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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Walmart, Target, Whirlpool and more

    People talk outside a Wal-Mart Pickup-Grocery store in Bentonville, Arkansas.
    Rick Wilking | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines after hours.
    Walmart — Shares dropped more than 8% in extended trading Monday after the retailer lowered its quarterly and full-year profit forecast, citing sharply rising food inflation that is hurting consumer spending on general merchandise.

    Other major retailers slid on the back of Walmart’s announcement, with Target declining 5% and Amazon down 4%. Macy’s and Dollar General fell each fell 3%, while Costco shed 2%.
    Whirlpool — Shares rose 2% after the home appliance company beat on profit estimates in its most recent quarter. Whirlpool reported earnings of $5.97 per share, beating consensus estimates of $5.24 per share, according to Refinitiv.
    NXP Semiconductors — Shares of NXP Semiconductors declined nearly 2% after the company reported second-quarter earnings. The chip company reported revenue of $3.31 billion, outpacing the $3.27 billion expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Newmont, World Wrestling Entertainment, Ryanair & more

    Ryanair planes are seen at Dublin Airport, following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Dublin, Ireland.
    Jason Cairnduff | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Monday.
    Newmont — Newmont shares tumbled 13.2% after the mining company reported a disappointing second-quarter profit. The company reported earnings of 46 cents per share, compared with a Refinitiv consensus forecast of 63 cents per share.

    World Wrestling Entertainment — Shares of World Wrestling Entertainment jumped more than 8.4% after Loop Capital upgraded and raised its price target on them “based on a greater likelihood that the company is sold with Vince McMahon stepping down.” McMahon, WWE’s top shareholder, is being investigated for sexual misconduct claims and stepped down as CEO on Friday.
    JD.com — The Chinese e-commerce company climbed 2.3% after Morgan Stanley named JD.com a “catalyst-driven idea.” The Wall Street firm said it’s particularly bullish on JD.com heading into earnings in August, as revenue growth is expected to accelerate from June’s level.
    Ryanair — Shares of Ryanair surged 4.6% after the budget airline reported quarterly earnings that beat Wall Street’s profit estimates. The company also expects to return to pre-Covid profit levels this year or next, even though the recovery is fragile.
    Philips – The Dutch medical equipment maker’s shares fell 7.2% after the company reported weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings, citing lockdowns in China and supply chain issues. It also cut its estimate for full-year sales growth to between 1% and 3%, down from 3% to 5%.
    Lam Research — Shares of the semiconductor equipment company slipped 1.4% after Barclays downgraded the stock to equal weight, saying in a note to clients that, despite a recent bounce, the semiconductor industry is due for a correction.

    Diamondback Energy — Energy stocks surged on the back or rising oil prices Monday. Diamondback Energy jumped 5.8%, while Marathon Oil advanced 6.6%. Valero and Hess gained 5.1% and 4.9%, respectively.
    Travelers — Shares jumped 2.3% after Raymond James upgraded Travelers to a strong buy. Raymond James believes the insurance stock, which is up 2.3% this year, will continue to outperform.
    —CNBC’s Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Samantha Subin and Carmen Reinicke contributed reporting.

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    Goldman Sachs cuts earnings outlook for MSCI China to zero growth

    Goldman Sachs slashed its earnings outlook for the MSCI China stock index to zero growth for the year, down from 4% previously, according to a report published late Thursday.
    China’s property market has come under renewed pressure in the last several weeks as many homebuyers stopped mortgage payments.
    The property market might take 5 years to recover from oversupply in China’s smaller cities, according to Henry Chin, head of research for Asia-Pacific at CBRE.

    In China, people typically buy apartments before they are completed. Pictured here on June 28, 2022, are unfinished residences in Nanning, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Goldman Sachs has cut its forecast for the MSCI China index due to a worsening slump in China’s property market.
    The investment bank slashed its earnings outlook for the index to zero growth for the year, down from 4% previously, according to a report published late Thursday.

    The analysts also cut their MSCI China price target over the next 12 months to 81, down from 84. MSCI China tracks more than 700 China stocks listed globally, including Tencent, BYD and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.
    The index has tumbled more than 6% in July alone as worries about China’s property market added to existing concerns about Covid, tech regulation and geopolitics.
    The new, reduced target means there’s another 18% upside from the index’s close of 68.81 on Friday, but it also means the index is expected to decline by about 3% this year versus posting a mild gain.

    Pressure on Chinese real estate

    “Residential-led growth” for China’s economy is coming to an end, Henry Chin, head of research for Asia-Pacific at CBRE, said Monday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.”
    He pointed to an underlying bifurcation in the market: housing demand coming back in China’s largest cities, but oversupply in smaller cities that could take “up to five years” for the market to absorb.
    Real estate and related industries account for more than 25% of GDP in China, according to Moody’s.
    Goldman’s property team has cut its expectations for new housing starts — a year-on-year decline of 33% in the second half of the year versus a previously forecast 25% drop.
    The investment bank’s equity analysts expect state-owned property developers to outperform those not owned by the state. Within China stocks, Goldman prefers sectors such as autos, internet retailing, and semiconductors, but is cautious on bank stocks due to their exposure to housing-related loans.

    Covid overhang

    Earlier this month, Goldman economists cut their China GDP forecast to 3.3%, down from 4%. The economists cited “all the unresolved problems in Covid and housing as well as the increased risks in global demand and Chinese exports.”
    China reported 0.4% GDP growth in the second quarter from a year ago, bringing growth for the first half of the year to 2.5% — well below the official full-year target of around 5.5%.
    Investment in real estate in the first half of the year fell by 5.4% from a year ago, worse than the 4% decline in the first five months of the year.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    Nomura’s chief China Economist Ting Lu warned in a report Friday that “the slowdown may be even worse than data suggest” and noted the property sector “deteriorated beyond even our bearish expectations.”
    “The outbreak of Omicron and lockdowns from March to May have materially worsened the situation, as lockdowns have limited Chinese households’ purchasing power and reduced their appetite and ability to purchase new homes,” Lu said.
    While China’s new Covid cases have climbed into several hundred a day, most infections have been in the central part of the country rather than the metropolises of Beijing and Shanghai.
    Over the weekend, one of the hardest-hit areas, Lanzhou city, said the risk of disease transmission has come under control.

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    Why it is too early to say the world economy is in recession

    Everyone is a pessimist these days. Barely a day goes by without an economist downgrading their forecasts. On July 14th Steven Blitz of ts Lombard, an investment-research firm, said that he was now expecting a recession this year in the world’s largest economy, a day after Bank of America made the same call. Goldman Sachs, another bank, reckons Germany’s gdp shrank in the second quarter of the year and will also do so in the third. Americans’ Google searches for “recession” have never been so high, and by some distance. TikTok, a short-video platform, is full of clips telling Generation z how to budget as the downturn unfolds. Traders are selling copper (a proxy for industrial health), buying the dollar (a sign that they are nervous) and pricing in interest-rate cuts for next year.Over the past 18 months a number of factors have combined to create a toxic mixture for the world economy. In response to the covid-19 pandemic America overstimulated its economy, provoking inflation not just within its borders but beyond them, as consumers’ voracious demand for goods bunged up the world’s supply chains. China’s attempts to stamp out covid compounded these problems. Then Russia’s invasion of Ukraine caused commodity prices to soar. In response to the ensuing inflation, roughly four-fifths of central banks worldwide have raised interest rates, by an average of 1.5 percentage points so far this year, causing stockmarkets to slump. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise rates for the fourth time in this cycle, and by three-quarters of a percentage point, after a meeting that ends on July 27th. Fear of the eventual consequences of monetary tightening is at the root of recession worries. It is clear that central banks have to take the proverbial punchbowl away from the party. Wage growth in the rich world is far too strong given weak productivity growth. Inflation is too high. But the risk is that higher rates will end the party altogether, rather than making it less raucous. History is not encouraging in this regard. Since 1955 there have been three periods when rates in America rose as much as they are expected to this year: in 1973, 1979 and 1981. In each case a recession followed within six months. Has recession struck again? Rich-world economies, which account for 60% of global gdp, have without question slowed since the heady days of mid-2021, when covid restrictions were being rapidly lifted and optimism about the future was growing. Goldman Sachs produces a “current activity indicator”, a high-frequency measure of economic health based on a range of surveys and data. The gauge has in recent weeks clearly slowed (see chart 1). Nicolas Woloszko of the oecd, a club of rich and middle-income countries, has derived a measure of weekly gdp from Google-search data. In the past few weeks, he finds, gdp in the rich world has started to look a lot weaker. Surveys of businesses in the euro zone and America released on July 22nd by s&p Global, a data provider, made for grim reading, with manufacturers gloomier than at any time since the early days of the pandemic.It looks too soon, though, to declare a recession—even if, as some expect, America’s statisticians reveal on July 28th that between April and June the world’s largest economy contracted for the second quarter running. This would count as a recession by one rule of thumb, but it does not pass the smell test. A series of one-off oddities led American gdp to shrink in the first quarter, even though the underlying performance of the economy was strong. It would also be too soon for Fed tightening to have had an effect.Most economists look to America’s National Bureau of Economic Research (nber) to find out if the economy is truly in recession. Its business-cycle-dating committee considers indicators beyond gdp in making that judgment, including jobs numbers and industrial production. The committee is thought to weigh some factors more heavily than others. The Economist has used a similar approach, with a little guesswork, to judge the health of the rich world as a whole (see chart 2). The exercise suggests that it is hard to argue that a recession has arrived.Yet with growth clearly slowing, the big question is how bad things will get. The few remaining optimists point to the strength of households and firms. The public is even gloomier about the economy than it was during the depths of both the global financial crisis and the pandemic (see chart 3). But households across the rich world probably still have some $3trn or so in “excess” savings accumulated during the pandemic, according to our estimates. In America in March 2022, the latest available data, the cash balances of the lowest-income households remained 70% higher than they were in 2019, according to the JPMorgan Chase Institute, a bank-affiliated think-tank. Moreover, surveys suggest that people seem more confident about their personal finances than about the state of the economy. Across the eu as a whole, households are about one-third more likely to be positive about their own finances than they have been, on average, since the data began in the mid-1980s. In America the share of people who reckon they will be unable to meet debt commitments over the next three months remains below its long-run average, according to a survey by the New York Fed. Various consumer-spending trackers, including from the Bank of England (for Britain) and JPMorgan Chase (for America), still look fairly strong. Governments across the rich world are also handing out money to help poorer people cope with roaring energy prices. In the euro zone, governments are stimulating the economy by the equivalent of about 1% of gdp. Britain is unwinding the fiscal support put in place during the pandemic, which is dragging on growth, but has nonetheless offered handouts to poor households. In May the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a think-tank, reckoned that such spending would largely compensate the poorest households for the rising cost of living (though retail energy prices are now likely to rise further still). The behaviour of businesses is also reasonably reassuring. The rate at which companies post new vacancies has slowed somewhat. Apple and TikTok are the latest firms to reportedly pare their recruitment plans. But across rich economies the number of existing open positions is still near a record high. In Australia, for instance, they are more than twice their pre-pandemic level, according to real-time data from Indeed, a job-hiring website. In America there are more than two open positions for every unemployed person. As a result, labour markets remain tight. You can find some evidence of rising joblessness in the Czech Republic if you squint. Overall, though, the oecd’s unemployment rate is lower now than it was just before the pandemic. In half of oecd countries the share of working-age people who are in a job—a broader measure of labour-market health—is at an all-time high. If history is any guide, these figures are inconsistent with a looming recession.Declines in investment have in the past played a big role in downturns: in recessionary periods for the g7 group of large economies since the 1980s, around half the fall in combined gdp in negative quarters has come from shrinking capital spending. This time investment data have weakened, but not catastrophically so, according to data for America, the euro zone and Japan, compiled by JPMorgan. In late 2021 and early 2022 capital spending boomed, as companies spent big on remote-working technology and reinforced supply chains. Now some firms believe they have overinvested in extra supply capacity. Others want to conserve cash. An analysis of survey evidence, financial markets, credit conditions and corporate liquidity by Oxford Economics, a consultancy, suggests that investment in the g7 could decline at an annualised pace of around 0.5% in the second half of this year. That is not good, but it is not enough to create a recession by itself. The investment declines in past recessionary episodes, for instance, were steeper.Unfortunately there is a limit to the confidence that can be taken from good economic data when the fundamental fear of investors is monetary tightening. Today, news of any kind, it seems, can convey bad news about a recession. Weak data confirm that a downturn is approaching. Strong data, including wage rises, suggest central banks are not succeeding in slowing things down, requiring further tightening, which in turn stands to provoke a recession. However strong consumers and firms look, only signs that inflation is falling will truly dispel fears of a downturn.True, there is some relief on the horizon. An index of supply-chain problems compiled by the New York Fed, comprising global transport costs and the opinions of purchasing managers, among other things, has clearly eased, though it remains well above the pre-pandemic norm (see chart 4). Commodity prices have come down since June. American petrol prices at the pump are currently falling by about 3% a week. Alternative Macro Signals, a consultancy, runs millions of news articles through a model to construct a “news inflation pressure index”, which indicates whether the news flow suggests price pressures are building up. The indices for America and Britain have fallen in recent days.But hopes for a rapid fall in inflation are almost certain to be dashed. Past increases in the price of food and energy have not yet fully filtered into headline inflation rates: Morgan Stanley reckons that rich-world inflation will peak at 8% in the third quarter of 2022. Other than in America’s volatile monthly data, growth in wages shows little sign of easing. In earnings calls companies still talk about how best to pass on higher costs to their customers. On July 21st Russia seemed to indicate that it would not turn off the gas taps to Europe, which if it did would doubtless provoke a recession on the continent. But its promises are not worth much.The mass of data confronting economists is useful, but an old lesson may still hold: that recessions are hard to spot in real time. The nber dates the start of America’s downturn associated with the global financial crisis to December 2007. But in August 2008 the Fed’s staff thought the economy was still growing at an annual pace of about 2%. Even after Lehman Brothers collapsed later in the year, the imf said that America was “not necessarily” heading for a deep recession. Understanding the economy at the best of times is hard enough; this time it does not help that the post-lockdown economy has been full of surprises. Practically no one predicted that labour shortages would emerge last year, or that inflation would go from bad to worse in 2022. That is the case for pessimism. The case for optimism is that the present episode of monetary tightening has only just begun. Before it bites there is time for an unusually volatile world economy to deliver more surprises—perhaps even positive ones. ■ More

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    A new way to short Tesla: AXS Investments launches new single-stock ETFs

    Live, Mondays, 1 PM ET

    Investors have a new way to make bullish and bearish bets on large-cap stocks.
    AXS Investments launched eight of 18 approved single-stock leveraged ETFs this month. The funds aim to increase exposure of short-term single-stock investments.

    “They’re designed for active traders, traders that are looking to make tactical trading decisions on a daily basis,” the firm’s CEO, Greg Bassuk, told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” on Monday. “As this market has matured for leveraged ETFs … we’re excited to bring the single-stock ETF access to the U.S. market.” 
    Bassuk notes AXS’ new products are based on actively traded stocks, including sector leaders such as Tesla, NVIDIA, PayPal, Nike and Pfizer among others in its first tranche. Funds of a similar nature are already available in European markets, he added.
    “It’s [ETF innovation is] always a balance between coming out with better tools for investors, and doing it within the regulatory constraints,” Bassuk explained.
    SEC Skepticism
    Dave Nadig, financial futurist at VettaFi, addressed turnover and regulatory concerns among single-stock ETF skeptics. It’s an issue raising eyebrows at the Securities and Exchange Commission, too.

    “My concerns are that people don’t read the labels well enough,” he said, explaining how volatility from these funds can “kill” investors’ returns if the funds are held improperly. “They don’t necessarily understand that you cannot hold these things for a week or two.”
    Investors may also lose the advantages of diversification as single-stock ETFs do not follow entire indexes, according to the SEC.
    “Because levered single-stock ETFs in particular amplify the effect of price movements of the underlying individual stocks, investors holding these funds will experience even greater volatility and risk than investors who hold the underlying stock itself,” the SEC said in a statement this month. 
    However, Bassuk contends the new ETFs give investors another option that may help them profit from daily moves. Plus, he believes the ETFs provide fewer risks associated with buying on margin.
    “Investors that buy on margin could potentially lose more than their initial investment, whereas this single stock ETF, in that regard, we believe is a better mousetrap in that investors can’t lose more than they’re investing,” Bassuk said. 
    Bearish bets among the eight live single-stock leveraged ETFs are lower since their July 14 listing date. The biggest laggard was the AXS 1.5X PYPL Bear Daily ETF, off nearly 22%.
    Bullish bets are showing stronger returns. The AXS 1.5X PYPL Bull Daily ETF is up just under 27%.
    Disclaimer More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Snap, American Express, Verizon, Seagate and more

    Signage for Snap Inc., parent company of Snapchat, adorns the front of the New York Stock Exchange, March 2, 2017 in New York City.
    Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    American Express — Shares of the credit card company climbed 2.9% as growth in travel and entertainment spending helped American Express beat Wall Street estimates. The company reported $2.57 in earnings per share on $13.40 billion of revenue in the second quarter. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had penciled in $2.41 per share on $12.50 billion of revenue.

    Snap — Snap plunged 39.1% after the company reported disappointing results in the second quarter. The Snapchat parent company, which also said it plans to slow hiring, cited Apple iOS changes and slowing demand for its online advertising platform among the reasons for the miss on the top and bottom lines. Snap got hit by a wave of Wall Street downgrades on the back of the results.
    Tech stocks — The stocks of tech companies that are reliant on online advertising slipped on the back of dismal results from Snap. Shares of Meta Platforms, Alphabet and Pinterest fell 7.6%, 5.6% and 13.5%, respectively, on fears slowing online ad sales could also hit these names.
    Twitter — The social media stock inched nearly 1% higher even after the company posted disappointing results in the recent quarter. Twitter cited broader advertising market headwinds and uncertainty related to Elon Musk’s takeover deal among the reasons for a fall in revenue.
    Verizon — Verizon shares dropped 6.7% after the company cut its full-year forecast and said it added 12,000 net retail phone subscribers, far below the 144,000 estimated by StreetAccount. Adjusted quarterly earnings fell short of estimates, according to Refinitiv.
    Mattel — Shares of the toymaker fell more than 7% despite the company reporting a beat on the top and bottom lines for its most recent quarter. American Girl sales slid almost 20%, Mattel said.

    Paramount Global — Shares of Paramount shed 2.9% after MoffettNathanson downgraded the company to underperform and slashed its price target for the stock. The firm said its lower rating was due to the potential for an upcoming recession, which would slow advertiser spend and put additional pressure on the company.
    Capital One Financial — Capital One shares dipped 4.7% after the financial services company missed earnings and revenue estimates in the recent quarter. The company reported earnings per share of $4.96 on $8.23 billion in revenue.
    Seagate — The technology stock dove 8.1% after missing estimates on the top and bottom lines in the recent quarter. Seagate reported earnings per share of $1.59 on $2.63 billion in revenue.
    Intuitive Surgical — The medical devices company’s stock shed 5.7% after missing estimates on earnings and revenue in the recent quarter. Earnings per share came in 5 cents below estimates, according to Refinitiv.
    Schlumberger — The oilfield services stock added 4.3% on the back of quarterly results that beat expectations on the top and bottom lines. Schlumberger also raised its outlook for the full year.
    HCA Healthcare — Shares of the hospital operator soared about 11.4% after posting adjusted earnings of $4.21 per share on revenues of $14.82 billion. Analysts anticipated earnings of $3.70 per share on $14.72 billion in revenue.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Carmen Reinicke and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: American Express, Verizon, Twitter and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    American Express (AXP) – American Express rallied 4.5% in the premarket after beating top and bottom line estimates for the second quarter. Card members registered record spending, driven by a rebound in travel and entertainment.

    Verizon (VZ) – Verizon fell 4.4% in the premarket after adjusted quarterly earnings fell short of estimates and the company cut its full-year forecast. Verizon is seeing its phone subscriber growth impacted by higher prices.
    Twitter (TWTR) – The social media stock fell 2% in premarket trading after the company reported disappointing second-quarter results. Twitter posted a loss of 8 cents, compared to an expected earnings of 14 cents, according to Refinitiv. Its revenue slid 1% year-over-year to $1.18 billion, which fell short of analysts’ projected $1.32 billion. Twitter partially blamed the revenue drop on ad industry headwinds tied to the broader macro environment, as well as uncertainty related to the pending take-over deal by Elon Musk.
    Schlumberger (SLB) – The oilfield services company reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for the second quarter and raised its full-year outlook. Schlumberger is benefiting from increased demand for its services amid higher oil prices. Its stock added 2.3% in premarket trading.
    HCA Healthcare (HCA) – HCA surged 11.4% in the premarket after beating top and bottom line estimates for its latest quarter. The hospital operator’s better-than-expected results came despite labor market and inflation challenges.
    Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) – The mining company’s stock slid 5.3% in premarket action after its latest quarterly earnings fell short of Street forecasts, though revenue beat consensus estimates. Cleveland-Cliffs noted its exposure to the auto sector, where supply chain issues have constrained production, and said it expects to benefit as those issues resolve.

    Snap (SNAP) – Snap tumbled 30.3% in the premarket after the Snapchat parent reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss and its slowest sales growth since going public. It also said current quarter sales are on pace for a flat performance, compared with a year ago, amid tougher economic conditions and growing competition for digital ad dollars.
    Mattel (MAT) – Mattel fell 1% in premarket trading despite a better-than-expected quarterly performance and strong sales of movie-themed toys. However, sales of its American Girl brand slid nearly 20% during the quarter.
    Seagate Technology (STX) – Seagate Technology slumped 11.8% in premarket action trading after the disk drive maker missed quarterly estimates on both the top and bottom lines. It also issued a weaker-than-expected forecast as demand wanes for products like personal computers.
    Tenet Healthcare (THC) – The hospital operator nearly doubled the 82-cent consensus estimate with an adjusted quarterly profit of $1.50 per share. Tenet said it was able to navigate through challenging market conditions as well as a cyber attack. Its stock surged 10.9% in the premarket.
    Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) – Intuitive Surgical missed estimates on both the top and bottom lines for its latest quarter, as placements of its Da Vinci robotic surgical systems fell. The company said Covid resurgences are impacting the number of procedures performed with the system, and its shares tumbled 12.1% in premarket trading.
    Boston Beer (SAM) – Boston Beer took a 9.6% premarket hit after reporting lower-than-expected earnings for its latest quarter and cutting its full-year forecast. Waning demand for its Truly hard seltzer brand continues to impact overall performance for the brewer of Sam Adams beer.

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    Coinbase blasts SEC over insider trading case, says none of the tokens it lists are securities

    An ex-Coinbase product manager was charged Thursday, along with two other individuals, in a first-of-its-kind crypto insider trading case.
    In a separate complaint Thursday, the SEC said that nine of the 25 tokens allegedly traded in the scheme were securities.
    Coinbase’s chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, denied the claims Thursday in a blogpost titled “Coinbase does not list securities. End of story.”

    Coinbase signage in New York’s Times Square during the company’s initial public offering on the Nasdaq on April 14, 2021.
    Robert Nickelsberg | Getty Images

    Coinbase pushed back on claims from the Securities and Exchange Commission that it offers unregistered securities, following fraud charges against a former employee at the company.
    An ex-Coinbase product manager was charged Thursday, along with two other individuals, with wire fraud in connection with an insider trading scheme involving cryptocurrencies. The case is the first of its kind.

    U.S. prosecutors accused the individuals of plotting to profit from the listing of new tokens on the Coinbase platform before they were announced publicly.
    In a separate complaint filed Thursday, the SEC said that nine of the 25 tokens allegedly traded in the scheme were securities.
    Coinbase’s chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, denied the claims Thursday in a blogpost titled “Coinbase does not list securities. End of story.”
    “Seven of the nine assets included in the SEC’s charges are listed on Coinbase’s platform,” Grewal said in the blogpost. “None of these assets are securities.”
    “Coinbase has a rigorous process to analyze and review each digital asset before making it available on our exchange — a process that the SEC itself has reviewed.”

    Whether some cryptocurrencies should be considered securities is a contentious matter that has flustered both regulators and crypto firms alike.
    Ripple, a San Francisco-based blockchain firm, is currently fighting a lawsuit from the SEC which claims XRP, a cryptocurrency it is closely associated with, should be treated as a security.
    It goes back to a notable Supreme Court case known as the Howey Test, which deems an asset as a security if it meets certain criteria. According to the SEC, a security is defined as “an investment of money, in a common enterprise, with a reasonable expectation of profit derived from the efforts of others.”
    The SEC’s position is significant as it means Coinbase may be forced to classify some of the cryptocurrencies it offers as regulated financial instruments.
    The process of listing securities, such as shares in a company, involves rigorous disclosure and registration requirements. Cryptocurrencies, by contrast, are unregulated and therefore don’t come with the same level of scrutiny.
    Coinbase has been known to be more conservative with its token listing framework than some other exchanges. Both Binance and FTX offer more than 300 coins, for example, while Coinbase lists just over 200, according to CoinGecko data.
    Nevertheless, the SEC believes the company is hosting unregulated securities on its platform, a claim that Coinbase denies.
    Caroline Pham, commissioner of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, also weighed in on the case Thursday, calling the SEC securities fraud charges a “striking example of ‘regulation by enforcement.'” The CFTC oversees foreign exchange trading.
    “The SEC’s allegations could have broad implications beyond this single case, underscoring how critical and urgent it is that regulators work together,” Pham said in a statement. “Regulatory clarity comes from being out in the open, not in the dark.”
    Coinbase’s Grewal concurred with Pham’s assessment.
    “Instead of crafting tailored rules in an inclusive and transparent way, the SEC is relying on these types of one-off enforcement actions to try to bring all digital assets into its jurisdiction, even those assets that are not securities,” he said.

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