Amy Winehouse to Valerie Szczepanik: Come on Over

Paul H Jossey
7 min readMay 25, 2019

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) crypto czar Valerie Szczepanik paused her nonstop conference-jaunting long enough to release token “guidance” for entrepreneurs and industry professionals. The document itself was unsigned, but the “public statement announcing it” was co-signed by Ms. Szczepanik and SEC Director of Corporation Finance William Hinman.

NPC Valerie

The “guidance” purported to “provide a framework for analyzing whether a digital asset has the characteristics of one particular type of security — an “investment contract.’” Its most notable feature, however, is the buck-passing prose that typifies commission crypto-decrees. This document underwhelms in cogency, time, value, and cost.

According to media reports the SEC toiled a half year on the 13-pager. Given that time frame, it plausibly cost the taxpayers around $250k in labor. In 2017, Ms. Szczepanik earned nearly quarter-million dollars (not counting benefits), it’s probably more now with her new title. Records list Mr. Hinman’s 2017 salary at $217k but he only started in May of that year so that may be prorated. Both have hordes of lawyers and support personnel who surely contributed.

So what did we get?

The first thing one notices is how steadfastly determined Ms. Szczepanik and Mr. Hinman are that no one takes their work product seriously. Even for the SEC the disclaimer is a doozy:

This framework represents the views of the Strategic Hub for Innovation and Financial Technology (“FinHub,” the “Staff,” or “we”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”). It is not a rule, regulation, or statement of the Commission, and the Commission has neither approved nor disapproved its content. Further, this framework does not replace or supersede existing case law, legal requirements, or statements or guidance from the Commission or Staff. Rather, the framework provides additional guidance in the areas that the Commission or Staff has previously addressed.

In case anyone thought to discard the warning as necessary boilerplate, the document itself disabuses that notion. The word “may” appears 22 times. It cites only one case from this century, the rest are 1943, 1946, 1967, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1985, 1992, and 1994 — times of peak relevance for cryptocurrency and digital assets.

The document provides little new from the SEC’s previous token statement, the two-year-old DAO report. In sum, the SEC will use the dated Howey Test, and consider other factors that “may” be important but only “some.” Don’t go thinking this is “exhaustive.” Essentially this document resembles the work of a nervous first-year associate at a mid-level law firm. But what cost the hypothetical firm two-days of billables took the SEC six months and cost perhaps a quarter-million dollars.

Industry participants whose livelihoods involve advising those creating the digital economy were unimpressed, as they often are with first-year associate work. As one concluded, the long-awaited guidance opined, “laundromat tokens are still laundromat tokens.” Others shared the sentiment less colorfully. One stated, “this guidance presents a framework that will stifle investment in and innovation of open blockchain networks in the United States.” One fancy lawyer drabbed, “A lot of it is a reiteration of what the law is and has been.” Another worried, “Taken literally, that definition could really impact and even hinder the process in which a token project/start-up can decentralize itself.”

Anyone surprised by the SEC’s latest non-move hasn’t paid attention. Everyone knows tokens caught the commission flatfooted, even though the first ICO happened six years ago. To catch up it appointed a ‘Senior Advisor for Digital Assets and Innovation.’ One might think the lack of foresight that made the position necessary would evince a need for new thinking, perhaps someone familiar with the entrepreneurial grind. One would be wrong.

Instead, the commission chose career bureaucrat, Ms. Szczepanik. Because nothing apparently says “innovation” like someone who’s worked at the SEC since the Clinton administration and came from Enforcement. Buck-passing often accompanies such a career. Ms. Szczepanik’s stance toward rules shows this. Instead of giving entrepreneurs hard rules, we get “may”-laden blather. This is necessary, she explained, to do her job better: “The lack of bright-line rules allows regulators to be more flexible.”

This is true but has other effects. It leaves regulators with massive discretion. It gives them enormous power over the economy with no responsibility for the results. It mandates entrepreneurs to approach them hat-in-hand for permission. And it makes them sought after speakers on the conference circuit.

But it’s a zero-sum game. Every unit of power Ms. Szczepanik reserves for herself and her colleagues removes it from job producers. Every ambiguous pronouncement shunts billable hours to lawyers and compliance professionals instead of research or marketing. Those building tomorrow’s economy need the flexibility, not bureaucrats. They will power our future long after Ms. Szczepanik flobs off to a professorship or nonprofit.

In her taxpayer-funded conference appearances, where the commoners sometimes pay upwards of $1000 per ticket, Ms. Szczepanik takes the same NPC posture reflected in the guidance. As she repetitively recites the ‘facts and circumstances’ benchmark as applied to the Howey Test and so on.

NPC Valerie in action

What might a market-minded crypto czar have done differently? Obviously, court precedent limits the SEC somewhat, but leeway exists within its own guidelines. One place might be trimming not expanding Howey mandates. For instance, the Howey case clearly states its test involves an exchange of money via arms-length transactions. When startups give tokens away no exchange occurs. This is particularly true if the token receiver lacks foreknowledge. This should keep the exchange out of the SEC’s ambit. The commission disagrees:

The lack of monetary consideration for digital assets, such as those distributed via a so-called “bounty program” does not mean that the investment of money prong is not satisfied. As the Commission explained in The DAO Report, “[i]n determining whether an investment contract exists, the investment of ‘money’ need not take the form of cash” and “in spite of Howey’s reference to an ‘investment of money,’ it is well established that cash is not the only form of contribution or investment that will create an investment contract.” . . . Further, the lack of monetary consideration for digital assets, such as those distributed via a so called “air drop,” does not mean that the investment of money prong is not satisfied; therefore, an airdrop may constitute a sale or distribution of securities. In a so-called “airdrop,” a digital asset is distributed to holders of another digital asset, typically to promote its circulation.

How do people paying nothing and in fact unaware beforehand they are getting a token “purchase” a security? The SEC doesn’t say, although it describes them as “purchasers” throughout the document. It seems little harm to abjure a token received without any consideration, even if it might someday acquire value and be traded. With such value, later purchasers would rely on track record, not mind-numbing risks few read. Fake value contrived through fraud is actionable on its own.

This is not to criticize anyone personally. SEC personnel act in their own interests like everyone else. It benefits them to retain power while disclaiming away responsibility. Turf wars are fun when nothing’s at risk except ego. It is not the individuals but the culture within the government that must change. It is what I’ve called the Machine — the cabal of mostly Ivy League and east-coast lawyers and intellectuals who flock to Washington, embed in name-brand agencies and end up producing useless documents that take six months and cost a quarter-million dollars.

Before her premature death, Amy Winehouse sang about the Machine in “Valerie.” Although ostensibly about reconnecting with a troubled companion, a deeper analysis reveals Ms. Winehouse’s prescience in crooning about the tensions between SEC bureaucrats and the economy builders of the future.

Well, sometimes I go out by myself, And I look across the water . . .

The water is the metaphorical gulf Ms. Winehouse recognized between entrepreneurs building the digital economy and SEC bureaucrats.

And I think of all the things of what you’re doing. In my head, I paint a picture . . .

Here Ms. Winehouse wondered what SEC bureaucrats could be doing that it took them six months to put out guidance a first-year associate could have produced in two days. What are they doing?

Did you have to go to jail? Put your house out up for sale? Did you get a good lawyer?

Here Ms. Winehouse referred to issuers like Kik who sold tokens in 2017 in the midst of the SEC’s uneven guidance. She referred to the need for these people to avoid jail and get good lawyers lest the SEC use it unlimited resources to bankrupt them.

Did you have to pay that fine? That you were dodging all the time? Are you still dizzy?

Here she referenced to SEC Enforcement, which admits it bullies companies into settlements warning them essentially, it has unlimited time and budgets because after all, it has the power and “flexibility.” It made Ms. Winehouse dizzy.

Why don’t you come on over Valerie?

Here Ms. Winehouse pleas on behalf of the crypto community for crypto czars to take a break from nonstop taxpayer-funded travel and see what entrepreneurs are doing. And warning she may have to involve Congress if the SEC continues intransigently.

Amy Winehouse

So how about it, SEC? Come on over.

By Jossey PLLC via www.thecrowdfundinglawyers.com

Originally Published: http://www.thecrowdfundinglawyers.com/2019/04/14/amy-winehouse-to-valerie-szczepanik-come-on-over/

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