Jim Cramer, the host of CNBC’s Mad Money took to Twitter for a rather controversial stance. He stated,
“Please be careful with Dogecoin…It is a security. It will be regulated. We will find out how many there are and how many are being created each day to make money for the exchanges.”
It wouldn’t be wrong to say that Cramer has opened a box of worms considering, SEC chair Gensler has been keeping a close eye on the sector to identify “unregistered securities.”
In the past, Congressman Tom Emmer has argued that Gary Gensler “believes that almost all tokens are security,” adding that he “adamantly disagrees” with the chair’s argument. Senator Cynthia Lummis, in an interview with CNBC, had also commented in the past that except Bitcoin, all other crypto assets are “looking more like securities.” She based her argument on the fact that other crypto assets are not as decentralized as Bitcoin and their founders kept a large portion of the product to “themselves.”
When it comes to DOGE, it has been debated last year that over 65% of Dogecoins are distributed among only 98 wallets. Where the single largest wallet holds 28% of all Dogecoins in circulation. Essentially, it can be inferred from the tweet that the meme coin may be called a “pump and dump” token, which is not “decentralized.”
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>Why I'm not in $DOGE and will never be no matter the gains. https://t.co/jFVU2yQf03— CubeHands (⬡,⬡) (@NFTiepie) April 19, 2021
However, soon after the post, DOGE founder Billy Markus took to Twitter to explain to Cramer “how blockchain works.”
He argued,
“In terms of “security,” it is a proof of work cryptocurrency so you have to put in work to retrieve the coins from the block, it doesn’t qualify under the howey
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