SEC says it’s coordinating with FBI to investigate ‘compromised’ ETF tweet

U.S. officials with the SEC and FBI will coordinate efforts to investigate a tweet released on Jan. 9 that shook the crypto market.
U.S. officials with the SEC and FBI will coordinate efforts to investigate a tweet released on Jan. 9 that shook the crypto market.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission announced it was coordinating efforts with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to investigate a tweet released from its X (formerly Twitter) account on Jan. 9.

In a Jan. 10 statement, the SEC reiterated that a Jan. 9 tweet claiming that the commission had approved spot Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded funds in the United States was “unauthorized” and not “drafted or created” by SEC officials. SEC Chair Gary Gensler published an X post claiming the official SEC account had been “compromised” by an unnamed party.

The Jan. 9 tweet from the official SEC X account, later removed. Source: X

According to the SEC, it planned to investigate the tweet with the FBI and the commission’s Office of the Inspector General. The commission warned the public that any filing approving a rule change allowing the listing and trading of a spot Bitcoin ETF would be posted to its website, which it later published.

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As of Jan. 10, spot BTC ETF offerings from ARK 21Shares, Invesco Galaxy, VanEck, WisdomTree, Fidelity, Valkyrie, BlackRock, Grayscale, Bitwise, Hashdex and Franklin Templeton were able to be listed on U.S. exchanges. Following approval, Gensler released a statement saying the commission “did not approve or endorse” Bitcoin, just the exchange-traded products. 

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Update (Jan. 10 at 9:30 pm UTC): This article has been updated to reflect the SEC approving a spot Bitcoin ETF.