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By Brayden Lindrea
The US Securities and Exchange Commission has officially closed its
investigation into Crypto.com, with no action taken against the crypto
exchange, according to the firm’s CEO, Kris Marszalek.
”They used
every tool available to attempt to stifle us, restricting access to
banking, auditors, investors, and beyond. It was a calculated attempt to
put an end to the industry,” Marszalek said in a March 27 X post.
”The fact that we not only persevered but became stronger is a testament to our vision and the community supporting it. Onwards!”
It comes seven months after the SEC issued a Wells notice to the crypto
platform in August, signaling its intention to take legal action against
the firm.
We are pleased that the current SEC leadership has made the decision to close its investigation into Crypto.com,” added
Crypto.com’s chief legal officer Nick Lundgren in a March 27 statement,
which accused the previous administration of abusing its authority to
harm the crypto industry.
Source: Kris Marszalek
Crypto.com had filed a lawsuit against the SEC in October, two months after the Wells notice, accusing the Gary Gensler-led commission of overstepping its authority and taking a “misguided” approach to crypto regulation.
Crypto.com’s announcement follows a wave of other crypto investigations and lawsuits dropped by the SEC over the last five weeks, which affected the likes of Coinbase, Consensys, Robinhood, Gemini, Uniswap, OpenSea and more recently, Immutable.
The SEC also dismissed its civil enforcement action against crypto trading firm Cumberland DRW with prejudice on March 27.
Related: Ripple will drop cross-appeal in SEC case, get refund from lower court ruling
The
SEC has adopted a far friendlier approach since Mark Uyeda started
leading the commission as acting chair on Jan. 20 after the resignation
of former chair Gary Gensler. The SEC established a Crypto Task Force led by SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce to support this new approach.
It
also canceled a controversial rule that asked financial firms holding
crypto to record them as liabilities on their balance sheets on Jan. 23.
Trump’s SEC chair nominee, Paul Atkins, is inching closer to becoming the SEC’s new leader after initially being held back by financial disclosures.
Meanwhile, Crypto.com partnered with Trump Media on March 24 to launch a series of “Made in America”-themed exchange-traded funds later this year.
Crypto.com
will provide the infrastructure and custody services to supply the
crypto tokens for the ETFs, which may include a basket of tokens,
including Bitcoin BTC ,
ETHER ETH , Solana SOL ,XRP XRP , and Cronos CRO
Magazine: SEC’s U-turn on crypto leaves key questions unanswered