SEC Increases Scrutiny of Audits of Cryptocurrency Companies: WSJ
Having proof of reserve reports is not enough information for an investor, according to Paul Munter, the SEC's acting chief accountant.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is increasing its scrutiny of audits of cryptocurrency companies in an effort to warn investors who may feel assured by audits such as proof-of-reserve reports, according to a Wall Street Journal report that cites a senior SEC official.
“Investors should not place too much confidence in the mere fact a company says it’s got a proof-of-reserves from an audit firm,” said Paul Munter, the SEC’s acting chief accountant. Having such a report “is not enough information for an investor to assess whether the company has sufficient assets to cover its liabilities,” he added.
In the aftermath of FTX's collapse as many as nine crypto exchanges across the world announced they would publish transparency reports or Merkle tree proof of reserves to reassure spooked investors. A Merkle tree proof of reserves is a cryptographic data structure that maintains privacy but allows users to verify the stability of their holdings on exchanges, thereby creating trust.
The SEC is warning both investors and audit firms that if it finds troublesome "fact patterns," the watchdog will consider a referral to the division of enforcement, according to Munter.
The development assumes significance as questions have been swirling regarding Binance, the largest crypto exchange by trading volume, that did release a report of its proof of reserves but it was withdrawn two days later when the auditing firm it had hired, Mazars, announced it was no longer working with crypto firms.
According to the WSJ report, Binance was looking for another audit firm after it was dropped by Mazars. Binance “reached out to multiple large firms, including the Big Four (Deloitte, EY, KPMG and PwC), who are currently unwilling to conduct a [proof of reserves] for a private crypto company,” the company said.
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