As the cryptocurrency industry reeled from a cascade of bankruptcies and fraud allegations in early January 2023, a different kind of regulatory crisis was quietly unfolding. A detailed analysis published on January 6 by the NYU Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement laid bare the Securities and Exchange Commission’s inconsistent approach to policing the thousands of Initial Coin Offerings that flooded the market during the 2017-2018 boom — and the implications were sobering for an industry desperate for regulatory clarity.
TL;DR
- The SEC’s “regulation by enforcement” strategy has left thousands of ICO issuers uncharged after the 5-year statute of limitations expired
- SEC Chair Gary Gensler called the charges against FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried a “clarion call” for crypto platforms to comply with securities laws
- An estimated 86% of the largest 2017 ICOs were trading below their listing price by October 2018, with 30% losing all value
- Genesis Global Capital laid off 30% of staff and was considering bankruptcy after losses tied to Alameda Research and Three Arrows Capital
- The Bloomberg editorial board argued that crypto’s 2022 meltdown fundamentally changed the regulatory debate in Washington
The ICO Bubble: Billions Raised, Little Accountability
Between 2017 and 2018, thousands of ICOs raised billions of dollars from investors drawn to the promise of revolutionary blockchain projects. The fundraising mechanism was simple: issuers sold cryptocurrency tokens to the public, often with little more than a white paper and a website. Some were spectacularly successful — one raised over $1.7 billion in early 2018, while another pulled in $4.1 billion over a year-long offering that concluded in June 2018.
But the vast majority of these projects were built on sand. According to an analysis by Ernst and Young, by October 2018, 86% of the 141 largest ICOs of 2017 were trading below their listing price, and nearly a third had lost their value entirely. Separate estimates suggested that as many as 80% of all ICOs issued in 2017 were fraudulent. The human cost was enormous: ordinary investors who had poured savings into tokens promising outsized returns found themselves holding worthless digital assets.
The SEC’s Enforcement Gap
Section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933 requires issuers of securities to file registration statements and make mandatory disclosures before offering securities to the public. The SEC has long maintained that most cryptocurrency tokens qualify as securities under this framework, with Chair Gary Gensler stating that “of the nearly 10,000 tokens in the crypto market, the vast majority are securities.”
Yet despite this sweeping assertion, the SEC pursued enforcement actions against only a handful of ICO issuers. The agency’s preferred approach — what critics have dubbed “regulation by enforcement” — meant taking on wrongdoers one at a time rather than establishing clear, industry-wide rules. By January 2023, the 5-year statute of limitations for financial penalties and disgorgement had effectively run out on most of the ICOs launched during the 2017-2018 bubble. Thousands of issuers who may have violated federal securities laws walked away without consequence.
This regulatory gap sent contradictory messages. On one hand, the SEC declared that most tokens were securities and threatened aggressive enforcement. On the other, it allowed the clock to expire on the vast majority of potential cases. The result was a regulatory environment where legitimate businesses struggled to understand the rules while bad actors faced little accountability.
FTX Fallout Intensifies Regulatory Pressure
The urgency of the regulatory debate was amplified by the ongoing fallout from FTX’s collapse. On January 5, 2023 — just one day before the NYU analysis was published — Genesis Global Capital announced it was laying off 30% of its workforce in a second round of cuts in less than six months. The crypto lending giant, a subsidiary of Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group, had suffered devastating losses from loans extended to Alameda Research (FTX’s trading arm) and the failed hedge fund Three Arrows Capital.
Genesis, which had originally been established as an over-the-counter Bitcoin trading desk for institutional clients, was actively considering a bankruptcy filing. Its troubles threatened to destabilize the broader crypto ecosystem, given DCG’s extensive portfolio of crypto companies including Grayscale Investments, CoinDesk, and Foundry Digital.
Meanwhile, the Bloomberg editorial board published a sweeping analysis on January 6 arguing that crypto’s 2022 meltdown — encompassing the failures of Terra/Luna, Celsius, Three Arrows Capital, BlockFi, and ultimately FTX — had fundamentally altered the regulatory debate in Washington. What had once been a niche policy discussion was now front and center, with lawmakers from both parties demanding action.
The Path Forward: Regulation or Recrimination?
With Bitcoin trading at approximately $16,950 and Ethereum around $1,269 on January 6, the crypto market remained deeply depressed. Total market capitalization stood near $818 billion, a stark contrast to the heady days when it topped $3 trillion. The SEC’s aggressive posture — exemplified by Gensler’s declaration that the SBF charges were a “clarion call to crypto platforms that they need to come into compliance with our laws” — suggested that the era of light-touch regulation was over.
Yet the ICO enforcement gap revealed a fundamental tension at the heart of the SEC’s approach. By relying on case-by-case enforcement rather than comprehensive rulemaking, the agency had failed to provide the clarity that the industry desperately needed. The statute of limitations had expired on the biggest wave of alleged securities violations in modern financial history, and no amount of after-the-fact enforcement could undo that damage.
Why This Matters
The events of January 6, 2023 crystallized a central paradox in crypto regulation. The SEC talked tough about enforcement but had let thousands of potential violations go uncharged. The industry suffered from a lack of clear rules while simultaneously resisting the very regulation that could provide them. And as companies like Genesis teetered on the brink of collapse, the human cost of this regulatory ambiguity — lost jobs, frozen funds, shattered trust — continued to mount. The crypto industry needed more than tough talk from regulators. It needed a coherent framework that could prevent the next FTX while providing legitimate businesses with a clear path forward. Whether Washington was up to that task remained an open question.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the potential for total loss. Always conduct your own research and consult with qualified financial and legal advisors before making investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
86% of ICOs below listing price by october 2018 and the SEC let the statute of limitations run on most of them. great work
to be fair, the SEC had like 3 people working crypto enforcement in 2018. underfunded and overwhelmed does not excuse it though
sec_lawyer_ the 5 year statute expiring on 2017 ICOs means those founders got away clean. no civil penalties, no disgorgement, nothing
the 5 year statute running out on 2017 ICOs while they were busy fighting ripple for 3 years. resource allocation at the SEC was completely broken during this period
gensler calling SBF charges a clarion call while ignoring 5 years of unprosecuted ICOs is peak SEC theater
gensler using SBF as a clarion call while thousands of 2017 ICO founders walked free because the statute expired. you cant make this stuff up. enforcement theater at its finest
peak theater. chase the headline case while thousands of retail investors who got rekt on 2017 ICOs got zero recourse. 5 year statute was the real rug
30% of 2017 ICOs lost ALL value. not dip to zero, literally ceased to exist. and the SEC response was to sue two exchanges in 2023. incredible prioritization