The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is dropping its investigation into whether Ether is a security.
“The Enforcement Division of the SEC has notified us that it is closing its investigation into Ethereum 2.0,” Ethereum developer Consensys said in a June 19 X post.
“This means that the SEC will not bring charges alleging that sales of ETH are securities transactions,” which the firm hailed as a “major win for Ethereum developers, technology providers, and industry participants.”
Consensys said the SEC’s decision came after it sent a letter to the agency on June 7 asking if it would end its investigation into Ether (ETH), as the regulator approved spot Ether exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in May, which the firm said are “premised on ETH being a commodity.”
Consensys senior counsel Laura Brookover shared the SEC’s response letter to the firm, which states that the agency does not “intend to recommend an enforcement action.”
The SEC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In March, Fortune reported the SEC issued subpoenas to multiple companies which was related to attempts to label ETH as a security.
Related: SEC chair sees spot Ether ETF S-1 approvals sometime in summer 2024
Consensys sued the SEC in April shortly after receiving a Wells notice from the agency warning it that its MetaMask crypto wallet may have violated securities laws.
The lawsuit claimed the SEC and its Chair Gary Gensler believed ETH was a security since at least early 2023. Consensys claimed SEC Division of Enforcement Director Gurbir Grewal approved a formal order of investigation into Ether’s status as a security on March 28, 2023.
In its latest post, it said the lawsuit is still ongoing.
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