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Lido 的 LDO 代幣下跌 10%,此前有傳言稱加密貨幣質押服務已收到 SEC 通知

加密貨幣播客大衛霍夫曼散佈(然後撤回)一個謠言,稱美國證券交易委員會已向去中心化質押服務發出 Wells 通知。麗都發言人拒絕置評。

David Hoffman

“Bankless” co-host David Hoffman (Danny Nelson/CoinDesk)

Lido’s LDO token tanked 10% on Saturday following a rumor the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) served the largest Ethereum staking service with a Wells Notice.

A Lido spokesperson declined to comment on whether the protocol had received a notice.

A Wells Notice is a letter from the SEC detailing charges it is considering bringing against a recipient. On Friday, David Hoffman of the “Bankless” crypto podcast said that he’d heard Lido and other crypto projects had been served with Wells Notices, an assertion he later retracted.

Hoffman described his comments to CoinDesk as “a miscommunication between me and a lawyer friend.”

The rumor sparked panic on Crypto Twitter, however, and it quickly spread across the Colorado convention hall where ETHDenver, one of the year’s largest crypto industry gatherings, was underway. The rumors, if proven true, would suggest that the SEC is ramping up scrutiny of Ethereum and crypto staking.

Wells Notice rumors

On Friday, Hoffman said on a video stream that “many Wells Notices” had been distributed in the past week, adding, “I think Lido got one.” Soon after the video spread on Twitter, Hoffman backtracked. “While there is at least one confirmed Wells Notice that *has* gone out recently, that *isn’t* known to the public, the idea of a mass recent carpet bomb isn’t correct,” he tweeted.

“There have apparently been rumors of Lido being caught in the crosshairs of Gary the Destroyer,” he said, referencing SEC Commissioner Gary Gensler, who has become persona non grata in some cryptocurrency circles due to the perception that he is unfriendly to the industry. “Members of the Lido team have reached out to me and said that this is false.”

It is unclear how the SEC would have delivered notice to Lido. The staking service is technically operated by the Lido decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), meaning it is governed by a vast network of Lido’s LDO token holders and lacks a formal leadership structure.

Despite Hoffman’s retraction, the market appeared to respond to his Wells remarks; the price of LDO has fallen 10% in the past 24 hours.

Andrew Thurman of crypto analytics firm Nansen tweeted that Wintermute, one of the largest crypto market makers, sold off around 10%, or $2 million, of its LDO holdings. Thurman speculated the sell-off was correlated with the Wells rumor, but Wintermute CEO Evgeny Gaevoy told CoinDesk that the timing was “coincidental.”

The SEC’s crypto crackdown

Friday’s Wells Notice fracas comes amid a broader crypto industry crackdown by U.S. securities regulators. Last month, for instance, stablecoin issuer Paxos confirmed that it had been served with a Wells Notice on Feb. 3. The SEC said it is considering charging Paxos with operating an unregistered security with its Binance-linked BUSD stablecoin.

Lido, a liquid staking platform, helps users lock up – or “stake” – tokens to earn interest and help secure the Ethereum blockchain. Lido currently accounts for 31% of all staked ether (ETH), according to Dune Analytics. The $8 billion staked with Ethereum via Lido, a decentralized service, makes it the largest Ethereum staker.

Last month, the crypto exchange platform Kraken agreed to shutter its own staking service in the U.S. in a settlement with the SEC. The Kraken shutdown had a chilling effect on the crypto staking landscape, raising regulatory questions for similar services – centrally controlled and DAO operated alike.

UPDATE (Mar. 5, 20:17 UTC): Adds comment from David Hoffman.

UPDATE (Mar. 5, 22:14 UTC): Adds comment from Wintermute CEO Evgeny Gaevoy.

來源

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