The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is going on tour in hopes of meeting with crypto entrepreneurs who otherwise might not engage with the regulator.
FinHub, the SECâs branch dedicated to interacting with tech startups, posted a notice last week that it would be visiting major U.S. cities, allowing individuals or teams to set up face-to-face meetings with agency staffers to ask questions or provide feedback about issuing tokens or other issues under the regulatorâs purview.
The road trip begins in San Francisco on March 26, at the SECâs local office, with the next visit planned for Denver.
While FinHub staffers at the meetings are able to answer questions about startupsâ projects, they will not be able to provide legal advice, said Valerie Szczepanik, the SECâs senior advisor for digital assets and innovation and associate director of the Division of Corporation Finance.
âWe canât give legal advice to any individual or member of the public, but we often give guidance to folks as they talk us through their proposed projects,â Szczepanik, who will attend the San Franciso event, told CoinDesk.
Some of the SECâs past enforcement actions have come about after crypto startups self-reported possible securities law violations to the regulator. Gladius Network LLC, one such project, settled charges of running an unregistered securities offering without admitting to (or denying) the charges, and the SEC did not fine the startup because the company reported itself to the agency.
Another startup, CoinAlpha, did receive a $50,000 fine after the SEC reached out about its unregistered securities offering, but the company settled the charges and did not admit to or deny the allegations.
As such, the penalties imposed on these firms that cooperated are relatively light.
The purpose of these face-to-face meetings â dubbed âLocal P2Pâ on the FinHub website â is to help crypto startups âput a human face on the regulator,â Szczepanik explained:
âWe really do want to engage with folks that are seeking to innovate in this area and they should know that itâs typically a positive experience. Iâm hoping to keep this going at the local level too, recognizing that not everyone can travel to D.C. or New York.â
The number of startups that have reached out to FinHub to ask for a review of its token offering process or more general advice since its launch last October is not public, and it is unclear how many startups have scheduled meetings for March 26.
However, only a few startups have provided feedback to the branch so far. As noted by SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce last week during the DC Blockchain Summit, only âfive or six lettersâ have been submitted to the groupâs request for feedback on a letter issued by Dalia Blass, director of the Division of Investment Management.
The letter effectively bars firms from launching exchange-traded funds (ETFs) which derive value using cryptocurrencies under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (most bitcoin ETFs filed to date have been filed under the Securities Act of 1933).
âWe really need people to be writing in,â Peirce said.
On Monday, Szczepanik said the SEC was seeing positive interest with FinHub.
âWeâre pleased with the kind of engagement that weâve gotten through FinHub,â Szczepanik said. âIt helps when people tell us about friction points so we know what those points are and what we might need to address as we think through the gamut of appropriate regulatory responses.â
Valerie Szczepanik image via TechCrunch