Gensler, who is potentially weeks away from being replaced as the head of the SEC by President-elect Donald Trump, has remained defiant and true to his stance on crypto and enforcement.
In a speech in New York on Nov. 14, Gensler said that ānot every [crypto] asset is a security.ā
He added that former SEC Chairman Jay Clayton and himself have both said that Bitcoin is not a security, āand the Commission has never treated Bitcoin as a security.ā
However, he still believes that most of the other crypto assets are securities despite there being no legal or congressional classification of them as yet.
Gensler reiterated the same two points that he has made to justify his barrage of lawsuits over the past few years:
However, industry executives have repeatedly pointed out that there is no means to register because their firms are not securities brokers.
Gensler continued to state that crypto is āa field in which over the years there has been significant investor harmā before citing the same tired arguments about āillicit activitiesā and declaring that āthe vast majority of crypto assets have yet to prove out sustainable use cases.ā
On Nov. 14, 18 US states filed a lawsuit against Gensler, accusing the SEC of āgross government overreachā against the crypto industry.
Gensler signed off, hinting that he may be poised to step down, stating, āIāve been proud to serve with my colleagues at the SEC who, day in and day out, work to protect American families on the highways of finance.ā
The SEC chairās term officially ends in June 2026. However, the crypto industry and investors remain hopeful that Trump will follow through with his promise of firing Gensler āon day oneā if elected.
Rippleās cross-border token XRP reacted strongly, skyrocketing 18% to top out at $0.83 during the Friday morning Asian trading session as investors saw renewed hope that the four-year-long legal battle with the SEC could be quashed soon.
The post Gary Gensler Remains Steadfast on Crypto Enforcement Despite Looming Ouster appeared first on CryptoPotato.
In a speech in New York on Nov. 14, Gensler said that ānot every [crypto] asset is a security.ā
He added that former SEC Chairman Jay Clayton and himself have both said that Bitcoin is not a security, āand the Commission has never treated Bitcoin as a security.ā
Cryptos Are Still Securities
However, he still believes that most of the other crypto assets are securities despite there being no legal or congressional classification of them as yet.
āOur focus, rather, has been on some of the 10,000 or so other digital assets, many of which courts have ruled were offered or sold as securities.ā
Gensler reiterated the same two points that he has made to justify his barrage of lawsuits over the past few years:
āFirst, those parties offering or selling securities to the public need to register and give proper disclosure to the public. Second, the intermediariesābroker-dealers, exchanges, clearinghousesāneed to be registered and properly regulated as to conflicts, disclosures, and business conduct.ā
However, industry executives have repeatedly pointed out that there is no means to register because their firms are not securities brokers.
Gensler continued to state that crypto is āa field in which over the years there has been significant investor harmā before citing the same tired arguments about āillicit activitiesā and declaring that āthe vast majority of crypto assets have yet to prove out sustainable use cases.ā
On Nov. 14, 18 US states filed a lawsuit against Gensler, accusing the SEC of āgross government overreachā against the crypto industry.
SCOOP: 18 U.S. states have filed to sue the @SECGov and its commissioners, accusing them of unconstitutional overreach and unfair persecution of the #crypto industry under the leadership of agency chief @GaryGensler.
The lawsuit, signed by 18 Republican Attorneys General,ā¦ pic.twitter.com/wxOovuIRQH
ā Eleanor Terrett (@EleanorTerrett) November 14, 2024
Stepping Down?
Gensler signed off, hinting that he may be poised to step down, stating, āIāve been proud to serve with my colleagues at the SEC who, day in and day out, work to protect American families on the highways of finance.ā
The SEC chairās term officially ends in June 2026. However, the crypto industry and investors remain hopeful that Trump will follow through with his promise of firing Gensler āon day oneā if elected.
Rippleās cross-border token XRP reacted strongly, skyrocketing 18% to top out at $0.83 during the Friday morning Asian trading session as investors saw renewed hope that the four-year-long legal battle with the SEC could be quashed soon.
The post Gary Gensler Remains Steadfast on Crypto Enforcement Despite Looming Ouster appeared first on CryptoPotato.