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Nvidia denies receiving DOJ antitrust subpoena

Nvidia shares saw a slight after-hours bump as the chipmaker denied a report that it received a Justice Department antitrust probe.

Nvidia has denied a report that it received an antitrust subpoena from the United States Justice Department, with its share price seeing a slight rise in after-hours trading.

“We have inquired with the US Department of Justice and have not been subpoenaed,” an Nvidia spokesperson told Cointelegraph, first reported by CNBC. “Nonetheless, we are happy to answer any questions regulators may have about our business.”

“Nvidia wins on merit, as reflected in our benchmark results and value to customers, and customers can choose whatever solution is best for them,” the spokesperson added.

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Worldcoin Rejects Buenos Aires’ Claims Regarding Abusive User Contract Clauses

Worldcoin Rejects Buenos Aires’ Claims Regarding Abusive User Contract ClausesWorldcoin, the digital biometric identification project, has rejected the claims made by Buenos Aires regarding possible infringements of customer protection laws. The organization told local sources that it answered Buenos Aires’ requirements since January to show the transparency it exercises in its operations. Worldcoin might face a deeper investigation if a local proposal gets approved. […]

Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting

Elon Musk hits at SEC, DOJ amid suit to force testimony in Twitter probe

Elon Musk claims the SEC and DOJ are abusing their regulatory powers for personal and political gain to receive punitive action.

Elon Musk has called for a “comprehensive overhaul” of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission hours after the regulator sued Musk alleging he failed to testify in its probe relating to his $44 billion Twitter (now X) purchase last October.

The SEC is investigating if Musk’s purchase triggered securities laws and an Oct. 5 filing by the regulator in a California District Court seeks to compel Musk to comply with an earlier SEC subpoena.

In an X post the same day Musk suggested the SEC — along with the U.S. Department of Justice — should instead be the ones probed.

“A comprehensive overhaul of these agencies is sorely needed, along with a commission to take punitive action against those individuals who have abused their regulatory power for personal and political gain.”

“Can’t wait for this to happen,” Musk added, in response to a post outlining the various actions the U.S. government has taken against Elon Musk-led companies.

Asked by an X user if such a probe would ever happen, Musk responded: “I estimate the probability at 100%.”

The SEC said it subpoenaed Musk in May 2023 and required him to provide testimony at the regulator’s San Francisco office on Sept. 15, which Musk initially agreed to, the filing reads.

Two days prior, Musk “abruptly” notified the SEC he wouldn’t make an appearance and made several “spurious objections,” the SEC said.

The regulator said it tried to negotiate an alternative time and place for Musk’s testimony in “good faith” but its efforts were met with Musk’s “blanket refusal.”

The SEC also claimed Musk’s objections lacked legal merit.

“None of Musk’s objections has any legal validity, and he has no justifiable excuse for his non-compliance with the SEC’s subpoena.”

X is among the most popular social media platforms for the cryptocurrency community with one heated topic of discussion being the SEC’s regulatory approach to the crypto industry.

Related: The ‘Elon effect’ shows how opinion leaders shape the fintech market

Musk has been looking to integrate cryptocurrency payments on X in recent months having obtained a currency transmitter license from Rhode Island’s regulator in late August.

Musk has taken shots at the SEC in the past, previously making his stance on the regulator clear in a December 2018 interview with 60 Minutes:

“I do not respect the SEC. I do not respect them.”

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Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting

Binance Reportedly Investigated in US for Russia Sanctions Violations

Binance Reportedly Investigated in US for Russia Sanctions ViolationsCryptocurrency exchange Binance is facing a U.S. probe over suspected violations of sanctions against Russia, according to a media report. The inquiry is looking into whether the trading platform was used by Russians to circumvent financial restrictions imposed over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Crypto Exchange Binance Faces Another US Probe, Sources Say The U.S. Department […]

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Credit Suisse, UBS, Other Banks Facing Russia Sanctions Probe in US, Report

Credit Suisse, UBS, Other Banks Facing Russia Sanctions Probe in US, ReportSwitzerland’s troubled Credit Suisse and its rescuer, USB, are subject to an investigation into whether bankers helped Russian oligarchs evade Western sanctions, according to a media report. Some major U.S. banking institutions are also under scrutiny within the probe initiated by the Justice Department, sources say. Credit Suisse, US Banks Investigated for Suspected Sanctions Violations […]

Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting

Report: DOJ and FBI Investigating Terraform Labs in Connection to Algorithmic Stablecoin Collapse

Report: DOJ and FBI Investigating Terraform Labs in Connection to Algorithmic Stablecoin CollapseThe Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) are reportedly investigating the collapse of the algorithmic stablecoin terra usd (UST) and the firm Terraform Labs. Unnamed sources say that former staff members from Terraform Labs, the company behind the Terra blockchain project, have been questioned by U.S. law enforcement. Unusual Relationship: […]

Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting

Crypto regulation decided by Congress, not the SEC: Blockchain Association

The group's policy head doubted a divided Congress can create crypto legislation but said it doesn’t give regulators absolute authority in the interim.

Despite attempts to police cryptocurrency through enforcement actions, United States financial regulators “are bound by legal reality” and Congress will ultimately decide crypto regulations the policy expert for the crypto advocacy group Blockchain Association has suggested.

The association's chief policy officer, Jake Chervinsky, shared his views in an extensive Feb. 14 Twitter thread on the state of crypto policy.

He noted neither the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) nor the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) “has the authority to comprehensively regulate crypto.”

Chervinsky believed a deal on crypto legislation seems “unlikely, given the ideological gap between House Republicans and Senate Democrats.” He accused the SEC and CFTC of overstepping their authority in an attempt to “get things done” without Congress.

Chervinsky called for the industry to remain calm following the recent flurry of activity from “crypto’s chief antagonist,” the SEC, and pointed to its crackdown on staking services as an example.

The SEC’s Feb. 9 settlement with crypto exchange Kraken, that banned the exchange from ever offering staking services to U.S. customers, was publicly rebuked by SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce.

In a Feb. 9 dissenting statement, Peirce argued that regulation by enforcement “is not an efficient or fair way of regulating” an emerging industry.

Related: US lawmakers and experts debate SEC's role in crypto regulation

Chervinsky suggested litigation is one way the crypto industry can push for good policy, noting the judiciary plays an important role in dictating policy that has been “ignored.”

Crypto exchange Coinbase also faces an SEC probe similar to what resulted in Kraken’s settlement.

Coinbase CEO and co-founder, Brian Armstrong, has taken a more resolute stance, claiming that getting rid of crypto staking would be terrible for the U.S.

Armstrong argued in a Feb. 12 Twitter post that Coinbase’s staking services are not securities and would “happily defend this in court if needed.”

Judge’s rulings in landmark cases create a legal precedent. If such a case were brought to court and a judge decided Coinbase’s staking services did not classify as securities, other crypto companies in a similar position could use the precedent as part of their defense.

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Paxos Receives Wells Notice from SEC, NYDFS Orders Issuer to Stop Minting BUSD

Paxos Receives Wells Notice from SEC, NYDFS Orders Issuer to Stop Minting BUSDAccording to a report published on Feb. 12, 2023, the New York-based financial institution and technology company, Paxos, has received a Wells Notice from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding alleged violations of investor protection laws. Paxos revealed the following day that it would no longer mint BUSD and it was ending its […]

Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting

‘Kraken Down’ — SEC commissioner rebukes own agency over recent action

"Today, the SEC shut down Kraken’s staking program and counted it as a win for investors. I disagree and therefore dissent," said commissioner Hester Pierce.

United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) commissioner Hester Pierce has publicly rebuked her own agency over the shut down of Kraken's crypto staking program in the United States. 

The commissioner blasted her regulator in a Feb. 9 statement called "Kraken Down," noting that regulation by enforcement “is not an efficient or fair way of regulating” in an emerging industry, stating: 

Today, the SEC shut down Kraken’s staking program and counted it as a win for investors. I disagree and therefore dissent.

Peirce's statement also slammed the regulator for shutting down a “program that has served people well."

“Using enforcement actions to tell people what the law is in an emerging industry is not an efficient or fair way of regulating. Moreover, staking services are not uniform, so one-off enforcement actions and cookie-cutter analysis does not cut it," she said.

Peirce implied the regulator was “lazy and paternalistic” and suggested the SEC should have initiated a “public process to develop a workable registration process that provides valuable information to investors.”

Coinbase CEO and co-founder Brian Armstrong agreed with Peirce’s comments in a Feb. 9 tweet, suggesting that requiring businesses to register its staking services is a “disingenuous offer” as there is no clear path to registration.

Earlier this week, Armstrong said he had heard “rumors that the SEC would like to get rid of crypto staking in the U.S. for retail customers,” and said “it would be a terrible path for the U.S.” as it would further drive crypto businesses offshore.

Coinbase is currently the subject of a SEC probe similar to the one which resulted in the Kraken settlement, which it revealed in an Aug. 9 SEC filing was also related to its staking services.

On Feb. 9, the SEC announced that it had reached a $30 million settlement with crypto exchange Kraken, saying it failed “to register the offer and sale of their crypto asset staking-as-a-service program.”

Kraken said in a Feb. 9 blog post that it would still offer staking services to non-U.S. customers through a subsidiary, but according to the SEC announcement the firm is permanently banned from providing staking services to U.S. residents, even if they sought to register it with the regulator.

Related: Getting rid of crypto staking would be a ‘terrible path’ for the US — Coinbase CEO

Peirce, also known as the SEC’s “Crypto Mom,” has been a strong advocate for the crypto industry during her time at the regulator.

Peirce has previously proposed a “safe harbor” for token projects which are looking to build decentralized networks, in which the network developers would receive a three-year grace period where they were exempt from SEC legal action, with an updated version of the proposal released on Apr. 13, 2021.

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NY law firm investigates potential ‘securities fraud’ at Core Scientific

The investigation was prompted by a report from Culper Research, which alleged that Core Scientific had "wildly oversold" its mining and hosting businesses.

A New York-based law firm says it has begun an investigation into whether Bitcoin miner Core Scientific and its leadership potentially engaged in “securities fraud and other unlawful business practices" which led to its stock price falling on several occasions. 

According to securities class action firm Pomerantz LLP, the investigation was prompted by a report from Culper Research in 2022, which alleged that Core Scientific had "wildly oversold" its mining and hosting businesses in 2021 and also waived a 180-day lockup period of over 282 million shares, making them "free to be dumped" in Mar. 2022. 

This report suggested that insiders at Core Scientific had "abandoned any pretense of care for minority shareholders," noting that on this news, Core Scientific's share price fell 9.4% on Mar. 3, 2022. 

The law firm also highlighted another incident on Sept. 28, 2022, in which crypto lender Celsius Network filed a motion in the bankruptcy court, accusing Core Scientific of violating the automatic stay provisions, adding improper surcharges, and failing to meet its contractual obligations.

This led to its stock price falling 10.3% the day after on Sep. 29, 2022, it said.

In a final incident, the law firm said on Oct. 27, 2022, Core Scientific announced that "given the uncertainty regarding the Company's financial condition, substantial doubt exists about the Company's ability to continue," revealing it held only 24 Bitcoin (BTC) compared to 1,051 BTC on Sept. 30. 

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This news caused Core Scientific's stock price to drop sharply, closing at $0.22 per share, a decline of 78.1%, said the firm. 

Pomerantz LLP said it was investigating these claims on behalf of investors of Core Scientific and has called for any such investors to join the potential class action.

The same law firm filed a class action lawsuit against Silvergate Capital on Dec. 13 for making "materially false and/or misleading statements" and failing to disclose "material adverse facts about the Company's business, operations, and prospects."

Related: BTC miner Core Scientific gets interim nod for $37.4M bankruptcy loan

On Jan. 4, Cointelegraph reported that Core Scientific had agreed to shut down 37,000 mining rigs it was hosting for Celsius due to the Bankrupt cryptocurrency lender’s failure to pay its power bills. According to the Bitcoin miner, this played a significant role in liquidity issues that led to its filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Dec. 21.

On Dec 23, Cointelegraph reported that a United States bankruptcy court had granted Core Scientific interim approval to access a $37.5 million loan from existing creditors to fund its liquidity issues.

Crypto Analyst Predicts Incoming Bitcoin Parabolic Rally, Says BTC at Point Where Things Get Exciting