SEC Places Heavier Scrutiny on Binance's Token Listing, Trading Process in Proposed Amended Complaint

In This Article:

  • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a proposed amended complaint against Binance.

  • The SEC mostly won against Binance's motion to dismiss its initial lawsuit, but a few questions about certain tokens remained unanswered in the order on a motion to dismiss.

  • The SEC also addressed two issues it lost – secondary BNB sales and Binance Simple Earn – in its proposed filing.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) wants to take another whack at its lawsuit against crypto exchange Binance, filing a proposed amended complaint Thursday night a few months after the federal judge overseeing the case allowed most of the regulator's charges to survive a motion to dismiss.

The SEC argued its proposed amended complaint addressed some of the judge's concerns in dismissing parts of its initial lawsuit – namely around ongoing BNB sales and Binance's Simple Earn product – and bolstered other charges that the judge did not fully address in her ruling, specifically around 10 digital assets the SEC used as examples of Binance operating as an unregistered securities purveyor.

"The MTD Order dismissed these claims based on insufficient factual allegations to meet the Howey test, as opposed to a defective legal theory," the SEC filing said.

The SEC first sued Binance in June 2023, alleging the exchange was operating as an unregistered broker, clearinghouse and trading venue, offered unregistered securities through BNB and the BUSD stablecoin, as well as its staking service. Binance, Binance.US (otherwise known as BAM Trading) and Binance executives moved to dismiss the lawsuit. Judge Amy Berman Jackson, in a June 2024 ruling, dismissed charges tied to Binance's Simple Earn product and secondary BNB sales, but allowed most of the SEC's charges to proceed.

However, in a July 2024 hearing, attorneys went back-and-forth over whether the judge's ruling meant that 10 cryptocurrencies the SEC alleged were also sold as unregistered securities were still part of the case.

"The PAC also bolsters allegations not expressly ruled upon concerning certain offers and sales of BNB and the Ten Crypto Assets to address Defendants’ prior dismissal arguments and Defendants’ anticipated argument that the MTD Order’s reasoning as to BNB secondary sales should apply to allegations concerning the Ten Crypto Assets," Thursday's SEC filing said.

Granting the motion to file an amended complaint won't unduly harm Binance and its affiliated persons and entities, given they'll still have a chance to respond and have been aware of the allegations since last June, the SEC said (it filed the proposed amended complaint at a court-ordered deadline; Binance has until Oct. 11 to oppose the motion).