Coinbase is asking a judge to dismiss the Securities and Exchange Commissionâs lawsuit against it. In a motion filed on Friday, Coinbase maintains that it doesnât trade securities, rendering the SECâs arguments invalid.
Technology
Coinbase argues it doesn’t trade securities, so the SEC’s lawsuit should be dismissed
Coinbase says the SEC’s lawsuit against it should be dismissed. It argues that the crypto exchange doesn’t actually sell securities, making the SEC’s claims invalid.
The SEC sued Coinbase in June, alleging that the crypto exchange broke securities laws by operating as an unregistered broker, exchange, and clearing agency. It also accused the company of selling unregistered securities through its staking-as-a-service program, which rewards users with crypto by participating in the proof-of-stake process on the blockchain.
However, Coinbase rejects the SECâs arguments, claiming that the case âfalls outside the agencyâs delegated authorityâ because the platform doesnât actually offer securities. Coinbase has long held this argument, with Paul Grewal, the companyâs chief legal officer, writing last year, âCoinbase does not list securities. End of story.â
In a post announcing Coinbaseâs motion to dismiss, Grewal claims that âthe SEC has violated due process, abused its discretion, and abandoned its own earlier interpretations of the securities laws,â adding that the âSEC has trampled the strict boundaries on its basic authority set by Congress.â
Those arguments still havenât stopped the SEC from suing Binance, crypto influencer Richard Heart, and Tron founder Justin Sun for allegedly selling unregistered securities as well.