Brayden Lindrea4 hours agoSEC likely still believes SOL is a security, say crypto execsMany crypto observers may be “overreading” the security regulator’s latest filing for its Binance lawsuit, meaning Solana and other tokens may not be off the hook yet.3747 Total views2 Total sharesListen to article 0:00NewsOwn this piece of crypto historyCollect this article as NFTJoin us on social networksThe United States securities regulator hasn’t necessarily let Solana off the hook as a security despite retracting its request for a court to decide on the matter as part of its Binance lawsuit on July 30.
“There is no reason to think SEC has decided SOL is a non-security,” said Jake Chervinsky, chief legal officer at crypto-focused venture capital firm Variant Fund, in a July 30 X post.
Chervinsky’s post refers to the latest response from the US Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking to amend its complaint regarding the “Third Party Crypto Asset Securities.” Essentially telling the court it is no longer asking to determine whether the tokens listed in the lawsuit are securities or not.
While Chervinsky didn’t expand on what that “litigation tactic” may be, he highlighted that the SEC still refers to the same tokens as securities in other crypto exchange lawsuits, including its one with Coinbase.
In separate posts, Miles Jennings, general counsel and head of decentralization at a16z Crypto, and Justin Slaughter, policy director at Paradigm, appeared to agree.
Slaughter argued that many are “overreading this filing” and that it doesn’t mean the SEC has decided that Solana and other tokens are not securities.
Jennings explained that Judge Amy Berman Jackson had set such a high bar to establish the Howey test in the Binance case that it wasn’t worth the SEC’s time and effort to prove these tokens were securities.
Judge Katherine Polk Failla in the Coinbase lawsuit seems more “inclined” to agree with the SEC’s position — therefore, it isn’t worth making the same request made in the Binance lawsuit.Source: Miles Jennings
Jennings says he isn’t convinced that the SEC has mounted a strong enough case to establish the connection between token sales on secondary markets and the managerial efforts of token issuers.
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“Obviously, I’m speculating about their political motive, but that speculation is informed by information I’m privy to about the SEC’s behavior behind closed doors,” he added.Which tokens are affected?
In its suit against Binance, the SEC claimed several tokens were securities.
The list includes Solana (SOL), BNB (BNB), Cardano (ADA), Polygon (MATIC), The Sandbox (SAND), Decentraland (MANA) and Axie Infinity (AXS).
The SEC once claimed that at least 68 tokens are securities, affecting more than $100 billion worth of cryptocurrencies in the market.
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