91天堂原創

SEC Subpoena Over PayPal Stablecoin Leaves Crypto Observers Confused

November 6, 2023
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In the fine print of its Q3 earnings, PayPal revealed that it has received a subpoena from the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding its newly-launched stablecoin.

In the fine print of its Q3 earnings, PayPal revealed that it has received a subpoena from the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding its newly-launched stablecoin.

鈥淥n November 1, 2023, we received a subpoena from the US SEC Division of Enforcement relating to PayPal USD stablecoin,鈥 the company said in its听.

鈥淭he subpoena requests the production of documents. We are cooperating with the SEC in connection with this request.鈥

A Form 10-Q is a comprehensive report of financial performance that must be submitted to the SEC each quarter by all publicly traded companies.

In a Form 10-Q, firms are required to disclose all relevant information regarding their finances that may affect their business operations.

It is, therefore, a much longer and more detailed version of a company鈥檚听 than that which is provided to investors and the听.

PayPal did not provide any further information regarding the subpoena in the Form 10-Q, and did not respond to an enquiry about the subpoena from 91天堂原創.

However, PayPal鈥檚 new CEO, Alex Chriss, appointed in September, did mention PYUSD once in a Q3听 with investors.

鈥淲e've launched the first regulated stablecoin by a global payments company in PYUSD, connecting our PayPal and Venmo ecosystems together and creating one of the most robust peer-to-peer (P2P) networks in the world,鈥 he said.

鈥淚ndividually, these are each incredible innovations, but we have not yet brought them all together into a cohesive, integrated and seamless customer experience and value proposition.鈥

Are stablecoins securities?

At the very least, it can be inferred from the subpoena that the SEC believes it has jurisdiction over PYUSD, and this would indicate that it sees the stablecoin as potentially a security offering.

Over the years, the SEC has made several statements to this effect about stablecoins, but its enforcement of securities laws against stablecoin activities has been rare and inconsistent.

In July 2021, during a听 at the American Bar Association, SEC chair Gary Gensler said explicitly that securities laws can apply to stablecoins.

鈥淢ake no mistake,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter whether it鈥檚 a stock token, a stable value token backed by securities or any other virtual product that provides synthetic exposure to underlying securities.

鈥淭hese platforms,鈥 he said of crypto trading platforms, 鈥渨hether in the decentralised or centralised finance spaces, are implicated by the securities laws and must work within our securities regime.鈥

Although not designed to 鈥減rovide exposure鈥 to US Treasury bills, PYUSD is backed not only by cash deposits but also by US Treasury bills, i.e. by securities.

Most major stablecoins, including Circle鈥檚 USDC and Tether鈥檚 USDT, are currently backed in the same way.

In September 2022, Gensler听 stablecoins share similar attributes to money market funds and other securities, but may not necessarily be securities in and of themselves.

鈥淒epending on their attributes, such as whether these instruments pay interest, directly or indirectly, through affiliates or otherwise; what mechanisms are used to maintain value; or how the tokens are offered, sold and used within the crypto ecosystem, they may be shares of a money market fund or another kind of security.

鈥淚f so, they would need to register and provide important investor protections.鈥

Putting securities laws to the stablecoin test

In June, when the SEC听filed听 against Binance and CEO Changpeng Zhao, one of the charges was aimed at the Binance stablecoin, BUSD.

The SEC alleges that BUSD was offered as a security without registration, and thereby in violation of the Securities Act 1933.

As evidence to support this claim, the SEC听 to numerous examples of Binance 鈥渢outing鈥 the 鈥渋nvestment potential鈥 of BUSD when used in interest-bearing products such as Binance Earn.

In contrast, PayPal has marketed PYUSD primarily on its attributes as a payment method; for example, using PYUSD offers cost-free P2P transfers.

It is, therefore, unlikely that the SEC is building a similar case against PYUSD as it brought against BUSD, and that has left some observers perplexed as to the reason for the subpoena.

SEC should target real offenders

Austin Campbell, founder and managing partner at Zero Knowledge Consulting and lecturer at Columbia Business School,听 the subpoena is yet more evidence of the SEC鈥檚 skewed priorities on crypto enforcement.

鈥淏eing incredibly blunt here, if PYUSD is a security, so are Starbucks gift cards, prepaid debit cards and airline reward points,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his thing fails the Howey test so spectacularly it would be laughed out of court by a judge.

鈥淚t's also safer for consumers than standard PayPal e-money because it's bankruptcy-remote. This is strictly better in all ways.鈥

Instead, Campbell suggested the SEC should focus more on obvious bad actors in the space that are believed to have broken securities laws.

鈥淚n a target-rich environment, the SEC continues to avoid going after anyone actually doing wrong and instead continues to target legitimate companies helping consumers,鈥 he said.

鈥淚t is guaranteed to damage American security interests and push the space offshore, in a way that makes it more viable for terrorists and criminals to use crypto.鈥

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