CME seeks to intervene in Bitcoin scam case, insists that virtual currencies are commodities

Maria Nikolova

A court ruling that Bitcoin is not a commodity would substantially disrupt the settled expectations of CME and numerous market participants who are trading bitcoin futures, CME warns.

Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc., a part of CME Group Inc (NASDAQ:CME), is seeking to intervene in a case against a virtual currency scam as a possible court ruling may challenge the treatment of Bitcoin and its likes as commodities under the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA).

The case in question is captioned Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. McDonnell et al (1:18-cv-00361) and was launched by the CFTC at the New York Eastern District Court in January this year. In brief, Defendants Patrick K. McDonnell, of Staten Island, New York, and CabbageTech, Corp. d/b/a Coin Drop Markets (CDM), a New York corporation, are charged with fraud and misappropriation in connection with purchases and trading of Bitcoin and Litecoin.

The CFTC has insisted that Bitcoin and other virtual currencies are commodities under the CEA. The regulator has now found a “legal friend” with regard to this claim – that is CME. On Monday, March 5, 2018, CME requested the Court to permit it to file the so-called Letter as Amicus Curiae. An amicus curiae is someone who is not a party to a case and is not solicited by a party, but who assists a court by offering information that bears on the case.

The proposed Letter, seen by FinanceFeeds, warns the Court of the grave consequences if Bitcoin and its likes do not have the status of commodities under the CEA.

CME informs the Court of the reliance CME and financial market participants have placed on the determination by the CFTC in 2015 that virtual currencies such as bitcoin are “commodities” within the meaning of Section 1a(9) of the CEA. As a result of that determination, the CFTC exercises exclusive jurisdiction over derivatives products—futures and options—based on virtual currencies.

If the Court rules that a virtual currency such as bitcoin is not a commodity, this would put in jeopardy CME’s and its market participants’ expectation to rely on the CEA and the CFTC’s regulatory protections for commodity derivatives contracts based on virtual currencies.

This legal uncertainty would substantially disrupt the settled expectations of CME and numerous market participants who are trading bitcoin futures for purposes of hedging cash market exposures or making a market in bitcoin futures by offering liquidity, in addition to market professionals that clear, broker or manage virtual currency futures trading activity.

Such a ruling could be interpreted to reverse the CFTC’s determination, and if followed ultimately could raise questions regarding whether CME’s bitcoin futures contract is a valid and regulated futures contract under the CEA.

If CME were forced to delist the bitcoin contract it listed late in 2017, it could lose the investment it made in developing the product. More importantly, holders of bitcoin futures contracts may be be forced to liquidate their positions unexpectedly—possibly at unfavorable prices—and thereby forced to terminate prematurely market making opportunities and hedging and investment strategies. The full financial implications of such consequences for many market participants are unknown, CME warns.

The Court has the right to decide on whether to admit the information provided by amicus curiae.

Read this next

blockdag

BlockDAG Attracts $18.1M In Presale, Drawing Investors From Dogecoin And UNUS SED LEO for Potential 30,000x ROI

As the markets for Dogecoin and UNUS SED LEO exhibit volatility, a significant number of investors are redirecting their focus towards BlockDAG during its Batch 9 presale, which has remarkably gathered $18.1 million.

Digital Assets

Coinbase launches perpetual futures trading for Dogwifhat memecoin

Coinbase International Exchange (CIE) will introduce perpetual futures trading for Solana-based memecoin dogwifhat ($WIF), starting April 25. These open-ended futures contracts can be traded using the USDC stablecoin.

Digital Assets

Kraken acquires TradeStation’s cryptocurrency business

Kraken, the second-largest U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchange, has acquired the cryptocurrency arm of online brokerage TradeStation.

Retail FX

The Funded Trader is back? Traders report account closures

Prop trading firm The Funded Trader has updated its website with a few banners, nearly three weeks after it ceased all operations, with claims for a relaunch in the near future. However, there was no official statement on the relaunch on its website, Discord channel, or social media accounts yet.

Executive Moves

NAGA lures former Tickmill compliance exec Loukia Matsia

NAGA Group, a provider of brokerage services, cryptocurrency platform NAGAX and neo-banking app NAGA Pay, appointed Loukia Matsia as their new Head of Compliance and Anti-Money Laundering (AML).

blockdag

Explore 2024’s Top Cryptocurrencies: BlockDAG Leads With 30,000x ROI Potential, Among Surge Predictions For Bitcoin And Ethereum

Navigating the vast ocean of cryptocurrencies might feel overwhelming for many investors, whether seasoned or newbies.

Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

EURUSD Technical Analysis Report 18 April, 2024

EURUSD currency pair can be expected to fall further toward the next support level 1.0600 (which reversed the price earlier this month).

Digital Assets

Binance ordered to remove Changpeng Zhao to get Dubai license

Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, has obtained a Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) license in Dubai.

Crypto Insider

Evolution and current state of global crypto adoption

Every four years, the crypto world gets hyped for the Bitcoin halving. Past halvings, like the one of May 2020, saw a massive increase in BTC transactions, which was driven by growing adoption and community involvement.

<