While the defendants may have gained an edge in pre-trial rulings in SEC v. Ripple Labs, are Rippleās legal troubles now over?
When the United States Securities and Exchange Commission filed legal action against Ripple Labs and its top-two executives in December, alleging that its XRP coin was in fact a security and that the firm had raised over $1.38 billion through an unregistered securities offering in 2013, many wondered if XRP would even survive.
Some exchanges delisted XRP; some asset managers sold their XRP tokens. XRP had lost its place as the top 3 currency by market capitalization and was even looking like it could drop from the top 10. But reports of Rippleās demise were spectacularly exaggerated.
As of mid-April, XRP had increased 532% over the previous 12 months, and things also took a favorable turn recently in the SEC lawsuit, with the defendants prevailing in two discovery rulings ā even turning the tables on the regulatory agency by winning access to the SECās internal memos and minutes with regard to crypto discussions. āThe SEC Is Now On Trial ā And Knows It,ā sounded Forbes.
But the lawsuit continues ā indeed, it is being closely watched and has the potential to set legal precedents in a number of areas, Daniel Payne, partner in the fintech and blockchain practice at law firm Murphy & McGonigle, told Cointelegraph, including:
āThe application of the statute of limitations to token sales; the extraterritorial reach of the securities laws to token sales on worldwide blockchains; the application of the securities laws to digital assets that FinCEN has regulated as a virtual currency [e.g., BTC]; and whether courts will use Bitcoin and Ether as models of non-security digital assets in their legal analysis.ā
Therefore, while the defendants may have gained an edge in pre-trial rulings in SEC v. Ripple Labs, can one really say that Rippleās legal troubles are over?
Not over till itās over
āNot by a long shot,ā Carol Goforth, the Clayton N. Little professor of law at the University of Arkansas (Fayetteville), told Cointelegraph. Ripple made a good case for accessing the SECās internal views on crypto ā i.e., the first discovery ruling. And in the second contest:
ā[Ripple executives] Garlinghouse and Larsen made a plausible argument that the SEC was over-reaching with its request for eight years of their personal bank records. As the insiders argued, why does the SEC need to know household expenditures in order to make its case?ā
āHowever, although Ripple may discover information that will help its defense as a result of that āwin,ā the extent to which this will matter in the long run is far from certain,ā said Goforth. āThe two recent pre-trial discovery rulings have shifted the playing field of the case,ā added Payne. āThe defendants have gotten traction with some important arguments, but that does not mean they have won the case.ā
āIt would be extremely premature to divine any significance from these interim ruling,ā agreed David Chase, a securities lawyer and former SEC enforcement attorney. These are really discovery skirmishes and donāt go to the heart of the case, he told Cointelegraph.
āA different kind of caseā
A recent article in The National Law Review noted regarding SEC v. Ripple Labs that āthe SECās case rests on the proposition that XRP is a security ā if it is not, the SEC lacks jurisdiction,ā while Payne told Cointelegraph: āThere are a handful of district court rulings that specific digital assets are securities: Telegram, Kik, ATBCoin, etc.ā Those cases have provided important precedents that the SEC relies on now to police new token issuances that it believes are securities offerings. Continued Payne:
āBut Ripple is a different kind of case. XRP was first sold over eight years ago, and over that time, the XRP ledger has become decentralized, while Ripple has, in large part, decoupled from XRP. But the SEC is alleging that XRP was and remains a security.ā
John Wagster, an attorney at Frost Brown Todd, informed Cointelegraph that like almost every SEC action in the cryptocurrency space, the claims against Ripple āwill be analyzed by market participants looking for a pathway to compliant token offerings,ā adding: āA healthy market needs regulatory consistency, and the most meaningful outcome of the Ripple enforcement action would be one that provides a clear path forward for future issuances.ā
Yuliya Guseva, professor of law at Rutgers Law School, told Cointelegraph that āthe Ripple case is exceptionally important.ā Even though it resembles the Kik and Telegram cases, the facts in SEC v. Ripple Labs are different. āThe outcome of Ripple may have a profound effect on the crypto market. For one, the ultimate decision should provide more clarity to the developers and crypto community.ā She added:
āThe decision may reveal if we have transitioned from the bygone era of ICOs and related enforcement to a more mature market phase with a more nuanced doctrinal approach to cryptocurrencies.ā
Regarding the discovery ruling, Chase is interested to see the SECās internal discussions about XRP and cryptocurrencies among the trove of documents now expected to emerge. āIt usually runs just one wayā ā i.e., companies delivering their documents to the court. But in this case, it is the SEC that has to produce the goods ā not a ātypicalā turn of events for the agency, suggested Chase.
What is propelling XRP price upward?
But what is one to make of the run-up in XRPās market price in the past year ā even before the discovery rulings. āXRP priceās journey to $1 this year has been nothing short of spectacular, considering the ongoing Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit against Ripple initiated in December 2020,ā commented Cointelegraph Markets contributor Marcel Pechman. In the weekend following the pre-trial rulings, XRP added over 40%, standing at around $1.3 on April 18, while almost reaching the $2 mark on April 14.
Wagster told Cointelegraph that the increase in XRPās market price over the past year has more to do with bullishness in crypto markets generally rather than anything specific to XRP, while Chase opined: āMaybe what weāre seeing is the free market in operation.ā The SECās lawsuit āis just another data point to be taken into accountā in an evaluation of XRP; investors could even be handicapping an eventual settlement with the agency.
There may be another interpretation: Maybe the SECās decisions just donāt matter that much anymore when it comes to globally traded cryptocurrencies. Goforth disagrees. The SEC still plays a large role in regulating U.S. exchanges and other businesses, she said, while Payne noted that āif a cryptocurrency has a touchpoint within the U.S., the SEC has an argument that it can assert jurisdiction.ā
Related: You donāt own me: XRP price surge defies SECās clamp-down on crypto
He did allow, however, āthat XRP is traded worldwide, where many purchasers may be unaware of the SECās case,ā which may have something to do with XRPās price resilience. The price may also be affected by āpurchasers who are betting that Ripple will win [the SEC case] and are trying to buy low.ā
The U.S. Supreme Court provided the framework to determine whether an asset is a security in SEC v. Howey Co. āThe Court explained that an asset is a security if it represents an investment in a common enterprise with the expectation of profits derived solely from the efforts of others,ā recounted The National Law Review. The SEC has been applying the 71-year-old Howey Test ever since, and in its Ripple Labs complaint, the agency said XRP should be considered a security ā explained the journal ā because:
āInvestors who purchased XRP anticipated that profits would be dependent upon Rippleās efforts to manage and develop the market for XRP. Ripple has disputed the SECās allegations, arguing that XRP is a āfully functioning currency that offers a better alternative to Bitcoin.āā
Goforth further explained: āIf the cryptoasset is truly decentralized so that there is no āotherā upon whom purchasers are relying, the Howey Test is not met.ā That is, the coin or token would not be considered a security, as happened with Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH). āIn the case of an asset like XRP, where the creator/issuer owns the bulk of the asset, controls its distribution, and is primarily responsible for its utility and potential profitability, it is easy to see how purchasers could be relying on the creator/issuer.ā
Typically, SEC enforcement actions target issuers who are engaging in obviously fraudulent or corrupt behavior or target a specific activity they are hoping to dissuade, noted Wagster, adding: āThe action against Ripple appears to target the promotional activity Ripple undertook when selling its tokens.ā
āRipple does not want to face the regulatory burdens of registering XRP as a security when Bitcoin and Ether appear to have escaped that fate,ā said Payne, adding: āThe question of how similar XRP is to Bitcoin and Ether today ā as opposed to when they were first created ā and whether the court even views that comparison as the right one could make or break this case.ā
Meanwhile, even if the court decides that XRP is unlike Bitcoin and Ether ā and has to be registered in the U.S. as a security ā āthat does not necessarily make the XRP token worthless,ā suggested Goforth. āThe real question would be what kind of final order the SEC might accept if it is clear that the court is going to find that XRP was sold as an investment and was, therefore, a security. If we analogize to SEC v. Kikā (another case where tokens [e.g., Kin] were issued by a company), then:
āRipple might be permitted to continue operating with limitations on the right of the company and its founders to sell additional tokens. Just as Kik is required to notify the SEC of trades, a similar obligation might be imposed on Ripple and its current and former CEO.ā
āOn the other hand, if the SEC insists on registration, it will be up to Ripple to decide if that makes financial sense. If it does, a registered token will actually have more value and be more readily traded, so that could be a real win for investors,ā said Goforth.
And if the SEC loses? Wagster told Cointelegraph: āNo matter the outcome of the SECās complaint against Ripple, the SEC will continue to be one of the primary regulators of cryptocurrency in the United States.ā
The wheel of fortune rises and falls
Even if Ripple prevailed in round one, it hasnāt won the match. As Wagster told Cointelegraph: āThe U.S. District Courtās recent rulings are certainly favorable to Ripple, but the game is far from over. The SEC tends to choose its cryptocurrency targets carefully.ā Moreover, he added:
āOnce the SEC decides to move forward with a high-profile enforcement action, it would be embarrassing for them to back down without some sort of victory. I expect them to continue to pursue their claims against Ripple with zeal.ā
There was a time when people thought that Ripple Labs, not Coinbase, would be the first crypto-native firm to be listed by a major U.S. stock exchange. Coinbase went public this past week on the Nasdaq exchange with a well-subscribed offering that drew comparisons with Facebookās and Airbnbās public debuts. Perhaps Rippleās destiny is not to make historic waves on Wall Street, but rather in the courts ā i.e., helping to clarify the rules that will prevail in the expanding cryptoverse.
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