The SEC may potentially sue Paxos over BinanceUSD – WSJ

The SEC has issued a Wells notice to Paxos regarding Binance USD, although it is uncertain whether the notice relates to issuance or listing.

This article was published 3 years ago. Some details may no longer reflect current market conditions or recent developments. If you spot anything that needs an update, contact us.
The SEC may potentially sue Paxos over BinanceUSD – WSJ

Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include the use of AI tools.

Make preferred on Google logo

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) enforcement division has issued a Wells notice to Paxos — The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported, citing anonymous sources.

The New York Department of Financial Services instructed Paxos Trust Co. — the issuer of stablecoin Binance USD (BUSD) — to halt any further creation of BUSD, according to the WSJ.

The Wells notice

A Wells notice is a formal notice the SEC issues to inform the recipient that it plans to bring enforcement actions against it.

The SEC plans to sue Paxos for allegedly violating securities and investor protection laws. BUSD is considered an unregistered security, according to the notice.

Paxos issued the 1:1 dollar-pegged stablecoin in partnership with Binance in September 2019. Since then, BUSD has grown to be the third-largest stablecoin and the seventh-largest cryptocurrency — with a market cap of $16.15 billion  — according to CryptoSlate data.

What happens next

A Wells notice does not mean that the SEC will take enforcement action. The five commissioners of the SEC have to vote to authorize any enforcement litigation or settlement by the agency.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.

5-minute digest 100k+ readers

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

You’re subscribed. Welcome aboard.

Paxos can submit a written response to the Wells notice and present its case as to why it should not be sued.

When the SEC nearly doubled its Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit in May 2022, it said that stablecoins would be an area of focus. Stablecoins are similar to bank deposits or money-market mutual funds, according to SEC Chairman Gary Gensler.

Article updated 09:10 GMT to add details.