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Coinbase takes its turn in court, arguing the tokens it listed are not securities

New York District Judge Katherine Polk Failla probed Coinbase in court on Wednesday about whether tokens listed on its exchange were securities

Coinbase was sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission in June for allegedly operating as an unregistered exchange, broker and clearing agency. Coinbase has pushed back on those claims, arguing for the case to be dismissed and accusing the regulator of taking a “regulation by enforcement approach.”

Coinbase lawyer William Savitt delved into how securities are defined, marking what they say is a difference between “investing in Beanie Baby Inc. and buying Beanie Babies.”

From its June complaint, the SEC had said tokens including SOL, ADA, MATIC, FIL, SAND, AXS, CHZ, FLOW, ICP, NEAR, VGX, DASH and NEXO were securities.

Savitt noted that Coinbase does not claim tokens listed on its website can never be deemed securities.

“We don’t take the view that token transactions can never be investment contracts,” he said, adding that, however, the SEC did not present any allegations in its lawsuit that would satisfy the investment contract definition.

He also stated that Coinbase agrees with the SEC that a formal contract signed by a buyer is not necessary to enter into an investment contract. But, again, just the fact that token buyers read the white papers and other information about token projects does not mean they are buying investment contracts, he said.

Savitt also pushed back on the SEC’s thesis that selling tokens on Coinbase should be deemed investment contracts simply because the token projects might have made certain promises to buyers, and buyers purchased tokens hoping for a price increase.

“There has to be a statement that is meant to convey an enforceable promise. That’s the irreducible minimum of what can be conceived to be an investment contract,” Savitt said.

What makes blockchain tokens really different from securities, is that whoever buys stocks, whether directly from an issuer or on the secondary market, gets all the rights such securities give to a holder, but that is not true for tokens, Savitt said.

Bitcoin clash

In a curious turn of the debate, the SEC and Coinbase attorneys clashed over why bitcoin definitely is not a security.

In the first part of the hearing, the SEC’s Patrick Costello mentioned the oldest cryptocurrency and noted that it’s not a security because “there is no ecosystem behind it,” so people buying bitcoin do not invest in a common enterprise. Coinbase’s Savitt responded to this thesis in his closing statement, noting that bitcoin definitely has an ecosystem, like any other cryptocurrency.

Coinbase asked about past court decisions

Judge Failla asked Coinbase’s lawyer whether New York District Judge Jed Rakoff’s decision last month was wrong when that judge sided with the SEC that Terraform Labs and its former CEO Do Kwon offered and sold unregistered securities.

Coinbase’s lawyer said “I don’t know,” but added that the exchange disagreed with some of Rakoff’s analysis.

The lawyer said that “we can live with its analysis” because Rakoff’s decision ultimately says that there has to be a contract or a contractual agreement.

Other judges have taken a direct stance in deciding whether cryptocurrencies in question are securities or not. Failla also asked Coinbase’s lawyer about the infamous Ripple case.

In that case, New York District Court Judge Analisa Torres ruled in July that some of Ripple’s sales, called programmatic, of XRP did not violate securities laws because of a blind bid process in place for them. She also ruled that other direct sales of the token to institutional investors were securities, leaving a partial win for the SEC.

Judge Failla not convinced on the major questions doctrine

Judge Failla, meanwhile, mentioned the major questions doctrine that Coinbase invoked, noting that it becomes a part of court decisions quite infrequently. She said she was “afraid to do exactly” what Coinbase is asking her to stop the SEC from doing – take more power than the law allows.

The doctrine says that if an agency wants to decide on an issue that has major national significance, it has to be supported by clear congressional authorization. Coinbase has argued that the doctrine would apply and the SEC is trying to encroach on the Congress’s mandate and make moves that “would have a legislative effect.”

Failla said that, since being on the bench for 10 years, no one has asked about the doctrine until this case.

“My read or my research into this area does not suggest that it comes up very often and even less often does it actually get found by a court,” Failla said.

Failla said she has a “natural hesitation” to implicate the doctrine because it is not frequently done.

Judge Faila ended the hearing late on Wednesday saying both parties had answered some of her questions, but she noted that she had more.

“I can’t decide this from the bench right now,” Failla said.

If the judge denies Coinbase’s ask to dismiss the case, which is likely, then it goes to discovery. At the end of discovery, both the SEC and Coinbase could bring a motion for summary judgment.

If the judge isn’t convinced, then it would proceed to trial and be presented to a jury, but that wouldn’t likely happen until 2025.

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