Categories: U.S. Regulation

Bitcoin ETF Pump Fake: Hacked SEC Twitter account falsely posts agency approved Bitcoin ETFs

Jan 9 (Reuters) – The U.S. securities regulator said someone briefly accessed its X social media account on Tuesday and posted a fake message saying it had approved exchange traded funds (ETF) for bitcoin, a move eagerly awaited by the crypto industry.
However, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said it has not yet approved spot bitcoin ETFs and its account on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, had been compromised briefly by an unknown party after about 4 p.m. Eastern time (2100 GMT). The “unauthorized access has been terminated,” the agency said.
It will work with law enforcement to investigate the hack and “related conduct,” the SEC said.
X confirmed late on Tuesday that the SEC’s account was compromised and said it was because of an “unidentified individual” obtaining control over a phone number associated with the agency’s account through a third party.
The social media site owned by Elon Musk also said the SEC did not have two-factor authentication enabled at the time the account was compromised and the hack was not due to any breach of X’s systems, citing a preliminary investigation.
The unauthorized post said the SEC had granted approval for bitcoin ETFs on all registered national securities exchanges and included a picture purporting to quote SEC Chair Gary Gensler. The price of bitcoin rose after the post, which was picked up by Reuters and other news media that monitor the SEC’s account.
The posting came as the SEC was widely expected on Wednesday to finally approve a batch of ETFs that track the price of bitcoin, in a potential watershed moment for the crypto industry. The unauthorized post surprised the industry, with insiders scrambling to find out whether it was true and why the SEC would first publish something on social media.
Executives from some ETF issuers, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said they were startled and surprised by the initial tweet.
One executive said he was “concerned” that the SEC might delay or withhold approval for spot bitcoin ETFs as a result of the hack.
Two issuers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it was not immediately clear whether the hack would impact the timeline for approvals of the spot bitcoin ETFs. The SEC is due to deliver a decision on a joint proposal from Ark Investments and 21Shares on Wednesday.
Terron Gold

Recent Posts

CME Goes 24/7 and Bitcoin’s Famous “CME Gap” Trade Is About to Disappear

The crypto market is entering the end of an era as CME Group officially launches 24/7 Bitcoin and…

6 days ago

VanEck Launches First U.S. Spot BNB ETF as Altcoin ETF Race Accelerates

Asset management giant VanEck has officially launched the first-ever U.S. spot ETF tied directly to BNB, the native…

6 days ago

Sui Suffers Another Major Network Outage as Transactions Grind to a Halt

Layer-1 blockchain Sui experienced another major network outage on May 28 after block production and transaction processing…

6 days ago

DTCC Expands Tokenization Push to Stellar as Wall Street Accelerates Multi-Chain Strategy

The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) has announced plans to connect its tokenization infrastructure to the Stellar blockchain,…

6 days ago

Robinhood Launches AI Trading Agents That Can Trade Stocks for You

Robinhood is officially entering the “agentic AI” era after unveiling a new beta feature that…

1 week ago

Fold Launches Bitcoin Rewards Credit Card With Up to 4% BTC Back

Bitcoin financial services company Fold has officially begun rolling out its long-awaited Bitcoin rewards credit card, allowing…

1 week ago