SEC files opening brief in its appeal against Ripple, seeks reversal on XRP classification

SEC files opening brief in its appeal against Ripple, seeks reversal on XRP classification

Key Takeaways

  • The SEC filed a brief appealing a court ruling that found XRP was not a security when sold to retail investors.
  • The SEC seeks to overturn the district court’s ruling and classify all XRP sales as unregistered securities offerings.
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The SEC on Wednesday filed an opening brief in its efforts to get the US Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit to overturn a previous court ruling that found XRP was not classified as a security when sold to retail investors.

In a July 2023 ruling, Judge Analisa Torres of the US District Court distinguished between XRP sales, determining that those on exchanges were not securities, but sales to institutional investors were. Following this ruling, a final judgment last August ordered Ripple to pay a $125 million civil penalty for institutional sales of XRP.

The SEC later decided to proceed with an appeal, aiming to challenge the court’s ruling that secondary market sales of XRP tokens were non-securities.

In the brief shared by defense lawyer James Filan, the SEC contends that both institutional and retail XRP sales meet the criteria for investment contracts under the Howey test. The regulator reiterated that Ripple’s sales of XRP, totaling over $2 billion, were unregistered investment contracts and violated federal securities laws.

The appeal challenges the district court’s distinction between institutional and retail investors. The SEC argues that this distinction contradicts the Howey test’s objective standard, which focuses on the economic realities of the transaction and what a reasonable investor would understand about the investment opportunity, not the specific identity of the seller.

The SEC asserts that Ripple’s public marketing campaign promoted its efforts to increase XRP’s price. The regulator claims that the campaign reached all investors, both institutional and retail, leading all purchasers to reasonably expect profits based on Ripple’s actions.

Due to this, the SEC contends that the lower court’s distinction between “sophisticated” institutional investors and “less sophisticated” retail investors was invalid and violated the Howey standard.

“All XRP investors — not just institutional investors who purchased XRP knowingly from Ripple — reasonably expected profits from Ripple’s efforts to increase the price of XRP,” the brief states. “That distinction is contrary to Howey’s objective standard,”

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