Coinbase continues to clash with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), recently urging the agency to roll back its regulations on decentralized exchanges (DEXs).
This ongoing dispute could further define the legal boundaries for decentralized finance (DeFi) operations in the United States.
Coinbase Calls SEC’s DEX Regulations ‘Irrational’
In a letter to the SEC on Monday, Coinbase’s chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, urged the regulator to withdraw a proposed rule that would require decentralized exchanges to fall under the agency’s purview. If the rule, which would go into effect in January 2022, is passed, DeFi projects would have to register as an alternative exchange system.
“Coinbase remains concerned about the SEC’s reopening and expansion of the term ‘exchange,’ which is designed in part to target decentralized exchanges (DEXs) that facilitate digital asset trading,” the letter begins.
Here are the key takeaways from Coinbase’s letter to the SEC:
- The APA and the Securities and Exchange Act require that the economic impact of such rules be strictly considered.
- The committee’s cost-benefit analysis lacks critical information and is based on irrational assumptions.
- The committee failed to take into account significant costs and underestimated the magnitude of the costs it claimed to take into account.
- The Commission failed to show that any problem required regulation and overstated the claimed benefits of the rules.
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The core argument between Grewal and Coinbase is that the proposal would end innovation in the cryptocurrency market in a number of ways, one of which is that it would impose impossible requirements on DEXs. The Coinbase CLO cited the end of Chevron’s respect, which was achieved by Paul Clement, a member of the Coinbase board.
According to Grewal, Clement’s success reflects the low likelihood that a reviewing court will agree with a broad attempt by regulators to extend key provisions of the Exchange Act far beyond their original meaning. Coinbase is therefore urging the Commission to rescind the rule, reissue notice, and allow meaningful stakeholder input.
Coinbase Deep In Legal Trouble
As Coinbase continues to advocate for regulatory clarity, it is deeply mired in legal trouble. The development suggests that the case, which began in June 2023 and is already over a year old, is far from over. It has to do with Gary Gensler’s stance that crypto platforms should register with the U.S. SEC. He says they qualify as exchanges regardless of whether they are centralized or decentralized.
In this position, regulators have accused Coinbase and other platforms like Uniswap Labs of operating as unregistered exchanges. This case has set a precedent for imposing significant restrictions in the name of consumer protection and market integrity.
Coinbase’s position is that regulators are overstepping their regulatory authority by not providing clear guidance on what constitutes a security in the first place. The exchange has attempted to demonstrate this lack of clarity using SEC documents, but has run into difficulties in its request.
Coinbase’s legal troubles extend beyond the SEC. The exchange is also embroiled in conflict with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) after digital asset critic Molly White and Public Citizen accused Coinbase of violating FEC laws by donating $25 million to the Fairshake Super PAC.
Read more: Cryptocurrency Regulation: What Are the Pros and Cons?
Coinbase also opposes the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s proposed prediction market rules, which it argues misinterpret the Commodity Exchange Act.
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