SEC v. Kik doesn’t have to be game-over for Kik or SAFTs. In fact, the 
decision is perhaps more favorable than the SEC v. Telegram order. 
On the last day of September 2020, Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein dashed the hopes of Kik Interactive, crypto entrepreneurs and Simple Agreement for Future Tokens, or SAFT, proponents in general by ruling in favor of the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission’s motion for summary judgment in SEC v. Kik Interactive.
The
 case was instigated by the SEC in June 2019 when the SEC filed an 
enforcement action against Kik Interactive Inc., (referred to in the complaint and here as Kik), a social media company that had used SAFT to launch its “Kin” crypto token in September 2017.
Related: Does Kik stand a chance against the goliath of the SEC in a US court?
The SAFT and Kik’s SAFT process
As
 many folks in the crypto space know, the SAFT was originally modeled on
 the highly successful SAFT process in which entrepreneurs raised funds 
by selling contractual rights to acquire equity interests in an ongoing 
venture if and when the company issued those interests in a specifically
 defined broader distribution.
A SAFT similarly involves a 
two-stage process in which a crypto developer seeks to raise funds by 
selling contractual rights to acquire a crypto asset when it is 
launched. Upon the launch, if the crypto asset is a fully functional 
utility token, the hope has been that the token itself would not be a 
security. This would mean that while the original sale of the SAFTs 
would need to be registered or exempt under the securities laws, the 
sales of the functional crypto asset would not need to comply with the 
securities laws at all.
In the Kik complaint, the SEC claimed that
 Kik’s 2017 offering of SAFTs relating to Kin tokens was an 
unregistered, nonexempt sale of securities, involving a single planned 
distribution that needed to be viewed as part of the eventual token 
sale. Despite Kik’s arguments that it had engaged in two separate 
transactions (first, the “pre-sale” of contractual rights, and second, 
the sale of Kin tokens in its token distribution event, or TDE), Judge 
Hellerstein of the Southern District of New York ruled on Sept. 30, 
2020, that these “two phases” were intertwined so that the sale of 
contractual rights and the eventual public offering of Kin tokens were 
part of a single plan of financing with a single purpose. As a result, 
the pre-sale and TDE “constituted an unregistered offering of securities
 that did not qualify for exemption.”
The ruling is indeed a 
significant setback for the crypto community, which had taken hope from 
Judge Hellerstein’s earlier comments distinguishing the preliminary 
injunction ordered by Judge Castel in SEC v. Telegram
 from the Kik case. However, despite recognizing the lack of direct 
precedent in relation to cryptocurrencies, the judge found that the Kin 
tokens were securities and that the entire plan of distribution violated
 federal law.
A more detailed consideration of the Kik ruling
In his decision, Judge Hellerstein applied the Howey
 investment contract test in determining that the Kin tokens were 
securities. He seemed particularly influenced by Kik’s promotional 
efforts extolling the profit-potential of Kin, the lack of consumptive 
uses available as of the launch, and references to the range of 
activities that Kik anticipated, which would support the growth of the 
Kin ecosystem and token value. He was not convinced by the minimum 
functionality — the existence of the wallet and the ability to send and 
receive premium stickers, and achieve and view Kin status — that existed
 at the time of the launch, or the prominent disclaimers of any 
contractual obligation for Kik to support the development of Kin or its 
ecosystem. Nor did he consider the extent to which the 57 Kin 
applications that currently exist and support value in the ecosystem 
were developed by persons other than Kik.
With regard to his 
conclusion that the pre-sale was part of an integrated offering, the 
judge looked to conventional integration doctrine. This requires a 
consideration of five factors:
- Is there a single plan of financing?
 - Do the sales involve the issuance of the same class of securities?
 - Were the sales made at or about the same time?
 - Was the same type of consideration received?
 - Were the sales made for the same general purpose?
 
Judge
 Hellerstein found that there was a single plan of financing for the 
same general purpose, based on the facts that the TDE started one day 
after the pre-sale, and all proceeds went to support Kik’s business or 
the Kin ecosystem.
While the lack of any temporal separation is 
hard to deny, there were a number of factors that could have weighed 
against the conclusion that was reached. For example, although 
everything that a business spends can be lumped together as business 
operations, there were doubtless different projects supported by the 
funds raised in the two stages. Certainly, the minimum functionality 
could not have been supported by funds raised in the second stage.
The
 two stages actually did not receive the same class of securities; the 
first class was the contractual right, and the second class was the 
crypto asset. The judge concluded that, ultimately, the results of the 
two stages were ownership of the same security, but this result is not 
compelled by the facts. And even the judge acknowledged that different 
consideration was received in the two stages of the offering, although 
he decided this was insufficient to change his conclusion.
One of 
the most problematic aspects of the decision is the reality that Kik’s 
distribution was planned and announced before the SEC had issued any 
guidance as to how the federal securities laws should apply to crypto 
asset sales. Kik had announced its plans on May 25, 2017, and began its 
pre-sale in June of that year. It was not until July 25, 2017, that the 
SEC released
 its “Report of Investigation Pursuant to Section 21 (a) of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934: The DAO,” or the “DAO Report.” This 
marked the first indication that the SEC intended to apply the Howey 
investment contract test — first developed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 
1946 — to the novel crypto asset class. In addition, DAO tokens were 
specifically designed to work like a venture capital development fund 
for crypto-based enterprises. The decision to treat that kind of 
offering as a security seemed far removed from Kik’s proposed offering. 
As a result, Kik continued with its plans, initiating the TDE for Kin 
tokens on Sept. 12, 2017. It took almost two years for the SEC to 
initiate legal action against Kik for these sales.
The other 
troubling aspect is just how successful Kin has been. This is not a case
 that involves massive fraud and deception. Kik has followed through on 
everything it said it would do. It created the Kin ecosystem and has set
 up a structure that allows other developers to create applications in 
which the tokens can be used. If it were not for the SEC, Kik would be 
thriving, the developers would be happy and thriving, purchasers and 
users would be satisfied, and an innovative ecosystem would be 
experimenting with a unique technology that has uses and benefits yet to
 be fully realized. As it is, the future of this ecosystem is uncertain.
Where to go from here?
This
 is not the end of Kin. First, we do not know what consequences there 
will be for Kin. The Sept. 30 order does not include either an 
injunction or monetary penalty, although the court has asked the parties
 to subject proposed judgments for such relief by Oct. 20. Depending on 
the scope of that order, Kik and Kin might well continue to operate as 
they have been, or might be relegated to operating primarily outside the
 confines of the United States.
In addition, there are now 57 
active Kin applications that offer opportunities to earn and/or spend 
Kin. Judge Hellerstein also noted:
“Based on blockchain activity excluding secondary market transactions, Kin currently ranks third among all cryptocurrencies.”
Thus,
 when Kik says that it is contemplating an appeal, it actually has more 
to lose and more, potentially, to gain than did Telegram. An appeal 
would give the Second Circuit an opportunity to weigh in on the issue of
 how the securities laws should apply to this transaction.
Lessons to be learned
As
 for other crypto entrepreneurs interested in the SAFT process, there 
are some lessons to be learned. For example, there are steps that might 
be taken in order to reduce the risk that the assets will be treated as 
securities. Entrepreneurs should be careful to avoid over-emphasizing 
the potential for profit from the efforts of the developer during 
distribution. In addition, having a robust range of functionality prior 
to issuance would be very helpful.
There are also steps that 
should decrease the chance that the two stages of the SAFT process will 
be integrated and treated as a single scheme. A gap in time between the 
contractual-rights sale and the token distribution phase is highly 
desirable. A period of months would be ideal.
Another way to 
discourage integration would be to give different names to the tokens 
issued to investors who originally purchased the contractual rights and 
the tokens issued to other purchasers upon launch. While in the wallets 
of the original purchasers, the tokens might have limitations on how 
quickly they could be resold or even limitations on the IP addresses of 
purchasers. Steps like this could bolster the notion that there are 
different classes of interest being sold.
In addition, the 
developer should strive to segregate funds received in each stage of the
 offering, earmarking proceeds from each part of the offering process 
for distinct functions. Having the two phases receive different types of
 consideration — such as fiat versus Ether (ETH) — is also a good idea, as noted in the Kik decision.
However,
 given that Judge Hellerstein’s opinion negatively impacts a very 
popular crypto asset, a company that did everything it said it would do,
 and an investor/user base that has been very happy with the 
opportunities that have been created, it is unfortunate that this is the
 way the SEC has chosen to proceed. If the SEC wants to come charging to
 the rescue, it would be nice if they first made sure that a rescue is 
warranted.
source link: https://cointelegraph.com/news/sec-versus-kik-safts-are-far-from-safe 
