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68 Am. U. L. Rev. 69 (2018-2019)
Crypto Securities: On the Risks of Investments in Blockchain-Based Assets and the Dilemmas of Securities Regulation

handle is hein.journals/aulr68 and id is 79 raw text is: 









                   CRYPTO SECURITIES:
       ON THE RISKS OF INVESTMENTS IN
    BLOCKCHAIN-BASED ASSETS AND THE
  DILEMMAS OF SECURITIES REGULATION


                       SHLOMIT   AZGAD-TROMER


   Recent declarations and  investigations by the Securities and Exchange
 Commission  suggest that blockchain-based assets are potentially subject to
 regulation as securities under the Securities Act. This Article presents a
 systematic analysis of the risks and embedded costs of investments in blockchain-
 based assets and assesses their potential regulation as securities.
   This Article offers a comprehensive account of the pertinent properties of
blockchain-based assets, the technology of the blockchain, the markets available
for their trade, and their varied underlying sources of value. It identifies unique
costs and  risk factors inherent to the blockchain technology, and examines
whether securities laws can potentially add value and protect investors from
these unique risks. Identified costs and risks factors include controlling costs
prevalent even in decentralized ledgers, monitoring costs that vary according to
the costs of automatic venfication, technology risks rooted in the vulnerability of
the blockchain to bugs in its software, and systemic risks embedded in limited
transparency and contractual rigidity of the blockchain-based investment contract.
   This Article examines these unique costs and risk factors and assesses their
normative  implications for securities regulation of blockchain-based assets.
With current efforts by regulatory authorities to designate blockchain-based assets
as securities, a coherent approach is presented based on the type of the offering,
investors'profile, and the technical and legal contours of the blockchain-based


    *  Associate Research Scholar, Columbia Law School. Thanks for helpful comments
and  conversations go to Mike Burstein, Mirit Eyal-Cohen, Geeyoung Min, and to
participants of the Law and Entrepreneurship Retreat at Alabama Law School, the
Roundtable discussion at Fordham Center on Law and Information Policy, and the
Associates Seminar at Columbia Law School. Special thanks to Eran Tromer, for decades
of thought-provoking and fruitful conversations, including the inspiration for this paper.


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