Go ahead and ban staking. Crypto investors will just go elsewhere

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“We’re hearing rumors that the SEC would like to get rid of crypto staking in the U.S. for retail customers. I hope that’s not the case as I believe it would be a terrible path for the U.S. if that was allowed to happen.”

That’s the tweet from Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, that earlier this month started to worry crypto holders in the United States.

The crypto space has long remained a battleground between U.S. authorities — including the Internal Revenue Service, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and Commodity Futures Trading Commission — because of a lack of definitive regulatory ownership and clarity over whether crypto assets are securities, property or otherwise.

Given all that happened in the last year, with the collapse of centralized exchange FTX and lending platforms including Celsius, Voyager, BlockFi and more, many believed the SEC would focus on ensuring that U.S.-based crypto exchanges were compliant with local laws and fully solvent.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler recently stated that crypto assets would again be on the agency’s 2023 to-do list. Observers of the crypto space didn’t have to wait long. Overnight, Kraken announced it would be shutting its crypto-staking service to U.S. customers and pay a US$30 million settlement fine to the SEC. This also comes amidst the IRS petition to U.S. courts requesting information on Kraken users who failed to report federal income taxes between the 2016-2020 financial years.

This leaves other U.S.-based exchanges, including Coinbase, in the firing line of the SEC regarding its staking options available to U.S. customers. Coinbase revealed that US$62 million in revenue was attributable to its staking product across the three months ending Sept. 30, 2022 — a whopping 10% of its total revenue across the same period.

This move against centralized staking products for U.S. customers has been touted as “protecting” vulnerable customers in the fallout from FTX’s collapse. With millions of users affected and billions of dollars vaporized, that’s almost believable.

However, the actions of the SEC over recent days may have the opposite effect, pushing users towards offshore exchanges — as has already been happening since FTX’s collapse — as well as decentralized staking platforms.

So where are we to go from here, and what’s the most likely outcome for crypto investors in the U.S.?

Is banning staking necessary?

The SEC has often taken a heavy-handed approach to cryptocurrency regulation in the U.S., and this latest move is no exception. While regulators genuinely seem to want to protect retail customers from potential fraud, especially after the collapse of FTX, their current approach may have unintended consequences and lead to U.S. users being even less protected than they currently are.