Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

SEC Chair Gary Gensler to Allow FTX Reopening But Under This Condition

The current administration at FTX is making every effort to revive the exchange and reopen its functioning. Latest reports also suggest that NYSE’s former president, Tom Farley has shown strong interest in acquiring FTC and reviving it again.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler Is Watching

While speaking at the DC Fintech Week, SEC chair Gary Gensler said that he is ok with FTX reopening its operations, however, that needs to happen with a clear understanding of the law.

Earlier this year in May, Farley introduced his own digital asset exchange named Bullish, and it is currently among the leading candidates in the bankruptcy auction. While speaking to CNBC, Gensler said:

“If Tom or anybody else wanted to be in this field, I would say, ‘Do it within the law,’. Build the trust of investors in what you’re doing and ensure that you’re doing the proper disclosures — and also that you’re not commingling all these functions, trading against your customers. Or using their crypto assets for your own purposes.”

FTX and Alameda were initially designed to maintain a strict separation, but the evidence presented during the monthlong trial revealed a significant level of interconnectedness between the two entities. It became evident that FTX and Alameda had an intricate and concerning relationship.

Bankman-Fried simultaneously managed both an exchange and a proprietary trading firm, raising questions about potential conflicts of interest and operational entanglement.

As per the recent report, both platforms have been transferring millions of dollars worth of assets, reportedly for debt restructuring.

FTX Can’t Bypass the Law

Gensler emphasized that when contemplating new regulatory measures for the industry, the existing securities laws are already “robust and effective.” The key lies in their enforcement.

“There’s no inherent conflict between crypto and securities laws,” he stated. “The challenge lies in the fact that numerous global players are presently operating without adhering to these well-established regulations”. The SEC chair added:

“Think about how many actors in this space are not complying right now with international sanctions and money laundering laws and are using crypto for nefarious or bad actions”.

Gensler noted that in the past six years, the SEC has taken legal action in the form of either lawsuits or settlements in approximately 150 crypto-related cases. Notably, one ongoing dispute involves Coinbase, a publicly traded U.S. cryptocurrency exchange that has expressed intentions to relocate due to regulatory challenges.

Gensler emphasized the importance of companies operating within the bounds of the law, although he refrained from mentioning specific cases during his statement.

FTX
Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Russian authorities plan to impose heavy fines on cryptocurrency miners operating in residential apartments

    Russian authorities have proposed imposing huge fines on cryptocurrency miners suspected of operating in residential properties. The authorities may also consider revising the Code of Administrative Offenses to hold those who abuse electricity accountable.

  • TheoriqAI Completes $6.2 Million Super-Seed Round of Financing, Led by Hack VC

    On May 14th, TheoriqAI, a modular AI agent infrastructure, announced on X platform that it has completed a $6.2 million Super-Seed round of financing. Hack VC led the investment, with participation from Foresight Ventures, HTX Ventures, Figment Capital, HASH CIB, Inception Capital, Antalpha Ventures, NewTribe Capital, Stateless Ventures, Bitscale Capital, Construct Ventures, Hypersphere, IOSG Ventures, LongHash Ventures, HashKey Capital, SNZ Holding, Chainlink.

  • Basel banking regulator delays crypto asset rules for banks until 2026

    The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's governing body, the Group of Central Bank Governors and Heads of Supervision (GHOS), has delayed the compliance deadline for new rules on bank crypto assets by one year. The latest date for the project has been changed to January 1, 2026.

  • LayerZero CEO: Up to 100,000 addresses have been recognized as witches

    LayerZero CEO Bryan Pellegrino stated on social media that up to 100,000 addresses have been identified as witches. Previously reported on May 4th, LayerZero officials stated that all witch users were given a chance to self-report within the next 14 days and those who did would receive an expected distribution of 15%.

  • Niobium, a fully homomorphic encryption chip provider, completes $5.5 million seed round of financing, led by Fusion Fund

    Niobium, a custom encryption chip provider specializing in zero-trust computing, has announced the completion of a $5.5 million seed round of financing, led by Fusion Fund, with participation from Morgan Creek Capital, Rev1 Ventures, Ohio Innovation Fund, and Hale Capital. It is reported that Niobium is building a fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) accelerator chip and will commercialize it. The new funds will be used to explore the commercial applications of FHE in industries such as healthcare, finance, and blockchain, and also plan to showcase the solution and launch pilot projects in the fourth quarter of this year.

  • RunPod Completes $20 Million Seed Round of Financing, Led by Intel Capital and Others

    According to distributed GPU cloud computing AI training model project RunPod announced the completion of a $20 million seed round of financing, jointly led by Intel Capital and Dell Technologies Capital, with participation from Julien Chaummond, Nat Friedman, Adam Lewis and others. RunPod uses global distributed GPU cloud computing services to train, deploy, and scale AI models, thereby reducing the workload of developers. According to its official website, RunPad accepts cryptocurrency payments, but reminds users to strongly recommend setting up a crypto.com account as part of the risk management process and conducting any necessary KYC checks in advance.

  • Kaiko data: Bitcoin miners’ income has dropped sharply, and they may sell BTC to maintain operations

    The latest data from cryptocurrency research and analysis company Kaiko shows that miners are facing huge selling pressure as Bitcoin mining revenue and transaction fees decline. Bitcoin miners' income mainly comes from two aspects: mining rewards and transaction fees. However, affected by the halving of Bitcoin rewards in April (block rewards dropped from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC), miners have to sell Bitcoin to pay for costs. Kaiko researchers pointed out in the report that the halving event usually prompts miners to sell BTC because the mining process requires a lot of expenses.

  • Brazil's trading volume reaches $6 billion in 4 months

    According to Kaiko Research, the correlation between Bitcoin (BTC) and stocks is increasing. After reaching a multi-year low of 0.01 in March, the 90-day correlation rose to 0.17 last week. Based on the company's research report on May 13th, the 90-day correlation between Bitcoin and stocks rose to 0.17 in the week of May 5th, higher than the multi-year low of 0.01 in March. The correlation between BTC and risk assets is lower than the high of 0.6 during the bull market.

  • Ethereum Foundation Announces Open Application for the Fifth Ethereum Protocol Fellowship Program

    On May 14th, the Ethereum Foundation announced that the fifth round of the Ethereum Protocol Fellowship (EPF) program is officially open for applications, with a deadline of May 26th.

  • CFTC settles registration violations with Falcon Labs

    The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has reached a settlement with the major cryptocurrency broker Falcon Labs, Ltd. to resolve Falcon Labs' failure to register. This is the CFTC's first action against an unregistered futures commission merchant, and Falcon Labs was accused of improperly facilitating customer trading on digital asset exchanges. Falcon Labs neither admitted nor denied the CFTC's findings and was fined over $1.7 million. Previously, the CFTC had charged Binance and its former CEO, and Falcon Labs subsequently changed its method of collecting customer information and updated its know-your-customer policy. The CFTC said it hopes to encourage other illegal digital asset intermediaries to report their activities through cooperation and reform with Falcon Labs.