Fungible cryptos in secondary sales are not securities, Ripple tells SEC
Ripple, the blockchain company behind XRP, argued that fungible cryptocurrencies are not securities when transferred in secondary transactions in a recent letter sent to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).In its May 27 letter, Ripple cited US attorney and crypto law thought leader Lewis Cohen to support its claim. In his widely cited 2022 paper, âThe Ineluctable Modality of Securities Law: Why Fungible Crypto Assets Are Not Securities,â he wrote:â[T]here is no current basis in the law relating to âinvestment contractsâ to classify most fungible crypto assets as âsecuritiesâ when transferred in secondary transactions.âIn his paper, Cohen explained that in secondary transactions, an investment contract transaction is generally not present. He further claimed that fungible cryptocurrencies âneither create nor represent the necessary cognizable legal relationship betweenâ a legal entity and the holder that is the âhallmark of a security.âSECâs ânew paradigmâRipple also referenced SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce's May 19 ânew paradigmâ speech. She said sheâd been voicing her dissent with the regulatorâs approach to crypto, adding:âHaving emerged from the crypto dissent years, I am glad to be able speak to you today as the head of the Commissionâs Crypto Task Force about a rational and coherent path forward and a new paradigm at the SEC.âPeirce said that the SECâs âapproach to crypto in recent years has evaded sound regulatory practice and must be corrected.â She also said that most cryptocurrencies are not securities, adding:âMost currently existing crypto assets in the market are not [securities]. My supplemental answer is that economic realities matter and non-security crypto assets may be distributed as part of an investment contract, which is a type of security.âRippleâs long fight with the SECThe SEC had viewed a large portion of digital assets as securities, with the regulatorâs former chair, Gary Gensler, stating in 2023 that most of the crypto market falls under the securities bracket. This stance led to a protracted legal battle between the SEC and Ripple.The lawsuit first began at the end of 2020, when the SEC took action against Ripple and its executives, claiming that XRP sales constituted unregistered security offerings. Still, after the governmentâs stance on crypto changed with the election of current US President Donald Trump, Ripple has mostly won the battle, with the SEC recently dropping its appeal against a ruling favorable to the company.In its recent letter to the SEC, Ripple also cited a ruling in the case noting that âthe court held that certain of Rippleâs historical institutional sales of XRP were investment contracts,â while the secondary sales were not. Furthermore, the judge âdetermined that XRP itself is not a security.â