The Breakdown - Did the SEC Really Serve Subpoenas at Mainnet?
Episode Date: September 22, 2021Today on “The Breakdown,” NLW looks at reports from Messari’s Mainnet conference that the Securities and Exchange Commission served one of the speakers with a subpoena right before a panel. He d...iscusses: The growing tension between securities regulators and crypto lending and interest programs Why Coinbase backed down from its fight with the SEC about its upcoming Lend product The non-news from today’s Gary Gensler webinar OFAC’s first sanctions against a crypto exchange. Enjoying this content? SUBSCRIBE to the Podcast Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1438693620?at=1000lSDb Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/538vuul1PuorUDwgkC8JWF?si=ddSvD-HST2e_E7wgxcjtfQ Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9ubHdjcnlwdG8ubGlic3luLmNvbS9yc3M= Join the discussion: https://discord.gg/VrKRrfKCz8 Follow on Twitter: NLW: https://twitter.com/nlw Breakdown: https://twitter.com/BreakdownNLW “The Breakdown” is written, produced by and features NLW, with editing by Rob Mitchell and additional production support by Eleanor Pahl. Adam B. Levine is our executive producer and our theme music is “Countdown” by Neon Beach. The music you heard today behind our sponsor is “Only in Time” by Abloom. Image credit: Lyubchik Prokopchuk/iStock/Getty Images Plus, modified by CoinDesk.
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Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW.
It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world.
The breakdown is sponsored by Nidig and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.
What's going on, guys? It is Tuesday, September 21st, and today we're talking about an SEC shakedown at Mainnet.
I've been in crypto full-time for a long time now, but this one was even surprising for me.
To get into this, I want to go back to some of the things I've mentioned in the last few weeks.
And let's discuss first the issue that securities regulators are clearly having with interest-bearing crypto accounts.
A couple months ago, Block 5 came into regulatory prominence when Texas, New Jersey, Alabama,
and a number of others basically said that they were operating unregistered securities in their states,
and they needed to stop that.
At first, Block 5 struck a tone that was, if not conciliatory in the sense that they,
made clear that they believed their products were not, in fact, securities, then at least the tone was
that they were willing to work with these regulators. New Jersey suspended their order a number of times.
It seemed like there was productive conversations happening. But then at last week's Salt Conference,
BlockFi CEO, Zach Prince, effectively said, look, the SEC is going to need to come in and say
whether these things are securities or not, because we're not going to make our policy based on the
policies of individual states. At the end of last week, this story got more complex.
as some of those same state regulators, Texas, New Jersey, Alabama, went after Celsius for its
similar interest-bearing products. Obviously, however, those things being as big as they are, the real
big moment in this whole securities regulators, interest accounts, crypto-yield product,
conversation came with Brian Armstrong, the CEO of Coinbase's thread from September 7th.
He wrote some really sketchy behavior coming out of the SEC recently.
Story time. Millions of crypto holders have been earning yield on their assets over the last few years.
It makes sense. If you want to lend out your funds, you can earn a return. Everyone seems happy.
A bunch of great companies in crypto have been offering versions of this for years.
Coinbase came out recently and said we would be launching our own version.
We were planning to go live in a few weeks, so we reached out to the SEC to give them a friendly
heads-up in briefing. They responded by telling us this lend feature is a security.
Okay, seems strange. How can lending be a security? So we asked the SEC to help us understand and share
their view. We always make an effort to work proactively with regulators and keep an open mind.
They refuse to tell us why they think it's a security and instead subpoena a bunch of records from us.
We comply. Demanding testimony from our employees, we comply. And then tell us they will be
suing us if we proceed to launch with zero explanation as to why. The thread goes on.
And in addition to this thread, Coinbase also published a blog post from their general counsel
further explaining the Wells notice they got, which was basically a threat to sue if Coinbase didn't
cease and desist its plans to launch this lend product. This, of course, created a huge amount of
discussion in the cryptosphere, and it was a pretty big move from Coinbase to go so public with
this set of statements, accusations, and tone. Now, holding aside questions of the actual legal
status or the security status of lend products, Jerry Brito, the executive director of CoinCenter,
had what I thought was a pretty cogent argument. He retweeted the piece from Coinbase's chief legal officer
and said, if true, this is pretty underhanded. I know it's easy for me to say, but Coinbase should go
ahead and launch its product, let the SEC sue, and go to court. Let the SEC make its case and let a judge
decide what the law is. Coinbase should go to court because the alternative is that the SEC will
enforce against a small provider, settle with them out of court, and hold up the scalp as guidance.
Enough with guidance. Howie and Reeves are judge-made law. We need court decisions to get clarity here.
Unfortunately, that's not what happened.
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Yesterday, the wires broke with the story that Coinbase would not be announcing its program,
and it turned out that the update had come at 5 p.m. on Friday.
Coinbase had added a new title to the June 29th blog post
where they had initially announced their LEN program
that said, update, as of 5pm Eastern Time Friday, September 17th,
we are not launching the USDC APY program announced below.
The subheader reads,
Our goal is to create great products for our customers
and to advance our mission to increase economic freedom in the world.
As we continue our work to seek regulatory clarity for the crypto industry as a whole,
we've made the difficult decision not to launch the USDA APY program announced below.
We have also discontinued the waitlist for this program as we turn our work to what comes next.
We had hundreds of thousands of customers from across the country sign up, and we wanted to thank you all for your interest.
We will not stop looking for ways to bring innovative, trusted programs and products to our customers.
Crypto Twitter responded about how you'd imagine.
Jason Yanowitz writes, this is infuriating.
Banks yield a measly 0.07%.
inflation is at least 2 to 3%.
The SEC is forcing wealth erosion on Americans.
Ryan Adams of Bankless wrote the SEC just scared Coinbase
into not launching its Lend product.
Enjoy your 0.01 APY bank account America.
Our regulators are protecting us from higher rates.
Now, not everyone was outraged, at least with this specific example.
Gabriel Shapiro wrote,
Lend, a product where you give a corporation money
and it can do pretty much whatever it wants with it
and even adjust the interest rate at its discretion, was never really the hill to die on.
D5 presents much closer and more debatable issues.
Still, the question is what is going on behind the scenes?
And for that, let's get some insight from Frankie Scoops himself, Frank Shapiro from the block.
I read this yesterday, but I think it's particularly relevant in today's context.
He wrote, TLDR, SEC is pissed.
They're way behind an understanding and overseeing this space because Clayton didn't take
crypto seriously.
I think the SEC will create a pathway for citizenship-like route for crypto projects and firms offering securities.
Crackdown coming unless lobbying ramps up.
Coinbase's thread most certainly antagonized them, though.
Gensler, as far as I know, is someone who doesn't mind making someone's life miserable.
Everyone in their mother is getting subpoenaed.
Wouldn't be surprised if we see a lot of these lending efforts shut or walked back on.
When news of Coinbase dropping lend broke, he quote tweeted it with the caption,
See, I told you they were pissed.
That fact, by the way, seemed to be confirmed yesterday at Masari's mainnet.
For those of you who have never been to a Masari event, they are always great.
Ryan has been putting on events in crypto, thinking about content in crypto, for basically
as long as anyone has been doing content in crypto.
He, in fact, ran CoinDesk for a while before it came into its sort of modern form.
He was the bridge between the founding and its modern era.
Anyway, the event looks great.
I wish I was there.
but that unfortunately became not the real focus of everyone on crypto Twitter who wasn't there,
or even those who were, because this happened around 11 a.m. yesterday morning.
Slava Rubin, an attendee tweeted,
LOL, I just witnessed a guy get served by the SEC at the top of the escalator at Maynet 2021,
right before going on stage for his panel.
Now, this isn't some random account.
Slava Rubin is the former founder of Indiegogo.
He's the founder of a new platform called Vincent that helps people
find alternative investments. For what it's worth, I've known him for a decade and a half now,
and he wouldn't make this shit up, and he's not looking for Twitter clout. So I was inclined to
believe him right away. And of course, this information set the crypto world on fire.
All of my telegram channels were lit up speculating on who it might have been. And that is one
piece I'm not going to comment on now, because at the time, it's all speculative and unconfirmed.
The people that folks most thought it was have said that it wasn't, so I don't want to participate
in the rumor mill. Now, it is an important question.
to ask, did it actually happen? And at 4.12 p.m. yesterday, Masari CEO, Ryan Selkis wrote,
if you're wondering, when I actually decided to run for Senate, it was when these fakers came to my event,
didn't buy a ticket, and served one of the speakers of subpoena. Enough talk. More war on our
out-of-control regulatory state. Selkis 2024, time to activate the crypto political machine.
And for the record, we offered to comp a ton of passes for regulators and congressional staff that
wanted to learn more about crypto. My comment about not buying a thing,
ticket was ingest. They don't want to learn. They want to shut crypto down in the U.S. full stop.
Jake Trevinsky gave an interpretation of why this happened. He wrote, two reasons why SEC might do this.
One, the target lives outside the U.S. and is hard to serve at home, but SEC knew they'd be in NYC
and took advantage of the chance for personal service. Two, SEC wanted everyone to see this happen
live to send a message and or intimidate the industry. NetNet, what it suggests to me is that
Frank Shapiro's thesis that the SEC is pissed seems more rather than less likely.
In general, it feels pretty clear to me that a reckoning is coming. There's just too much swirling
to not feel like U.S. regulatory issues are coming to a head. For example, the much-reported Treasury
Stablecoin report is supposedly coming soon. What's more, Gary Gensler did a live stream today
with the Washington Post called The Path Forward all about cryptocurrencies. I didn't have a chance
to watch it, but from everything that I've read from all the quotes, it just seems like Gensler
cementing his lines. Gensler said pedantically that the value of cryptocurrencies could go down
dramatically. They could go up dramatically. He discussed that it's important to not, quote, undermine
the stability of the system. He said, quote, I think it's better to bring it inside the public
policy framework to ensure that we address these important public policy goals. He said that the SEC
has a, quote, great deal of authority on when it comes to crypto tokens. He repeated his assertion
that crypto platforms have thousands of tokens on them, and so it's very unlikely that they don't
have securities. He criticized all forms of private past money, which, of course, George Selgin,
venerated historian that he is, had something to say about on Twitter. But my favorite
interpretation of what he actually said came from Brian Ramos in my comments. I asked what
was the best summary of what Gensler said, and he said, in an interview titled The Path Forward,
I refuse to outline a clear path forward. I think what is notable about the answer, I think what is notable
about this speech then is that nothing was notable. This is an example of lines being drawn and people
getting entrenched in their positions. There is one more piece of news from today that I wanted to
discuss that relates to this larger story of the U.S. government's involvement in crypto. It's not about
the SEC or securities designation. It's about a different side of this, but it's still relevant.
The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, OFAC, has labeled suex.io a specially designated
national. Now, OFAC is the office that sanctions people, and while they've sanctioned individual
crypto addresses before, this is the first time a crypto exchange as a whole has been sanctioned.
suex.io is a Russia-based exchange that was blacklisted for its alleged role in supporting
crypto transactions for ransomware attackers. What that means is that U.S. citizens and residents
are forbidden to do business with suex.io on penalty of fines or even prison. Not that I think a lot
of U.S. citizens were out there smashing by on suex.io. Here's a little color.
from CoinDesk. Deputy Treasury Secretary Adéimo said in a press call ahead of the announcement
that Suex facilitated transactions from at least eight ransomware variants, and as much as 40% of
Suex's transaction volume was associated with addresses linked to known malicious actors.
While the Treasury Department did not identify any specific attacks, Suex abetted,
Chanalysis said in a blog post that cryptocurrencies paid by victims of the Ruik, Conti, and May's
ransomware attacks sent payments that ultimately went through the exchange.
Chainalysis identified some $13 million in Bitcoin transactions sent through Suex directly tied to
ransomware attacks. Scammers sent another $24 million in Bitcoin, while another $20 million in Bitcoin
were tied to Hydra and other darknet markets. Adamo said, exchanges like Suex are critical
to attacker's ability to extract profits from ransomware attacks. Today's action is a signal of our
intention to expose and disrupt the illicit infrastructure used in these attacks. However,
he concluded his speech with,
we recognize that the vast majority of activity that's happening in the virtual currencies
is legitimate activity.
But we also do know that these criminals are using some of these exchanges and mixers and peer-to-peer services
to conduct illicit activity that is not in our national interests.
Here's the bright spot part of the podcast.
It's very clear that the U.S. government is ramping up its engagement with crypto.
It's very clear that Gensler has set out on this mission and will not be deterred from his regulation
by enforcement approach. It's very clear that we're going to have to avail ourselves of the tools of
law, judges, courts, lawsuits, etc., to try to get rulings on things that we think differently about
than do groups like the SEC and probably the Treasury as well. But as I've said before,
this was inevitable. This is inevitable. I don't think we have anything to be scared by, for example,
OFAC going after an exchange that seems pretty clearly to be in the wrong here, and perhaps even just a front
for exactly this type of activity. That doesn't diminish or delegitimize any of the real activity
happening in crypto. In fact, it just draws the contrast between that activity and the real above-board
stuff. It's entirely possible to me that we see some of these moments happening right now this fall,
like the SEC coming to Mainnet and serving someone right before they got on a panel,
as a key inflection point that drove the ultimate confrontation that allows us to figure out
what the true regulatory regime for crypto and digital assets in the U.S. is going to be.
This is the point in the battle where not having the fight anymore is way worse than just getting it
done with. Anyways, guys, I appreciate you listening. And until tomorrow, be safe and take care of each other.
Peace.
