SEC Crackdown On Cryptocurrency ICOs Expands. Here's What To Know

 | Apr 05, 2018 04:58

The US's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which conducts oversight of the country's stock and options exchanges as well as the securities industry as a whole, has increasingly been cracking down with severity on fraudulent initial coin offerings (ICOs), for violating securities laws. Ever since Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have entered the mainstream, willing but naive investors interested in this new asset class have also become targets.

Which means, if you're considering investing in an ICO, it's a good time to become more familiar with what the SEC calls the 3-Rs, the Risks, Rewards and Responsibilities surrounding these offerings.

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For those unfamiliar with ICOs—which have become a popular way for start-ups to raise funds without having to rely on middlemen such as venture capitalists or investment banks—an initial coin offering is the cryptocurrency world's version of an initial public offering (IPO) for stocks. ICOs are also sometimes called ITOs or initial token offerings. And much like investing in shares of a stock, some coins provide investors with a stake in a healthy, growing enterprise, while some only provide issuers with a way to defraud investors.

Earlier this week the SEC alleged that Sohrab Sharma and Robert Farkas, co-founders of Centra Tech, a company billing itself as a financial services start up, masterminded a fraudulent ICO via its CTR token. The SEC accused the pair of "orchestrating a fraudulent...offering."

This latest example is just one of a number of recent cases across a broad array of industries. Last October the SEC charged Maksim Zaslavskiy and two of his companies with selling unregistered securities . According to the SEC, Zaslaviskiy was selling digital tokens that he claimed were backed by diamond and real estate investments.

Unfortunately for investors, the assets being peddled via Zaslavskiy's REcoin Foundation and Diamond Reserve Club didn't really exist. The charge includes Zaslavskiy falsely claiming to investors that between $2 million and $4 million had already been raised when in fact the actual amount was approximately $300,000.

Another recent case involves Overstock.com (NASDAQ:OSTK), the online retailer of such things as homegoods and jewelry that has been trying to transform itself into a cryptocurrency powerhouse via its tZero subsidiary. The company's stock, which started the year at $86.90 has tanked. It's down 58% so far this year, currently selling at $36.65 as of yesterday's close. These heavy losses have been fueled by the company frantically selling off shares in order to pay off debt and finance tZero's activities. It doesn't help matters that its efforts to raise capital for tZero via an ICO are currently

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