SEC Issues Report on the Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crowdfunding Through Cryptocurrency

On July 25, 2017, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued a Report following their investigation of The DAO.  The DAO is an unincorporated organization that is just one example of a “Decentralized Autonomous Organization” –  a virtual organization embodied in computer code and executed on a distributed ledger or blockchain.

The DAO was formed in 2015 as unique form of crowdfunding whereby participants would vote on proposals and be entitled to rewards.  Between April and May of 2016, The DAO offered and sold approximately 1.15 billion DAO Tokens in exchange for approximately 12 million Ether.  Ether is a form of virtual currency.  These DAO Tokens gave the holder certain voting and ownership rights.

Token holders could vote on predetermined proposals deciding where The DAO invested its money, with each token holder’s vote weighted according to how many DAO Tokens he or she held.  On June 17th, 2016, an unknown individual or group attacked The DAO and appropriated approximately 1/3 of the total funds.  Although the funds were eventually recovered by The DAO, the SEC began investigating the attack and The DAO.  Ultimately, the SEC determined that an Enforcement Action was not necessary, however it issued a report laying out how the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act applies to The DAO and similar entities.

Section 5 of the Securities Act prohibits entities not registered with the SEC from engaging in the offer or sale of securities in interstate commerce.  Upon investigation of the circumstances surrounding The DAO, the SEC stated that The DAO qualifies as an “issuer” and thus must register as such with the SEC in order to sell DAO Tokens – which the SEC considers to be securities – in compliance with federal securities laws.  Given the SEC’s flexible interpretation and application of the Act, this Report is a caution to virtual entities that the federal securities laws are applicable and that the SEC intends to pursue enforcement of these laws in the field of virtual currencies and securities.

Initial Coin Offerings and the Securities Environment

A new financial instrument is arising in the capital markets and it provides both benefits and challenges to the equity environment. Variously denominated as initial coin offerings, crowdsales, token launches, and crowdfunding, this mechanism, rather than offering equity in a start-up venture, offers discounts on cryptocurrencies before they become available on the several exchanges.

Such offerings are made into a fraught landscape where they risk being interpreted as securities offerings that are subject to regulation, oversight, and enforcement by the Securities Exchange Commission. While the innovative characteristics of digital currency ought be encouraged, the SEC may, for reasons I explore in this note, be inclined to bring this device within their purview.

ICOs generally hold their offerings to be outside the conventional definition of securities and, so, outside the legal framework applicable to securities. Nevertheless, there is an expressed sense in the marketplace that government regulation of cryptocurrency will be necessary for the mechanism to be fully utilized.

This paper will review briefly two reasons that U.S. law will likely conclude that cryptocurrency is a security subject to the American regulatory scheme, First, I argue that the offerings made via ICOs are in effect, if not name, securities subject to the associated law. Second, I present my view that the Securities Exchange Commission is likely to find it to be in the public interest to conclude that digital currencies should be characterized as securities.

  1.     The Offering of Digital Currencies by Companies Seeking to Raise Capital Fits the Legal

Construct of a Security

The law defining securities, for purposes of federal regulation, has evolved in considerable nuance and complexity. The Securities Act of 1933 rather quaintly defines a “security” as

any note, stock, treasury stock, security future, security-based swap, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust certificate, preorganization certificate or subscription, transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate, certificate of deposit for a security, fractional undivided interest in oil, gas, or other mineral rights, any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege on any security, certificate of deposit, or group or index of securities (including any interest therein or based on the value thereof), or any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege entered into on a national securities exchange relating to foreign currency, or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a “security,” or any certificate of interest or participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing.

The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 uses a somewhat similar definition.

Section 5 of the Securities Act makes it unlawful to offer or sell any security unless a registration statements is in effect for that security or there is an exemption from registration available. That section also requires the use of a statutorily prescribed prospectus document.

Finance is, in the practice, much more intricate than the plain language of the statutes appears to acknowledge, and, so, the courts have articulated considerable law particular to a wide range of circumstances encountered in application an in an evolving industry. Controlling these interpretations is the Supreme Court case SEC v. W.J. Howey Co. That case articulated both the priority of substance over form in evaluating whether a device is a security, as well as a test consisting of four distinct elements:

The first Howey test looks for an investment of money into some enterprise. Court cases has since broadened that notion to include any form of consideration;

Such an investment must be made into a common enterprise. Court rulings have articulated both “horizontal commonality” and “vertical commonality.”

Horizontal commonality describes the pooling of value from several investors who share in the profits and risks. Most circuits that have considered the issue of what is a common enterprise find it satisfied where a movant shows horizontal commonality, that is the pooling of investors’ funds as a result of which the individual investors share all the risks and benefits of the business enterprise] These circuits focus on whether the scheme involves a “pooling” of assets. For the common enterprise test to be satisfied, horizontal commonality requires that an investor’s assets be joined with another investor’s assets into a joint venture where each investor shares the risk of profit and loss according to their individual investment.

Vertical commonality is split into “Narrow” verticality and “Broad” verticality.

  1. The narrow vertical view is held by the Ninth Circuit. The narrow vertical approach finds a common enterprise if there is a correlation between the fortunes of an investor and a promoter. Under narrow vertical commonality a common enterprise is a venture in which the fortunes of the investor are connected with and dependent upon the efforts and success of those seeking the investment. It is not necessary that the funds of investors are pooled; what must be shown is that the fortunes of the investors are linked with those of the promoters, thereby establishing the requisite element of vertical commonality. Thus, a common enterprise exists if a direct correlation has been established between success or failure of the promoter’s efforts and success or failure of the investment. Under this view, the test is satisfied if the promoter and the investor are both exposed to risk and the profits and losses of investor and promoter are correlated.
  2.   The broad verticality test finds a common enterprise if the success of an investor depends on a promoter’s expertise. “Broad vertical commonality … only requires a movant to show that the investors are dependent upon the expertise or efforts of the investment promoter for their returns.” The Fifth Circuit and the Eleventh Circuit (because of the Eleventh Circuit’s adoption of pre-split Fifth Circuit opinions) both follow this view. These courts focus on the expertise of the promoter in the industry of the alleged security. If the investor relies on the promoter’s expertise, then the transaction or scheme represents a common enterprise and satisfies the second prong of the Howey test.

The third prong of the Howey test requires an expectation of profits. Profits can be in the form of a cash return on the principal investment, capital appreciation, dividends, interest, or other earnings. For purposes of the Howey test, “profits” mean return to the investor, and not to the success of the enterprise. For example, a Ponzi scheme has no possibility of real prosperity, but certainly involves a security. This test looks to the motivation of the investor.

The fourth test in Howey calls for the expectation of profits to be derived solely from the efforts of the promoter or some third party. The efforts of the promoter or third party must have a clear role in the success or failure of the enterprise.

We can examine just what it is that ICOs are offering by reviewing their descriptive so-called “White Papers” which offer the promoters’ outlines of the business model and goals of the enterprises. I have reviewed dozens of such white papers and find these elements in common among them:

-A description of the rapid growth presently occurring in the market space the enterprise proposes to enter

-A description of the unique value proposition the enterprise claims to possess (generally using rhetoric focused on results, rather than specific methods and always couched in highly technical language

-Many falsely claim their descriptive language or process is trademarked or otherwise lawfully protected from cooption

-In return for the solicited investment, the promotions offer early or discounted access to some form of digital currency, sometimes the promoter’s own brand of such digital currency

-A vague growth model is postulated, based on such things as “activity” within the proposed business ecosystem, transaction fees derived from cyptocurrency trades, or growth of other users’ participation in the system itself

-Investment in the offering is virtually always through some existing digital currency or, in some cases, precious metals, such as gold

I found no ICO White Paper that did not articulate, or at least imply, satisfaction of all four of the Howey tests for a security. Most satisfied both the horizontal and both vertical tests for a common enterprise. Often, the efforts by promoters to avoid using language they might have considered admissions of Howey criteria worked to render the rhetoric of those white papers cumbersome and incomplete.

In short, the promoters of ICOs conspicuously promote their own skills, insight, and claims to exclusive intellectual property as the value drivers of the enterprise upon which their respective enterprises will generate returns to investors, whose pooled investments are sought to capitalize the business. While nearly all of the white papers I reviewed were cautious to avoid references to specific return values or rates investors might expect, without exception, they all make repeated mentions of “profits” or some synonym thereof By either direct evidence, or by implication, then, these ICO white papers describe “securities” that meet the Howey tests.

  1.     The Digital Currency Market Space Exhibits Characteristics Which May Make it a Good

Subject of Regulation

The statutory authority to regulate these offerings aside, the SEC has an imperative to examine them in detail. Indeed, the SEC has, on more than one occasion, suggested that digital offerings are securities.

At least two other U.S. supervisory entities have articulated their views that digital currencies are subject, to varying extents, regulatory oversight.

The Commodities Futures Trading Commission has designated bitcoin as a commodity, subjecting it to the CFTC’s trading rules. As well, the IRS has characterized cryptocurrency as “property” and not “currency,” thereby disqualifying it for treatment with exchange gain or loss under Reg. §1.988-2.

The argument that the marketplace will serve to govern itself in this sector is somewhat belied by the fact that the marketplace in Bitcoin does not operate with an even hand.

As shown in Figure 1, the volatility of the conversion price of the pairs of Bitcoin/U.S. Dollar and Bitcoin/China Yuan has been growing at a faster rate for the Yuan than for the Dollar, especially since April of 2017. This has created a structural opportunity for arbitrage and can leave investors subject to unregulated speculation in cryptocurrency. Given that bitcoin and similar devices trade anonymously, the opportunity to generate large profits, outside the purview of the tax authorities, could, no doubt, attract any number of participants with obscure intent to the marketplace.

The attraction of a market so apparently open to manipulation by substantial participants may also be worth consideration.

The Facebook-FTC Settlement and the Future of Privacy Regulation

In the wake of a landmark Federal Trade Commission (FTC) settlement imposed on the social media giant Facebook, it is fair to speculate whether other companies will be forced to pay hefty fines and prioritize compliance with privacy standards in order to escape punishing federal regulation. The settlement, which was announced on Wednesday, July 24th, compels Facebook to pay a five billion dollar fine, the largest ever penalty leveled on a social media company in connection with privacy violations.1 Though the fine is relatively trivial in the context of Zuckerberg and co.’s multi-billion dollar annual earnings, the settlement also forces Facebook to “submit to quarterly certifications from the FTC to acknowledge that the company is in compliance with the [settlement’s] privacy program,” a major defeat for a company whose business model revolves around the collection and analysis of user data.2 The settlement also forces Facebook to reform its corporate structure and submit to oversight from an internal “privacy committee” tasked with ensuring the integrity of user data, among other impositions.2

All in all, the settlement is important not so much for its impact on Facebook as its implications for legal scrutiny of other technology companies. Although the federal government lacks the congressional mandate required to more expansively scrutinize the privacy standards of technology companies, such a mandate may well be in the offing, especially considering that political interest in privacy violations is cresting among members of both parties. Moreover, even if Congress elects not to craft a comprehensive online privacy law, future settlements imposed by the FTC could cripple rival companies lacking the social media giant’s seemingly inexhaustible resources.

Although the FTC settlement represented a major shift in the regulatory landscape, social media companies innocent of the sort of grave violations committed by Facebook can rest easy for the moment, given that the agency must target offending companies one-by-one in the absence of a sweeping congressional privacy mandate. In fact, the sort of stringent legal protections for user data commonplace in the European Union have not yet been approved by American lawmakers, who have so far refrained from devising a tough privacy law in the mold of the E.U.’s General Data Protection Regulation. Specifically, the European regulation requires social media companies to “inform users about their data practices and receive explicit permission before collecting any personal information,” a level of government oversight unheard-of stateside.3 Without the sweeping powers afforded to their European counterparts, American regulators have chosen to target serious individual offenses – like the unauthorized collection of user data by third party programs that sparked the inquiry into Facebook.2

But it would be a mistake to assume that the legal and political landscape will become more favorable to technology companies in the foreseeable future. Conservatives and liberals alike have entered into an uneasy alliance to promote a stringent new privacy law,4 and both Marco Rubio and Ron Wyden – lawmakers on distinct poles of the ideological spectrum – have proposed new regulations on social media giants.5 As a consequence of broad-based political support for privacy restrictions, future settlements reached with technology companies are bound to be at least as costly as the one recently reached with Facebook – a prospect that should trouble smaller companies that lack the ability to maintain profitability in the wake of a federal crackdown. Although federal regulation may prove burdensome and costly, compliance seems to be the vastly more preferable alternative.

 

 

  1. https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/press-releases/2019/07/ftc-imposes-5-billion-penalty-sweeping-new-privacy-restrictions
  2. https://www.cnbc.com/2019/07/24/facebook-to-pay-5-billion-for-privacy-lapses-ftc-announces.html
  3. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/08/opinion/sunday/privacy-congress-facebook-google.html
  4. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/14/technology/big-tech-strange-bedfellows.html
  5. https://blog.malwarebytes.com/security-world/privacy-security-world/2019/03/what-congress-means-when-it-talks-about-data-privacy-legislation/

Pastore & Dailey Successfully Represents Fortune 500 Pharmaceutical Corporation

Pastore & Dailey successfully obtained a withdrawal of all claims brought in Connecticut State court against our Fortune 500 pharmaceutical client.  Our client was accused of distributing an asbestos tainted product sold in the 1970s.  Following discovery efforts and extensive discussions, we were able to satisfy plaintiffs that there was no evidence linking our client to a contaminated product.

Pastore & Dailey Successfully Represents Fortune 500 Pharmaceutical Corporation

Pastore & Dailey successfully obtained a withdrawal of all claims brought in Connecticut State court against our Fortune 500 pharmaceutical client.  Our client was accused of distributing an asbestos tainted product sold in the 1970s.  Following discovery efforts and extensive discussions, we were able to satisfy plaintiffs that there was no evidence linking our client to a contaminated product.

 

Summary Judgement Win

Successfully represented a software development company in the motion for summary judgment phase of litigation pending in the Southern District of New York, in which the court determined that the Firm’s client could seek in excess to $15 million in damages at trial on its primary claim against a Fortune 500 company.

Former Dissident Shareholder Becomes Qualstar’s Interim CEO

Former Dissident Shareholder Becomes Qualstar’s Interim CEO

Steven Bronson, the investor who took control of Qualstar Corp. after a proxy fight, has been named its interim chief executive and president, the company announced Monday.

Bronson, a member of Qualstar’s board, was appointed to replace Larry Firestone, who became chief executive of the Simi Valley data tape storage and power supply manufacturer in June 2012.

Bronson immediately closed a Qualstar office that Firestone opened in Denver and is terminating the executives working there. The move will result in a savings of about $1 million, according to the company.

In June, Bronson and four other candidates were elected to the Qualstar board after longstanding complaints that the money-losing company was underperforming. Bronson and BKF Capital Group Inc., his Boca Raton, Fla.-based investment firm, are the second largest investors in the company, with an 18 percent stake.

For there to be a successful turnaround of the company, Bronson said expenses need to be controlled and reduced.

“The board (of directors) will continue to take the appropriate actions to right-size Qualstar, support its current and future business, build a solid foundation and preserve its liquidity base,” Bronson said, in a prepared statement.

Bronson also is chief executive of Interlink Electronics Inc., a Camarillo manufacturer of touch pads and mouses for computers and other electronic equipment used in industrial and consumer applications.

Shares closed up 1 cent, or a fraction of percent, to $1.41 on the Nasdaq.

Los Angeles Business Journal

By Business Journal Staff Monday, July 15, 2013

 

Connecticut Complex Litigation

On October 16, 2012, the Connecticut Superior Court denied motions to dismiss filed by separate defendants in response to an amended complaint filed by our client, a 1031 Exchange Company.  Each defendant (one a large banking institution and the other, a top nationwide law firm) filed motions seeking to have the suit dismissed on, among others, the grounds of forum non conveniens and improper venue.  The amended complaint alleged that both the bank and the law firm violated multiple laws by withholding evidence in a prior civil suit filed against our client, who assists with Section 1031 like kind exchanges.  As a result of the alleged withholding of key evidence, our client was held liable in Massachusetts state court for a substantial amount of money for improperly trading funds that were to be conservatively invested for its Section 1031 clients.  Instead of assisting our client with the conservative investment strategy, the bank in question allegedly encouraged our client to engage in risky trading of the funds.  Not only did the bank allegedly encourage the risky trading when it knew it should not have, but, their attorneys, with the bank’s aid, allegedly withheld the evidence needed to exculpate our client.  Because the evidence was allegedly withheld and some of it was allegedly destroyed, our client was held liable in Massachusetts state court for the risky trading and a judgment entered against it.  The alleged actions of our client led to criminal trials in Massachusetts and ultimately, two convictions, which have subsequently been overturned.  Had the bank not allegedly encouraged our client to make such risky trades when the bank was allegedly aware that the invested funds were to be conservatively traded and had the bank and its law firm not allegedly concealed and destroyed evidence, our client would not have been found liable to the 1031 investors for certain damages and no criminal trials would have ensued.  Thus, the amended complaint asserted twenty causes of action against the bank and the law firm, which causes of action include indemnification, contribution, unjust enrichment, intentional spoliation of evidence, breach of fiduciary duty and many others.

The case is pending on the Connecticut Superior Court’s Complex Litigation Docket.  In his opinion, Judge William Bright, when considering all of the elements needed for a forum non conveniens dismissal, noted that Connecticut would indeed be a proper forum for this action despite the years of litigation that took place in Massachusetts between the parties.  Finally, Judge Bright found defendants’ contention that venue is inappropriate unpersuasive.  Thus, after a decade of litigation in Massachusetts against the 1031 exchange, the bank and the law firm, our client now has the opportunity to litigate in Connecticut, its home state, and can take discovery of various parties that it has not been able to for the years in question.

Success Systems Inc. v. Tammerica Lynn et al.

In a recent decision, handed down on October 10, 2012, the U.S. District Court of Connecticut denied a motion to vacate a judgment, which judgment was initially entered in our client’s favor in April 2010.  The lawsuit was originally filed by our client in the U.S. District Court of Connecticut in 2006.  After the defendant failed to appear and after a hearing in damages, the Court finally entered the judgment in 2010.  We then successfully registered the judgment in the District of Massachusetts (in an effort to collect on the judgment via seizure or property and assets).  Subsequently, the defendant sprang to life and filed motions to vacate the judgments in both the District Court of Connecticut and the District Court of Massachusetts.  Because the District of Connecticut was the original court, Massachusetts deferred taking action until the District Court of Connecticut rendered its decision.  The District Court of Connecticut ordered discovery and ultimately, a hearing on the merits.  After discovery closed and on the eve of the hearing, we filed a motion to compel the production of certain documents and information due to the defendant’s evasiveness throughout the discovery process.  The Court ultimately granted the motion to compel in full and awarded all attorneys’ fees in preparing and filing the motion.  After the hearing, Judge Donna Martinez denied defendant’s motion to vacate, giving our client yet another victory in the years long legal battle to recover monies rightfully owed to it.