The Securities and Exchange Commission should be going after crypto exchanges that offered XRP, the chairman of the House investor protection subcommittee said Tuesday.
In an oversight hearing closely watched by supporters of Ripple and the XRP cryptocurrency, California Rep. Brad Sherman questioned SEC Enforcement Director Gurbir Grewal on why the agency isn’t investigating exchanges that offered the XRP cryptocurrency.
“You’ve gone after XRP because XRP is a security, but you haven’t gone after all the major crypto exchanges that process tens of thousands, if not far more, transactions,” said Sherman, a Democrat representing parts of the Los Angeles metro area. “If XRP is a security — and you think it is, and I think it is — why are these crypto exchanges not in violation of law?”
Whether XRP is in fact a security is subject to one of the most intense ongoing court battles in crypto. The SEC sued Ripple in December 2020, accusing the company of failing to register roughly $1.4 billion worth of XRP as securities. Ripple, however, maintains XRP is a utility token for payments, not a speculative asset, and that it was issued prior to Ripple’s founding.
Grewal said he can’t “talk about what matters we are looking at or not looking at,” but noted the SEC had brought a case against the crypto exchange Poloniex for offering unregistered securities.
Sherman countered, “It’s easier to go after the small fish than the big fish, but the big fish operating the major exchanges did many, many, tens of thousands of transactions with XRP. You know it’s [a] security, that means they were illegally operating a securities exchange.” He added that many exchanges have stopped offering XRP.
Grewal noted that SEC has beefed up its crypto-focused enforcement team but said it would be inappropriate to comment further.
Sherman said the SEC is “going to have to take on some cases you are not certain of winning.”
Ripple has aggressively fought the case in court and its CEO, Brad Garlinghouse, recently told Protocol the firm would leave the U.S. if it lost. The judge overseeing the case recently ordered the SEC to produce documents related to the case sought by Ripple and called out the SEC for “hypocrisy” in fighting the release.
Sherman closed the roughly one-hour hearing, which also covered enforcement of the SEC’s climate disclosure rules and the gamification of investing, by noting that more clarity from lawmakers would be helpful in regulating cryptocurrency.
“No definition is more important than to define security, since that’s what the SEC does,” Sherman said. “Congress really hasn’t acted. Courts have acted with the Howey Test, which was not focused on digital assets, as it was written in the 1940s.”