With all the current hype and excitement about ICO’s, the lack of regulations makes them a potential haven for fraudsters and others who are not registering their offering or otherwise providing necessary safeguards for the public.
Unfortunately, the SEC statement leaves room for misinterpretation and requires further clarification, as it states, “may be securities”. There’s not a definitive ruling of what types of coins/tokens are considered securities, or which ones are exempt from security registration requirements.
It does point out, however, that each ICO will be judged on its own merits and there is the distinct possibility that federal securities laws do, in fact, apply. Complying with US federal securities laws is a complex, expensive endeavor and the penalties for non-compliance are punitive.
According to CNBC.com staff writer Evelyn Cheng, “For all the hype in the digital currency world about so-called initial coin offerings, U.S. investors often can’t officially participate. She continues, “Before buying one of these new digital coins … an investor typically must check a box that says he or she is not a U.S. citizen or green card holder.”
However, that might not protect the organization. If they end up distributing to US citizens, the SEC can still come after them. As BlockMason cofounder Jared Bowie states, “Any company that opens an ICO, but does not offer their token for sale in the U.S. confirms their fear that their token is at risk of SEC regulation.”
The SEC also has other concerns. On August 28, the SEC issued an Investor Alert: Public Companies Making ICO-Related Claims. This warning was for investors considering companies that are already publicly traded and are making claims regarding ICO’s. Four companies were issued trading suspensions based on their claims around ICO’s.
While the warnings were expected, it’s doubtful that ICOs will suddenly dry up; since the SEC’s original bulletin, according to the New York Times, 46 new coin offerings have been announced and another 204 are continuing on schedule.
There are reasons why so many recent ICOs have been successful. They offer a new model for raising funds, a new way to think of assets, risk and opportunities. Some experts are suggesting that almost everything that can be tokenized, will be tokenized. They create a way to fund new ideas, while also incentivizing those that back them a reason to use and promote them.
Under Regulation D, offerings restricted to accredited investors are exempt from having to register their securities. Companies that use that exemption need to perform proper due diligence to ensure that the investor does meet the criteria (generally, $1 million in Net Worth, not including primary residence or income of over $200,000 for the last two years).
While accredited investors might have certain business acumen, does that imply that they really understand the technology involved? Wouldn’t some computer student who understands the protocols and coding much more be more ‘sophisticated’ in the topic? Yet, there lack of wealth would prevent them from consideration from the offering.
Other factors for a legally compliant ICO are less controversial. For example, transparency is something that every potential investor appreciates. The more the team communicates their overall plans, financial structure, use of funds, incentives, associated risks, and other details, the more the public can weigh the value of the offering.
Consider the recent 21-count indictment and $110 million fine against Bitcoin exchange BTC-e for money laundering. As Jamal El-Hindi, acting FinCEN director, states, “We will hold accountable foreign-located money transmitters, including virtual currency exchangers that do business in the United States when they willfully violate U.S. AML laws.”
As the field develops, increasing sophistication from ICO purveyors, regulators and the public should unfold. Unfortunately, at the moment, there is a lack of clarity; organizations that go the ICO route are unsure of their legal standing, regulators don’t have clear rules for different use cases, and the public is often investing blindly. For all parties, it’s strongly recommended to do your due diligence. Through the bright light of careful due diligence, the scams and frauds will become known and the offerings that have real promise will hopefully rise to the top.