CRYPT CURRENCY
INVESTORS FACE UNSEEN RISKS IN INITIAL COIN OFFERINGS on research by
DAV I D H O F F M A N Professor of Law
“[I]n a financial ecosystem built around the proposition that regulation is unnecessary because code is the final guarantee of performance, often ICOs are not embedding the governance promises they make—which protect investors against exploitation— in software code.”
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Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, led by Penn Law professor David Hoffman, have conducted the first detailed analysis of “Initial Coin Offerings” (ICOs) of virtual currencies, known as cryptocurrencies, revealing the estimated $25-billion-dollar industry’s protections against self-dealing may leave investors exposed to risks they don’t anticipate from issuers. The study, “Coin Operated Capitalism,” is forthcoming in the Columbia Law Review. Initial Coin Offerings are an example of financial innovation, placing them in kinship with venture capital contracting, asset securitization, and initial public offerings (IPOs). Unlike an IPO, however, an ICO does not typically involve the sale of equity or shares in a corporation. Instead, ICO participants are buying an asset from ventures or firms that are selling digital currency, namely a coin or “token,” which is actually a string of computer code of which there is a restricted supply, that enables its holder to use, or govern, a network that the ventures’ promoters plan to develop using funds raised through the sale. “Our main finding is, in a financial ecosystem built around the proposition that regulation is unnecessary because code is the final guarantee of performance, often ICOs are not embedding the governance promises they make — which protect investors against exploitation — in software code,” said Hoffman, a contracts law expert. “We also show that at least some popular ICOs have retained the power to modify their currency’s rights, but have failed to disclose that ability to investors in plain language.” The research team includes Shaanan Cohney (a Penn PhD student in computer science), Jeremy Sklaroff (a recent graduate of Penn’s Carey JD/MBA program), and David Wishnick (a fellow at Penn Law’s interdisciplinary Center for Technology, Innovation and Competition). Together, the study authors surveyed the 50 ICOs that raised the most capital in 2017, and analyzed the relationship between the contractual promises made by ICO promoters in their offering documents and the actual functionality of the cryptocurrencies they deliver. The study authors first collected online contracts, a range of “soft law” documents made available digitally by the projects to investors and which, collectively, helped to raise $2 billion alone for these projects.