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the efforts of others.”
Gensler noted that many crypto tokens are being sold by entrepreneurs who are looking to raise money from the public. This use-case places crypto tokens squarely within the definition of security or investment contract, and thus, submits crypto tokens to federal oversight. Regulation of crypto markets in this way safeguards not only crypto investors, but also the broader stability of the economy.
While Gensler emphasized that the views in his speech were his own and not representative of the SEC, his perspective will likely impact the SEC as it moves forward with enforcement policy. In the interim, Savage Villoch attorneys are available to consult on your cryptocurrency investment questions or concerns!
Sources: [1] https://www.investopedia.com/tech/question-why-should-anyone-invest-crypto/#:~:text=Another%20common%20reason%20to%20invest,dilute%20their%20value%20through%20inflation.
[2] https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/gensler-remarks-crypto-markets-040422