The United States’ biggest crypto exchange, Coinbase, has asked the Second Circuit to take on the interlocutory appeal in its intense legal battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Coinbase most recently bagged a legal victory against the SEC in the crypto rulemaking petition that started way back in 2022.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been put on blast by a federal appeals court, which has demanded the agency justify its decision to block Coinbase’s 2022 petition for clear crypto regulations.
A federal appeals court says the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission needs to better explain why it turned down a request from Coinbase to develop regulations to cover the booming crypto asset sec
A U.S. judge halted the case in which the exchange and SEC are duking it out over an enforcement matter, and will let Coinbase chase a higher-court appeal.
In another 11th-hour court loss for Chair Gary Gensler's tenure, judges in a Coinbase case again call the SEC's crypto position "arbitrary and capricious."
A judge just ordered the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to craft a more thorough response to a petition from Coinbase.
A single sentence disagreeing with the main concerns of a rulemaking petition is conclusory and does not provide us with any assurance that the SEC considered Coinbase’s workability objections, nor does it explain how it accounted for them,
Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, has publicly endorsed a proposal for global leaders to establish Bitcoin strategic reserves.
Publicly-traded United States-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is offering Bitcoin-backed (BTC) loans to its U.S. users once again.
Coinbase has launched Bitcoin-backed loans for U.S. users, allowing them to borrow up to $100,000 in USDC using Bitcoin as collateral.
HARRSIBURG, Pa. -- A federal appeals court says the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission needs to better explain why it turned down a request from Coinbase to develop regulations to cover the ...
In tuxedos and floor-length gowns, crypto executives and adherents spilled through the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium in Washington on Friday, ready to toast the inauguration of Donald J. Trump — a leader who promises to become the most crypto-friendly US president.