SEC's Gurbir Grewal criticizes crypto industry's noncompliance, 'creative attempts' to avoid rules
Quick Take The SEC’s Director of the Division of Enforcement, Gurbir Grewal, lashed out at the crypto industry on Wednesday morning for about 15 minutes and rebutted the agency’s critics. During his speech, Grewal also raised concerns about the crypto industry and marginalized communities.
The Securities and Exchange Commission's top enforcer, Gurbir Grewal, condemned the crypto industry over its "significant noncompliance" and addressed criticism lodged at the agency over the years.
Grewal, the director of the agency's Division of Enforcement, laid into the crypto industry on Wednesday morning for about 15 minutes during a two-day "SEC Speaks" event sponsored by the Practicing Law Institute.
"Over this past decade, we have confronted significant noncompliance and many, many creative attempts by market participants to avoid our jurisdiction, with some claiming that we're making it up as we go, that we are regulating by enforcement and others arguing that we are somehow recklessly exceeding our authorities," Grewal said. Grewal also noted that his views don't necessarily reflect the agency's.
The crypto industry has criticized the SEC for what many call "regulation by enforcement," while SEC Chair Gary Gensler has argued that most cryptocurrencies are securities and should be regulated similarly to other investments. Cases have been taken to the courts, with some firms, such as Coinbase, arguing that crypto is similar to Beanie Babies and others calling for clarity on how securities laws apply.
Grewal said the test to determine whether crypto is a security is the Howey Test, referring to a 1946 U.S. Supreme Court case frequently cited by the SEC to determine whether an asset qualifies as an investment contract and, therefore, a security.
"It's not the essential ingredients test or the Beanie Babies test or some other tests that industry folks might like to create for themselves," Grewal said on Wednesday.
The SEC has been clear and consistent about Howey — there are "no secret analyses," Grewal added
'Verbal gymnastics'
"At the same time, we've been accused of picking winners and losers, stifling innovation, and driving crypto businesses to some more favorable foreign jurisdictions wherever they may exist," Grewal said, taking a shot at the crypto industry for what he described as, "a decade's worth of verbal gymnastics that are just a backhanded way of saying that 'we want a different set of rules that apply to everyone else.'"
"The predatory inclusion tactics that certain crypto entities are directing at Black, Brown and other marginalized communities are extremely troubling," Grewal said. "Here, I'm talking about the familiar but so far unsupported narratives that crypto will somehow increase financial inclusion, that it will uplift the unbanked or the underbanked, and that it will help them build wealth and increase upward mobility."
A Pew Research Center study from last year found that 24 percent of Asian adults and 21 percent of Black or Hispanic adults say they have invested or used crypto, compared to 14 percent of white adults.
"Crypto assets are the only major financial products that Black Americans are more likely to own than white Americans," Grewal said. "There's some evidence that Black and Brown investors were disproportionately harmed during the downturn of crypto markets over the last few years."
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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