The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has instituted a lawsuit against Metamask developer, Consensys. The Commission alleges that the crypto firm violated securities laws by acting as an unregistered securities broker.
According to the court document, the SEC claims that Consensys has acted “as an unregistered broker of crypto asset securities through its MetaMask Swaps service” since October 2020. The Commission also accused the crypto firm of engaging in the unregistered offer and sale of securities through crypto staking programs.
The SEC stated that Consensys has brokered over 36 million crypto transactions since 2020 through its MetaMask Swaps, at least 5 million involving crypto asset securities. Metamask is known as one of the most widely used crypto wallets. In addition to storing their crypto assets on the application, users can buy and sell cryptocurrencies by swapping one crypto asset for the other.
This ‘Swap’ service forms the focal point of the SEC’s enforcement action. The SEC claims that some of these crypto assets are securities, and by enabling users to swap these securities, Consensys acted as an unregistered securities broker, thereby violating securities laws in the process.
The SEC went further to list Polygon (MATIC), Decentraland (MANA), Chiliz (CHZ), The Sandbox (SAND), and Luna (LUNA) as the crypto securities that were made available for trading on Metamask’s swap platform.
Additionally, the SEC accused Consensys of performing a “traditional function of the securities market” by offering and selling securities for Lido and Rocket Pool. The Commission claimed that the staking programs offered by Lido and Rocket Poo are investment contracts and that Consensys was in the wrong by offering these securities through unregistered transactions on its ‘MetaMask Staking’ platform.
Interestingly, the SEC’s lawsuit against Consensys comes just months after the crypto firm filed a lawsuit against the Commission, accusing the SEC of an “unlawful seizure of authority.” Consensys sought Judicial relief against a potential action from the SEC. They also asked the court to declare that Ethereum wasn’t a security and that the SEC had no jurisdiction over crypto-related matters.
The crypto firm looked to have won that battle, considering that the SEC dropped its investigation into Ethereum’s status as a security. However, in the letters informing Consensys about the Commission’s decision to drop its investigation into Ethereum, the SEC had warned the crypto firm that they could bring enforcement actions against them relating to other issues, which they have now done.
Reacting to the SEC’s lawsuit, Consensys stated that it would “vigorously pursue” the lawsuit it had initially filed against the SEC. The crypto firm also remarked that they had fully expected” the SEC to follow through with its threat of claiming that MetaMask had to be registered as a securities broker.
Featured image from CNBC, chart from TradingView