United States Congressman Tom Emmer slammed SEC Chair Gary Gensler during a congressional hearing, calling him the most “destructive” and “lawless” Chair in the regulator’s 90-year history.
“You’ve made up the term crypto asset security. This term is nowhere to be found in statute, you made it up [and] you never provided any interpretive guidance on how crypto asset security might be defined within the walls of your SEC,” Emmer
told
Gensler before a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Sept. 24.
Emmer said the term had served as the entire basis for Gensler’s “enforcement crusade” against the crypto industry for the last three years. This was up until last week when SEC lawyers
retracted the term
in a court footnote.
Emmer also grilled Gensler over his agencies’ handling of
the Debt Box case
— a case where the SEC sued a crypto startup for an alleged $50 million fraud scheme. The case against Debt Box was dismissed on May 28, and the SEC
was ordered to pay $1.8 million
in fees.
SEC Chair Gary Gensler speaking at the Congressional hearing. Source:
US House Financial Services Committee
Emmer said the SEC attorneys crafted a series of lies in the Debt Box case to “effectuate the commands” of Gensler’s “anti-crypto rhetoric” and regulation-by-enforcement agenda.
“The matters in that case were not well handled,” Gensler said in response to Emmer’s questioning.
SEC “should have admitted long ago” that crypto tokens aren’t securities: Peirce
Gensler also faced heat from within his own ranks, with SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce saying the SEC’s move to retract the term crypto asset security in court last week should have happened “a long time ago.”
“[By] tucking into a footnote, we admit that now actually the token itself is not a security. That’s something that we should have admitted long ago,” the pro-crypto SEC commissioner explained.
“We’ve fallen on our duty as a regulator not to be precise,” Peirce said.
Peirce responding to House Financial Services Committee chairman Chair Patrick McHenry at the hearing. Source:
US House Financial Services Committee
When asked whether crypto tokens need a statutory definition to ascertain how they apply to securities laws, Peirce responded: “It’s always helpful to have Congress weigh in, but there certainly are some guidelines we could provide in this area that we have chosen not to provide.”
Gensler confirms SAB 121 rule will stay in place
Despite calls from
42 US politicians to rescind
the SEC’s Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 121 rule, Gensler said it will remain in effect.
“No, it’s a good accounting bulletin,” Gensler said in response to a question from House Rep. Wiley Nickel about whether the SEC would rescind the rule.
The SAB 121 rule mandates SEC-reporting entities that
custody crypto
to record those holdings as liabilities on their balance sheets. A SAB 121 repeal bill received bipartisan support in Congress before being
vetoed by President Joe Biden
in June.
Gensler claims it will help public companies understand the risks associated with holding crypto, pointing to FTX, Terraform Labs and other crypto bankruptcies.
Related:
SEC likely still believes SOL is a security, say crypto execs
Nickel didn’t bite, claiming that SAB 121 actually makes the digital asset ecosystem “less safe.”
Nickel recently claimed that SAB 121 would
prevent US banks
from custodying crypto exchange-traded products at scale, creating a “concentration risk” by handing more control over to non-bank entities.
With the rule now in place, Nickel slammed the SEC’s Office of the Chief Accountant for recently exempting
Bank of New York Mellon
from the
balance sheet reporting
requirement — arguing that it will lead to “different rules for different folks.”
But Gensler disagreed: “It’s actually the same rules for different folks.”
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