What happened in crypto today

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Coinbase’s chief legal officer says the United States Securities and Exchange Commission has overstepped its boundaries in suing the exchange — this came shortly after the company revealed it would file an order to dismiss the SEC’s lawsuit. Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada (BoC) reported a decline in the ownership of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies in the country in 2022, as neither market conditions nor regulations sided in favor of Canadian crypto investors, according to a BoC study. 

Coinbase lawyers allege SEC “violated due process”

The Securities and Exchange Commission has “violated due process” in suing Coinbase, according to the exchange’s legal counsel.

In an Aug. 4 filing with a New York District Court, Coinbase said the SEC “abused its discretion, and abandoned its own earlier interpretations of securities laws” in going after the exchange. The legal team said the SEC v. Ripple case demonstrates that the securities regulator overstepped its boundaries after a judge ruled that XRP largely doesn’t qualify as a security.

The SEC sued Coinbase on June 6, roughly three months after the crypto exchange received a Wells notice from the securities regulator. The SEC is also pursuing legal actions against Binance and Hex founder Richard Heart. 

Crypto winter has been rough on Coinbase, but there are signs that the exchange is returning to stability. On Aug. 3, Coinbase reported better-than-expected second-quarter revenues and a much smaller loss than previous quarters.

Canadian crypto ownership declines amid tight regulations, falling prices

The Bank of Canada (BoC) reported a decline in the ownership of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies in the country in 2022, as neither market conditions nor regulations acted in favor of Canadian crypto investors, according to a BoC study published on July 26.

The study includes data from the annual Bitcoin Omnibus Survey conducted by the Canadian central bank, which showed a relapse from the massive crypto adoption witnessed in 2021

The above graph shows that Bitcoin ownership in Canada declined to 9% by August 2022. However, BTC adoption saw a slight uptick to 10% by the end of the year, and the drop in Bitcoin ownership does not imply that investors were spreading out their investments into other cryptocurrencies. The report read:

“Investors did not appear to shift out of Bitcoin and into other cryptoassets, as we observe decreased ownership of altcoins.”

The biggest motivation for Canadians interested in Bitcoin is as an investment, according to over one-third of the 4,996 respondents in the Bank of Canada’s 2022 survey.

Most Canadians acquired their crypto holdings through mobile and web apps. Bitcoin and crypto mining became the third-most-popular method of accumulating tokens for the second consecutive year.

Coinbase to file order seeking dismissal of SEC lawsuit

Coinbase is planning file an order seeking the dismissal of the lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 4.

On its Aug. 3 second-quarter 2023 earnings call, Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal expressed confidence the exchange would win the court case brought by the regulator.

“Tomorrow […] We will be moving the court for an order dismissing the case in its entirety.”

The revelation comes as the exchange posted $663 million in net revenue for the second quarter of 2023.

Interestingly, the exchange’s non-trading revenue surpassed its trading revenue in the quarter, with $335.4 million of net revenue coming from subscriptions and services compared to $327 million in transaction revenue.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said on an Aug. 3 earnings call that it was focused on the non-trading parts of the business over the next three to five years, naming scalability, regulatory clarity and driving crypto utility as focus areas.

Author: Serge Egon Ostman

Read more at: https://cointelegraph.com/news/what-happened-in-crypto-today

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