Coinsquare Charged with Violating Securities Laws

Market manipulation among the charges presented by Ontario Securities Commission (OSC)
What happened?
July 14, 2020: The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) charged Toronto-based crypto asset trading platform Coinsquare with violating Ontario securities laws, including engaging in market manipulation and misleading its clients about trading volumes.
Between July 2018 and December 2019, Coinsquare allegedly inflated its trading volumes by reporting fake or “wash” trades that represented over 90% of its trading volume. In addition, Coinsquare fired an employee who repeatedly raised concerns about the inflated trading volumes to Coinsquare’s senior management team.
Source: https://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/Proceedings-SOA/soa_20200716_coinsquare.pdf
Who is impacted?
Coinsquare management, business associates, investors, and other virtual asset service providers doing business with Coinsquare.
Why this matter?
Coinsquare and previous fraudulent virtual asset service providers such as Quadriga, Einstein, and Mount Cox continue to struggle with creating a viable and compliant business model in Canada
Internationally, companies that enter into or are considering a business relationship with Coinsquare will need to assess their anti-money laundering risk in light of this statement.
What’s next?
According to the OSC, one of Coinsqaure’s biggest failure was the decision by both management and directors not to ensure the company had strong governance and compliance in place. Coinsquare, and those doing business with the company, can expect additional scrutiny from both regulators and the market. In the meantime, Wealthsimple, an existing OSC regulated fintech, has recently entered the Canadian virtual asset market.
learn more
Is your AML compliance too expensive, time-consuming, or ineffective?
iComply enables financial services providers to reduce costs, risk, and complexity and improve staff capacity, effectiveness, and customer experience.
Request a demo today.
Why Do We Need AML?
Within the crypto community, many people express negativity toward KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) procedures. There are a variety of reasons for this, but much of this stems from the underlying reality that the results of Suspicious Activity...
Seven Myths About Security Tokens
As blockchain technology continues to mature, issuers today can launch a security token more efficiently than ever. However, while there are many tools on the market that can help you issue a token as a security, most of these tools fall short, leaving issuers to...
5 Takeaways from the SEC Statement on Digital Asset Securities Issuance and Trading
Recently the U.S. SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance, Division of Investment Management and Division of Trading and Markets released a statement following the enforcement actions against companies Airfox, Paragon, CryptoAsset Management, TokenLot, and the founder...












