The FTX hearing by the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs starts shortly. I'll be livetooting it here, and will be publishing a recap of it in my newsletter later.

Hearing stream: https://banking.senate.gov/hearings/crypto-crash-why-the-ftx-bubble-burst-and-the-harm-to-consumers
Newsletter:https://newsletter.mollywhite.net/

I'll use the #FTXhearing hashtag throughout, so feel free to filter it out if I'm clogging your feed or you'd rather catch up later.

Crypto Crash: Why the FTX Bubble Burst and the Harm to Consumers | United States Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs

The Official website of The United States Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs

Statements by witnesses—Prof. Hilary Allen, Kevin O'Leary, Jennifer J. Schulp, and Ben McKenzie—have already been published at the link above.

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Sen. Brown (D-OH) opens with a very critical statement, where he talks about Facebook's Libra project (shut down by gov't.) which he describes as a "shiny tool" to try to extract money from consumers.

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"Crypto doesn't get a free pass because it's shiny and bright, or because venture capitalists think it might change the world." – Sen. Brown

Brown urges that this hearing is not just about FTX, but will focus on the crypto industry and consumer protection.

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Sen. Toomey (R-PA) says largely the opposite to Brown, and echoes the crypto industry's line that we must separate FTX's wrongdoing from all this promise that supposedly exists in the industry.

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"There's nothing intrinsically good or evil about software, it's about what people do with it... Code committed no crime..." – Sen. Toomey

😮‍💨

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Toomey says some Senators have suggested "pausing cryptocurrency" while hearings go on.

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The crypto industry clearly has a strong spokesperson and salesman in Senator Toomey.

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Sen. Brown introduces the witnesses. Prof. Hilary Allen and Ben McKenzie Schenkkan (better known as Ben McKenzie) will be critical of crypto; Kevin O'Leary and Jennifer Schulp are both pro-crypto.

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First up is Prof. Hilary Allen. Her statement is challenging crypto's claims they are decentralized. She has suggested that "a ban on crypto would be the most straightforward".

She says that if legislators are not willing to proceed with a ban, then they must be very careful not to enact laws that would make crypto "too big to fail".

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Now Kevin O'Leary is up. He was a paid spokesman of FTX. He's listing his crypto entanglements, and talking them up 🙄

O'Leary echoes Toomey in his statements that Bitcoin "isn't a coin, it's software".

This is a recently popular argument, which seems to seek to lean on "code as speech" precedence.

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O'Leary explains how HE will be the one to do the detective work on what happened at FTX.

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He characterizes skeptics as "entrenched businesses" who "abhor competition".

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Now Jennifer J. Schulp, who's in camp "this is an FTX problem, not a crypto problem". She's talking up defi.

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She characterizes various regulatory suggestions from the crypto-critical as "taking technological choices out of people's hands."

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"Risk is a natural component of markets, and failure is often necessary for development."

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Now Ben McKenzie, who says the crypto industry depends on "misinformation, hype, and, yes, fraud".

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McKenzie is outlining how he does not believe that cryptocurrencies are currencies, and how he believes that every cryptocurrency is a security.

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@molly0xfff Interesting, but I don't see how Bitcoin is a security. Don't know about the others, because I've never looked closely at them.

@MattChambers For those curious about a standard definition of a financial security:

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/security.asp

@molly0xfff

What are Financial Securities? Examples, Types, Regulation, and Importance

A security is a fungible, negotiable financial instrument that represents some type of financial value, usually in the form of a stock, bond, or option.

Investopedia
@dredmorbius @molly0xfff Thanks! I'm a retired securities lawyer, so I know the definition better than that source. I don't see how Bitcoin is an investment contract or any of the other possibilities. Where are the efforts of others? Now, for other crypto assets, the analysis may be different. For example, I think stable coins and tokens probably are securities.

@MattChambers IANAL and am green to much of this (hence the "dumb question" / "standard definition" toot).

That said, from the article: Howey v. SEC (1946) and the Howey Test:

[T]he court found that the plaintiff's sale of land and agricultural services constituted an "investment contract"—even though there was no trace of a stock or bond.

This case established the four-prong Howey Test, which states that an investment can be regulated as a security if:

  • There is an investment of money.
  • The investment is made into a "common enterprise."
  • The investors expect to make a profit from their investment.
  • Any expected profits or returns are due to the actions of a third party or promoter.
  • No contract requirement.

    "Efforts of others" might presumably be, say, "enhancing the value of the cryptocurrency ecosystem" (I'm positing language a crypto-advocate might use, not my own), and transactions of others of those assets themselves, creating a putative market capitalisation.

    Edit: Markdown glitch, enum. list.

    @molly0xfff

    @dredmorbius @molly0xfff Perhaps, but I think a court would want something more tangible in terms of efforts. For so called stable coins, you can see whatever makes it stable as efforts of someone. Same for tokens. But for a pure cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, hard to see the efforts of others.

    @MattChambers Could well be.

    Former SEC chair Jay Clayton agrees with your take FWIW:

    In June 2018, the former Chair of the SEC, Jay Clayton, clarified that bitcoin is not a security: "Cryptocurrencies: These are replacements for sovereign currencies, replace the dollar, the euro, the yen with bitcoin. That type of currency is not a security," said Clayton.7

    Bitcoin, which has never sought public funds to develop its technology, does not pass the Howey Test used by the SEC to classify securities. However, by Clayton's definition, tokens used in an ICO are securities.

    https://www.investopedia.com/terms/h/howey-test.asp

    Citing: https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2018/06/06/sec-chairman-clayton-says-agency-wont-change-definition-of-a-security.html

    @molly0xfff

    Howey Test Definition: What It Means and Implications for Cryptocurrency

    The Howey Test determines which transactions qualify as an "investment contract" and would therefore be subject to U.S. securities laws.

    Investopedia
    @dredmorbius @molly0xfff Good to know, but why didn't the SEC bring more cases while Clayton was Chair?