coinbase insider trading

Two days ago Coinbase announced a change in its listing procedure in an attempt to prevent front running and insider trading.

Coinbase against insider trading 

INSIDER TRADING
Coinbase responds to insider trading allegations

Insider trading and front running are growing also in the cryptocurrency market. Insider trading is the dishonest practice of investing in a security with early knowledge of important news that could seriously affect its price. In the US, insider trading and front running is a federal offence punishable by imprisonment. 

In September last year, the SEC, the US financial markets regulator, opened an insider trading investigation against Binance, the world’s largest exchange. 

Binance was accused of using its users’ data and information to trade for its own benefit, committing a crime of market manipulation and insider trading.

Similar accusations have now been made against Coinbase, the second-largest exchange listed on the Nasdaq last year. According to these accusations, taken from social media, some people very close to the company’s top management have used insider data and information to make investments on their own behalf. 

Response from Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase

In response to these accusations, Brian Armstrong wrote a long post on the company’s blog, in which he explained the procedures used to list an asset compared to others and announced important changes in the procedures that will be adopted to avoid possible insider trading.

Armstrong explained that:

“To try and prevent on-chain data giving signal to watchful traders. Finally, there is always the possibility that someone inside Coinbase could, wittingly or unwittingly, leak information to outsiders engaging in illegal activity”.

The Coinbase CEO added:

“We have zero tolerance for this and monitor for it, conducting investigations where appropriate with outside law firms. If these investigations find that any Coinbase employee somehow aided or abetted any nefarious activity, those employees are immediately terminated and referred to relevant authorities (potentially for criminal prosecution)”.

According to Armstrong, the company’s employees have their trading activity restricted precisely to avoid cases that could lead to front running or insider trading, but he also said that even more stringent procedures would be adopted, especially with regard to the choice of tokens to be listed on the platform.

Alex Johnson, author of the Fintech Takes newsletter, commented on the post by the CEO of Coinbase:

“Makes it seem an awful lot like Coinbase knew that someone had an information advantage and had already acted on it”.

As if to say that this post looks more like a clumsy attempt to repair damage rather than a serious effort to prevent similar incidents from happening in the future

Armstrong pointed out that in the future the company will work to try to keep the confidentiality of its listings to prevent this data from fueling speculation, when someone manages to know in advance the name of the assets that will be listed on the exchange.

In the post he also wrote that:

“While this is public data, it isn’t data that all customers can easily access, so we strive to remove these information asymmetries”.

The post Coinbase strengthens policies against insider trading appeared first on The Cryptonomist.