It seems like just yesterday that cryptocurrency was being hyped as the next big thing in expensive Super Bowl ads featuring big-name celebrities. The vibe is markedly different this week after the Securities and Exchange Commission sued two of the biggest crypto exchanges, alleging they violated securities law.
The SEC’s charges against Binance and Coinbase vary in scale and scope, but both sets result from increased regulatory scrutiny toward just what products these exchanges sell to consumers. That has been a major question mark, one that has left the industry begging for clarity from the SEC and Congress about how the government views the “tokens” trade, which has produced billions in transaction fees for these major markets. Now they have their answer — and it’s not one that they’re going to like.
According to the SEC’s complaints, both Coinbase and Binance allegedly ignored their need to register with the SEC as exchanges, brokerages and clearing agencies — functions that are usually performed by three separate companies. Coinbase, which is U.S.-based, is further accused of selling at least 13 crypto assets on its market that count as securities. Binance and its founder, Changpeng Zhao, are meanwhile also charged with misusing customers’ funds by commingling them with the company’s finances and falsely portraying Binance’s U.S. platform as an entirely separate platform “as part of an elaborate scheme to evade U.S. federal securities laws.” (Both companies have denied the allegations.)
At the heart of the lawsuits — and the crypto industry’s pushback — is an unanswered question: “Is a token a security or a commodity?” The former includes “investment contracts” like stocks and bonds, in which someone invests money in a venture and expects to see profits as a result. Commodities, on the other hand, are usually physical things that can be bought on exchanges in bulk — like oil, corn or wheat — before they’re actually produced.
The answer matters as far as which regulatory agency gets to set the rules for the industry. While the SEC has jurisdiction over securities, the crypto industry would much prefer its products to be seen as the latter, not least because they fall under the jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which has looser enforcement mechanisms than the SEC. (It’s worth noting, though, that the CFTC has also sued Binance in a separate matter.)
But that’s a hard case to make when so many of the digital coins minted over the last decade can’t be used to actually buy anything other than digital coins. The transfer of funds from one coin trading platform to another has become reliant on exchanges like Binance and Coinbase, which also hold on to their customers’ assets and settle their trades. And the markets have sold themselves to the public mostly as places to invest in digital assets and turn a profit on those investments.
The ambiguity has spurred the industry to invest a good chunk of its revenue into making sure that regulators don’t apply current securities law to it or its products — and if that fails, lobbying Congress to change the law to exclude digital tokens explicitly. Coinbase in particular has been loudly complaining that the SEC should bear some of the blame if it finds any issue with the company’s actions. After all, Coinbase lawyers argued in a letter to the SEC last month, the agency cleared Coinbase’s initial public offering in April 2021, which required a close look at its finances. And, Coinbase has argued in letters and lawsuits, the uncertainty of the regulatory landscape means that it can’t possibly be expected to comply with laws that it believes don’t apply to its products.








