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Rumors of an SEC crackdown are flying after Poloniex said it will delist nine crypto tokens including DCR for trading to U.S. customers.


No Longer Available to U.S. Cryptocurrency Traders

Poloniex has announced that it will no longer offer nine cryptocurrency tokens for trading to U.S. customers following reports of incoming regulations against unregistered security tokens. Meanwhile, opinions remain split as to whether securities regulations should apply to cryptocurrency tokens.

In a Medium post published on Thursday (May 16, 2019), Poloniex announced that it would no longer offer nine cryptocurrency tokens to its U.S. customers. According to the announcement, the move due to uncertainties over whether U.S. regulators would qualify such tokens as securities.

An excerpt from the post reads:

On Wednesday, May 29th, at 16:00 UTC, the markets for ARDR, BCN, DCR, GAME, GAS, LSK, NXT, OMNI, and REP will be disabled for Poloniex customers in the US. All assets remain available for trading to customers outside the US.

U.S. traders affected by the move will be able to withdraw these assets from Poloniex as long as the cryptocurrency exchange continues to list the same on its platform.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire expressed frustration at the decision being as a result of “restrictive” U.S. cryptocurrency regulations. The Goldman Sachs-backed Circle acquired Poloniex back in 2018.

Allaire isn’t alone in condemning U.S. cryptocurrency regulatory policies especially regarding the classification of initial coin offering (ICO) tokens as securities. A group of U.S. Congressmen are even trying to pass the Token Taxonomy Act – a bill that would exempt crypto tokens from the definition of securities.

SEC Crackdown Looms For Crypto Tokens?

However, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has consistently maintained that most ICOs are securities.

The SEC has also continued its crackdown on unlicensed cryptocurrency security offerings with several fines and arrests. There are even reports that the Commission is gearing for a final assault on unlicensed token offerings in what may be a hammer blow to ICOs in the U.S.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin entreprenuer, Ragnar Lifthrasir, cautioned his followers, saying:

Word on the street is that the SEC is finally, decisively, coming for ICOs. The Poloniex announcement by Allaire is the beginning. Bitcoin users not affected.

Apart from traders, such a move would also affect exchange platforms that have increasingly adopted a horizontal strategy by listing as many cryptocurrency tokens as possible.

Critics say real maturity in the market would hinge on a more vertical approach that prioritizes the quality of the tokens being offered rather than focusing on collecting huge listing fees from all and sundry.

With the considerable burden attached to abiding with securities regulation, it is not unlikely that many of these tokens would cease to exist. Such a situation might lead to the fulfillment of the altcoin extinction event as predicted by people such as Matt Hougan of Bitwise and Barry Silbert of Digital Currency Group.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin continues to be the darling of traders and institutions alike. In 2019 alone, several establishments like Fidelity Investments, TD Ameritrade, and Microsoft to mention a few have upped the ante in terms of their Bitcoin adoption drive.

Should all cryptocurrency tokens be exempted from securities regulations? Let us know in the comments below.


Images via Twitter @Poloniex, @jerallaire, @real_vijay, Shutterstock

The post SEC Finally Coming for ICOs? Poloniex Delists 9 Crypto Tokens in the US appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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