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    Home»Blockchain»Judge Tosses 2022 Investor Lawsuit, Says Yuga NFTs Are Not Securities
    Judge Tosses 2022 Investor Lawsuit, Says Yuga NFTs Are Not Securities
    Blockchain

    Judge Tosses 2022 Investor Lawsuit, Says Yuga NFTs Are Not Securities

    DigicoinvisionBy DigicoinvisionOctober 3, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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    A US judge has dismissed an investor lawsuit against Web3 company Yuga Labs, ruling that the case failed to show non-fungible tokens (NFTs) meet the legal definition of securities.

    Judge Fernando M. Olguin ruled the plaintiffs did not demonstrate how Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC), ApeCoin (APE) or other NFTs sold by Yuga satisfied the three conditions of the Howey test, a standard used by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to determine whether a transaction qualifies as an investment contract. The lawsuit was originally filed in 2022.

    Yuba Labs marketed its NFTs as digital collectibles with membership perks to an exclusive club, making them consumables rather than investment contracts, Olguin said. He wrote:

    “The fact that defendants promised that NFTs would confer future, as opposed to immediate, consumptive benefits does not alone transmute those benefits from consumptive to investment-like in nature.”

    Judge Olguin dismisses investor lawsuit against Yuga Labs. Source: Court Listener

    The judge also said the plaintiffs failed to show that the Bored Ape Yacht Club and other NFT collections launched by Yuga are a “common enterprise” with the expectation of profits produced by others, adding legal precedent that most digital assets are not securities.

    Related: NFTs ‘heating up’ as nightclubs, rappers jump back on bandwagon

    No common enterprise with the explicit expectation of profit

    The NFTs, which trade on public blockchain networks, did not establish an ongoing and dependent financial link between the purchaser and Yuga Labs, and do not qualify as a “common enterprise” under the Howey Test, Olguin said.

    Investors who purchased NFTs from the company paid a fee to Yuga that was independent of the NFT prices, Consensys attorney Bill Hughes wrote on X.