"As the country becomes one of the
world’s strictest crypto regulators, companies are exploring plans to expand
internationally and possibly leave entirely.
The wave of government enforcement
against cryptocurrency companies is beginning to remake the industry.
Coinbase, the largest crypto
exchange in the United States, has opened a business
in Bermuda. Gemini, a rival firm based in New York, is seeking a license
in the United Arab Emirates. And Bittrex, an exchange in Seattle, has shut down
its U.S. operations.
After years of trying to shape
federal regulation in the United States, a growing number of American crypto
companies — particularly the exchanges where customers buy and sell digital
tokens — are exploring plans to build their businesses abroad. They are expanding
into new markets and weighing the possibility of leaving the country entirely.
The moves are a response to a
growing law enforcement crackdown that has made the United States one of the
strictest regulators of crypto in the world. On Tuesday, the Securities and
Exchange Commission filed a long-anticipated lawsuit
against Coinbase, arguing that the exchange was marketing securities without
the proper registration. A day earlier, the S.E.C. sued the international crypto exchange
Binance, seeking to bar its founder from the U.S. securities market.
The enforcement is a turning point for an industry that
seemed to be gaining mainstream acceptance just a year ago. Cryptocurrencies
were created with an antigovernment ethos, as a decentralized finance system
that would operate beyond the reach of regulators. But as the market surged in
2021, crypto companies set up a lobbying apparatus in Washington and sought to
rebrand themselves as a compliant business eager to work with the government.
That effort has largely failed. Last year, a series of
crypto meltdowns created widespread suspicion of the industry. Congress,
regulators and the public have become increasingly
hostile.
These days, the possibility of
leaving the United States is “the No. 1 thing that crypto start-ups are talking
and thinking about,” said Nic Carter, a founder of Castle Island Ventures, a
crypto venture capital firm. “You can move to the Caymans or London or Bermuda,
or have a significant faction of your executives there, or Hong Kong or Dubai.”
In theory, a large exodus from the
United States could eventually make it harder for Americans to trade digital
currencies and experiment with new crypto products. But not all American crypto
companies are seeking to relocate: Firms that specialize in Bitcoin mining, an
energy-intensive process, have flocked to the United States in pursuit of cheap
power. And even crypto companies that are expanding internationally plan to
fight for more favorable rules in Washington.
Still, tensions between the industry
and U.S. regulators have been growing since early 2021, when Gary Gensler, a staunch crypto
critic, was appointed chair of the S.E.C.
For two years, the S.E.C. has argued that almost all
cryptocurrencies should be classified as securities, like stocks traded on Wall
Street, which would force crypto firms to register with the agency and subject
them to strict disclosure requirements.
A new round of hostilities began in
November after the collapse of FTX, the crypto exchange founded by Sam
Bankman-Fried. Over the following months, the S.E.C. sued a series of crypto lending
firms and cracked down on an investment product marketed by Kraken, a popular
U.S. exchange.
At the same time, several top
financial regulators issued statements warning banks about the risks of crypto.
The industry’s supporters labeled the government actions Operation Choke
Point 2.0, alluding to an Obama-era law enforcement campaign to prevent banks
from working with certain businesses.
“Things definitely took a big turn
after the FTX collapse,” said Perianne Boring, who runs the Chamber of Digital
Commerce, a crypto advocacy group. “We had a lot of good-faith efforts underway
at the S.E.C. and even with other policymakers that are now the big critics.”
As the largest U.S. crypto company,
Coinbase has been at the center of the regulatory debate.
After it was founded in 2012,
Coinbase rose to prominence by marketing itself as the most trustworthy and
compliant crypto exchange. Two years ago, it went public, a watershed moment that seemed to
signal the industry’s growing role in U.S. commerce.
Since then, Coinbase has clashed
repeatedly with federal regulators. In September 2021, after the S.E.C. stopped
the firm from offering a popular investment product, the company’s chief
executive, Brian Armstrong, accused the agency
of “really sketchy behavior.”
In Washington, Coinbase and other
major U.S. crypto companies have fought back against the intensifying
regulatory regime, lobbying legislators to create rules tailor-made for the
digital asset industry. But as those efforts have fallen apart, some crypto
firms have started looking abroad.
At a conference in London in April,
Mr. Armstrong said the United
States needed clearer rules governing crypto. “If the U.S. doesn’t have this,”
he said, “these firms are going to be built in offshore havens.”
Coinbase was already beginning to move in that direction. In
May, the company said it was opening an international exchange, based in
Bermuda, that would allow overseas users to make a type of high-risk,
high-reward trade that is barred in the United States.
In a statement
announcing the business, Coinbase said it “remained committed to the U.S.” But
it noted that other countries were starting to “strategically position
themselves as crypto hubs.” The company did not respond to a request for
comment.
“We see countries that instead of
trying to litigate, they’ve actually sat down, assessed the risk in the
marketplace and established new rules,” said Kristin Smith, the chief executive
of the Blockchain Association, a crypto advocacy group. “We’re going to see
different projects and developers launch and operate initially overseas.”
Still, a wholesale abandonment of the United States is
unlikely anytime soon. The crypto industry has always had global reach, with
companies scattered throughout Europe, Asia and the Caribbean. Coinbase is
planning to challenge the S.E.C.’s lawsuit, and a victory could give the
industry new ammunition to push for the laws it wants.
But as the enforcement actions pile
up, other U.S. crypto companies are taking steps to expand their businesses
overseas.
Last week, Gemini, the crypto
exchange founded by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, said it was seeking a license
to operate in the Emirates. The announcement cited
statistics showing that the Emirates had outpaced the United States in crypto
adoption. A Gemini spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment.
In March, Bittrex announced that it
would halt operations in the United States, citing “the
current U.S. regulatory and economic environment.” A few weeks later, the
S.E.C. sued the crypto exchange; its U.S.
arm has filed for
bankruptcy, while the company’s global exchange continues to operate abroad.
In a statement, Oliver Linch, the
chief executive of Bittrex’s global operation, said it was “no surprise” that
crypto companies were looking overseas. “The chaotic regulatory environment in
the U.S. is only serving to compound the woes of the crypto winter and the
scandals of 2022,” he said.
For business founders with
relatively small crypto companies, a move is especially tempting. “For new
start-ups, it’s easier,” said Mr. Carter of Castle Island Ventures. “There’s
definitely an appetite to consider other jurisdictions.”"
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