United States Securities and Exchange has targeted blockchain gaming platform Immutable potentially targeting its listing and private sales of the IMX token in 2021.
According to a Nov. 1 statement from Immutable, the SEC issued an âacceleratedâ Wells notice following an initial interaction where the SEC informed the company that a Wells notice would be sent âwithin the week,â but delivered it âwithin hoursâ instead.
Immutable highlighted the vague nature of the notice, stating that it âsimply cited statutory provisionsâ with âfewer than 20 words of material explanationâ and offered little meaningful detail about the investigationâs focus. The company believes the agencyâs claims could be targeting the âlisting and private salesâ of its native IMX token in 2021.
Shortly after issuing the notice, the SEC reportedly engaged in a phone call with the firm, raising concerns over a 2021 blog post in which Immutable detailed Huobi Venturesâ early investment in IMX at a pre-launch price of $0.10 issued at a â$10 pre-100:1 splitâ, stating that there had been no âexchange of valueâ in the deal.
Immutable disputes this claim, arguing that the investment was, in fact, legitimate and backed by âreal consideration.âÂ
The firm added it is âconfident in its positionâ regarding the classification of the IMX token, pushing back against what it described as the SEC âindiscriminately claiming that tokens across the industry are securities.âÂ
Immutable called for a ârobust conversation to clarify factsâ and expressed its willingness to challenge the SECâs enforcement approach if necessary.
Reacting to the news, Immutable co-founder Robbie Ferguson reiterated the companyâs position to âdefend digital ownership in gamingâ by joining contemporaries like Robinhood and OpenSea in defending against the SECâs claims.
While a Wells notice does not guarantee that formal action will be taken, the development came as a blow to Immutableâs IMX token which was down more than 14% at press time.
The SEC, led by Chair Gary Gensler, has consistently gone after crypto firms for allegedly skirting securities laws. This has also sparked pushback from U.S. policymakers, who say Gensler is creating confusion in the digital asset space by introducing terms like âcrypto asset security.â
Yet the regulator remains unfazed, recently issuing a Wells notice to Crypto.com. In response, Crypto.com filed a lawsuit challenging the commission.