SEC Sues Former NBA Star Paul Pierce Over EthereumMax Promos
The Hall of Famer will pay $1.4 million in penalties and disgorgement to settle charges that he did not disclose payments to promote the token.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) sued former National Basketball Association player Paul Pierce for "touting" ethereumMax (EMAX) tokens without revealing he had been paid to do so.
In a release Friday, the SEC said Pierce had been paid $244,000 in EMAX tokens, but did not disclose the payments while marketing the project on Twitter. He also allegedly suggested he held a large amount of EMAX tokens through screenshots, despite his holdings being "much lower" than what he displayed. Pierce will pay $1.409 million in penalties and disgorgement.
The NBA Hall of Famer agreed not to "promote any crypto asset securities for three years," the SEC's statement said.
The SEC previously settled with Kim Kardashian over similar charges. The reality TV star paid $1.26 million for not disclosing $250,000 in payment.
Read more: What Is EthereumMax? Inside the Crypto Kim Kardashian Lost $1.2M Promoting
In a statement, SEC Chair Gary Gensler said the settlement is "yet another reminder to celebrities" to disclose if they are being paid to promote investments.
"You can’t lie to investors when you tout a security,” he said. “When celebrities endorse investment opportunities, including crypto asset securities, investors should be careful to research if the investments are right for them, and they should know why celebrities are making those endorsements.”
The regulator's action comes a day after it sued Terraform Labs and founder Do Kwon on allegations of fraud and selling unregistered securities. The SEC alleged that basically the entire Terra ecosystem was implicated in securities law violations, including the yield-bearing Anchor protocol and the various tokens Terraform issued.
The SEC has been on a tear recently, settling charges with crypto exchange Kraken last week and indicating it would sue stablecoin issuer Paxos over its Binance USD token.
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Financial technology and crypto firms are increasingly applying for state or national bank charters, despite the community’s historical resistance to centralized banking.
Cosa sapere:
- Fintech and crypto firms are increasingly applying for bank charters, anticipating a more favorable regulatory landscape.
- Becoming a bank allows firms to accept deposits and lower borrowing costs but brings stricter oversight.
- Regulatory bodies have historically approved few new bank charters, though recent signals suggest a more streamlined process.