6.9 C
Ottawa
Monday, November 3, 2025

Coinbase Leadership Says SEC Will Drop Its Lawsuit Against the Exchange

Date:

Cryptocurrency exchange operator Coinbase said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) will drop a key suit against the company.

On Feb. 21, Coinbase Global Inc. Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal published a blog post on the company’s website that said the SEC’s staff has “agreed in principle to dismiss its unlawful enforcement case against Coinbase, subject to Commissioner approval.”

“Today’s announcement confirms that this case should never have been filed in the first place,” Grewal said. “This is a victory not just for Coinbase, but for our customers, the United States, and individual freedom.”

Representatives of SEC did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Epoch Times.

Shares of Coinbase rose in premarket trading on Friday morning, but as of about 11 a.m. ET, the price of the New York-based company’s stock had fallen to about $256.30 a share. It closed on Feb. 20 at $256.59 a share.

As of about 11 a.m. ET on Friday, the price of bitcoin, the main cryptocurrency traded on Coinbase’s platform, rose to $97,996.24 a token from $97,216.21 a token at the same time on Thursday.

Related Stories

Man Behind False Bitcoin Founder Claim Given Suspended Sentence
Bitcoin Breaks $100,000 After Trump’s SEC Selection, Fed’s Comments

In his blog post, Grewal said the lawsuit against Coinbase was “political” and said the agency was conducting a “war against crypto.”

On Friday, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said on social media platform X that he expects the SEC will formally dismiss its litigation against Coinbase before the end of February. He also blamed the litigation on former SEC Chair Gary Gensler and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who he said “orchestrated this unlawful action.”

Gensler, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, resigned on Jan. 20 ahead of President Donald Trump’s inauguration. On Jan. 21, Trump named Mark Uyeda the acting chairman.

Armstrong said the SEC would have lost on the merits of the law because it was exceeding its congressional authority by asking Coinbase “to delist a number of assets that were not securities.”

Armstrong went on to say that “caving to their demands could have killed the crypto industry in America.”

Armstrong and Grewal both expressed optimism that the United States will soon enact new laws governing the cryptocurrency industry.

“It is critical that we pass legislation which provides the long-term certainty needed for the US to lead in this industry,” Grewal said. “Clarity will bring new inflows of capital into the US, update our financial system so consumers pay lower fees, and help create economic freedom for all.”

Coinbase declined to offer further comment beyond what Grewal and Armstrong said on Friday.

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Kimberly-Clark to Buy Tylenol Parent Kenvue in $48.7 Billion Deal

Tylenol lines the shelves of a store in Brandon,...

Samsung Hit With $191.4 Million Verdict for Infringing OLED Display Patents

The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at the...

OpenAI, Amazon Ink $38 Billion Computing Power Deal

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman speaks during the Snowflake Summit...

Microsoft Increases UAE Investment to $15.2 Billion After US Clears Nvidia Chip Exports

A Microsoft sign and logo at the company's headquarters...