How the SEC’s Recent Win May Play in Its Coinbase, Binance Cases
A federal judge ruled that secondary-market transactions for certain cryptocurrencies violated securities law. The catch: This was a default judgment. The defendant never showed up, and no one filed amicus briefs to oppose the Securities and Exchange Commission’s motion for a default ruling.
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To be (a security), or not to be
The narrative
Judge Tana Lin, of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, ruled last Friday that Sameer Ramani violated federal securities law by using insider information to trade on cryptocurrencies that would be listed on Coinbase.
Why it matters
The ruling may have implications for the SEC’s other cases against crypto exchanges like Coinbase, Binance/Binance.US and Kraken. While a default judgment ruling arguably has less precedential value than a ruling after a bench trial, or set of hearings where the various parties present their cases, it’s still a ruling by a federal judge. And, it’s a ruling in the same circuit as other crypto-relevant cases.
Breaking it down
A federal judge ruled that Ramani, who was friends with a former Coinbase employee, traded securities based on insider knowledge.
The case dates back to 2022, when the Department of Justice alleged that former Coinbase product manager Ishan Wahi, his brother Nikhil and Ramani committed wire fraud and insider trading. Ishan Wahi would share information about Coinbase’s future asset listings with his brother and Ramani, who then traded on those assets.
The Wahis pleaded guilty to DOJ charges and settled the SEC charges. On Friday, the SEC won its motion for default judgment against Ramani, the third and final defendant in the case, who never showed up to fight back.
While a number of groups filed friend-of-the-court briefs before the Wahis settled the SEC charges, the Friday ruling does not appear to reference or acknowledge those.
“Courts reviewing motions for default judgment must accept the allegations in the complaint as true,” the judge noted.
“Taking the allegations in the FAC [first amended complaint] as true, the Court finds that: (1) Ramani traded on material nonpublic information that he knew was provided to him in breach of Ishan’s duty as a Coinbase manager; and (2) Ramani’s misconduct was in connection with the purchase and sale of securities,” the judge wrote.
In the judge’s view, the SEC had shown successfully – even with the caveat that the judge needed to accept the allegations were true – that Ramani had insider-traded with the purchase and sale of securities.
In her ruling, the judge listed the prongs of the Howey Test – the Supreme Court case that acts as a precedent for determining whether or not something is a security – and how the complaint met those requirements. But she said she based her analysis on the SEC’s complaint, citing rulings from previous SEC cases against LBRY and Terraform Labs.
“The issuers promoted the tokens based on their potential for investment returns, which they claimed derived from the promised efforts of the promoter’s management team to create, develop, and maintain an ecosystem that would increase the demand for a token, and thus its price,” Judge Lin wrote, referencing the complaint in her analysis of one of the Howey prongs. “A number of issuers even posted their tokens’ daily price on their websites. Any objective investor would therefore have expected to profit from trading in the tokens.”
While Ramani himself did not appear, Judge Lin referenced his co-defendants in the Department of Justice case against Ishan and Nikhil Wahi.
“Ramani’s co-Defendants have largely admitted many of the allegations in pleading guilty in the parallel criminal proceeding,” she wrote.
Judge Lin also – importantly – noted that her analysis applies to secondary-market sales.
The SEC has already submitted the ruling as supplemental authority in its cases against Binance.US and Coinbase, referencing the line on secondary market sales.
“In Wahi, the court held that a defendant who purchased certain crypto assets on trading platforms purchased securities because the assets were offered and sold as investment contracts under SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.,” the SEC wrote in a notice to Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who oversees the Binance.US case.
Attorneys for Coinbase pushed back against the SEC’s use of the default judgment ruling, writing that none of the amicus parties who had filed briefs earlier in the case moved to oppose the SEC’s motion for default judgment.
Gary DeWaal, senior counsel with Katten Muchin Rosen, LLP – one of the law firms representing Binance.US in its defense against an SEC suit – told CoinDesk that Judge Lin had not had the opportunity to have the issue briefed by anyone on the defendant’s side.
Having those amicus briefs earlier in the case probably didn’t help much.
“The judge probably reviewed [those], but it’s not as strong as actually having a party of interest,” DeWaal said. The judge did not have the chance to hear from the defendant (who did not mount a defense or show up, and is believed to have fled the country).
In a statement, an SEC spokesperson said the commission was “pleased with the district court’s holding in SEC v Wahi that crypto asset transactions in secondary markets can be transactions in securities.”
“On Friday, the court specifically held that Howey applies in that context and that Ramani’s trades of certain crypto assets on secondary market platforms were transactions in investment contracts,” the statement said. “We will continue to hold accountable those who violate the federal securities laws, including with respect to crypto assets in the secondary markets.”
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If you’ve got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you’d like to share, feel free to email me at nik@coindesk.com or find me on Twitter @nikhileshde.
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Edited by Benjamin Schiller.