ARTICLE
17 July 2023

Reining In The SEC

FL
Foley & Lardner

Contributor

Foley & Lardner LLP looks beyond the law to focus on the constantly evolving demands facing our clients and their industries. With over 1,100 lawyers in 24 offices across the United States, Mexico, Europe and Asia, Foley approaches client service by first understanding our clients’ priorities, objectives and challenges. We work hard to understand our clients’ issues and forge long-term relationships with them to help achieve successful outcomes and solve their legal issues through practical business advice and cutting-edge legal insight. Our clients view us as trusted business advisors because we understand that great legal service is only valuable if it is relevant, practical and beneficial to their businesses.
Every "investment contract" requires a contract. Wow - imagine that! Who knew? Not the SEC, which coerced numerous settlements from blockchain tech entrepreneurs and digital asset platforms...
United States Technology

Every "investment contract" requires a contract. Wow - imagine that! Who knew? Not the SEC, which coerced numerous settlements from blockchain tech entrepreneurs and digital asset platforms while claiming no contract need be proven.

But in SEC v. Ripple Labs, the courts have now held again - see< em>SEC v. Kik for the first time - that every investment contract requires a "contract, transaction, or scheme" - exactly what the Supreme Court said 77 years ago inHowey.

Good news for entrepreneurs, exchanges, traders, and especially for the 40 million American adults who buy and sell crypto assets. Bad news for empire-building bureaucrats who disregard Supreme Court opinions.

Here's another Supreme Court opinion that the SEC is ignoring: West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency. And here's another case that the SEC will lose in the Supreme Court: Jarkesy.

This used to be an agency that only pushed cases that it believed to have merit. Lately it has decided to push cases until the courts stop it. Big difference, as former SEC Chairman Jay Clayton has pointed out. Fortunately for the rest of us, the courts are now stopping an SEC whose Chair won't take the bit.

Judge's decision is a boost for other crypto firms that claim regulators have too aggressively policed market

www.wsj.com/...

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More