Coinbase has scored a partial victory in its legal battle against the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), potentially gaining access to important documents related to the agency's classification of tokens as securities.
On September 5, Judge Catherine File of the Southern District of New York granted in part Coinbase’s request to compel the SEC to release specific documents. This ruling is a key development in the exchange’s ongoing legal dispute with the SEC, which began in July over the scope of Coinbase’s requests for documents related to the regulator’s position on digital assets.
According to Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal, the court’s decision is expected to lead to important SEC disclosures that will be relevant to the case.
The SEC’s lawsuit, filed in June 2023, alleges that Coinbase acted as an unregistered securities exchange, broker and clearing agency.
On July 23, Coinbase filed a motion seeking documents related to the SEC’s interpretation of securities laws in connection with digital assets, the company’s initial public offering, and SEC Chairman Gary Gensler’s comments on digital assets. However, the SEC argues that Coinbase’s requests are overbroad and seek information that is irrelevant to the case.
The outcome of this lawsuit could have far-reaching implications not only for Coinbase, but for the entire cryptocurrency sector. The SEC’s actions against Coinbase could establish a regulatory framework for other companies and influence ongoing enforcement cases.
As the U.S. Senate debates a sweeping reconciliation package dubbed the “Big, Beautiful Bill,” crypto industry advocates are rallying behind an amendment introduced by Senator Cynthia Lummis aimed at reforming outdated and burdensome tax rules for digital assets.
In a major shift from its earlier stance, Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe — Germany’s largest banking group — is preparing to introduce cryptocurrency trading services for retail clients by the summer of 2026, according to a report from Bloomberg.
Kazakhstan is taking a major step toward integrating digital assets into its national financial strategy, with plans to establish a state-managed crypto-reserve.
Bitvavo, Europe’s largest euro-denominated spot crypto exchange, has officially received a MiCA license from the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), allowing the firm to operate across all 27 European Union member states.