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Former FTX executive Nishad Singh was a prolific Democratic Party donor: CNBC

Former FTX Director of Engineering Nishad Singh donated millions to candidates and causes aligned with the Democratic Party beginning in 2020, CNBC reported.

Prior to taking a senior role in Sam Bankman-Fried’s now-crumbling crypto empire, Singh’s only political contribution was $2,700 to Rep. Sean Casten, D-Ill., in 2018. However, when Singh joined FTX in 2019 after a brief role at Alameda Research, he would go on to donate more than $13 million to Democrats after the 2020 elections, CNBC said, citing state and federal campaign records. 

At least $8 million from Singh flowed to Democratic causes in the 2022 election cycle, including $1 million to support a political action committee (PAC) behind Joe Biden’s presidential bid, $2 million to support the Senate Majority PAC, a combined $4 million to Reproductive Freedom for All, and another $1 million to Mind the Gap, a super PAC founded by Bankman-Fried’s mother, CNBC said.

Nonpartisan campaign tracker OpenSecrets ranks Singh 31st in its list of top donors to outside spending groups.

A $500,000 donation from crypto startup Prime Trust to the Democratic Part of Oregon PAC actually originated from Singh, The Oregonian reported

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Jeremy Nation

Nike’s RTFKT unveils web3 sneakers, angers some with U.S.-only drop

RTFKT, a digital fashion and collectibles firm owned by Nike, unveiled what it said is the “1st native web3 sneaker.”

Dubbed “Cryptokicks iRL,” the shoes have advanced features such as auto-lacing, enhanced lighting, haptic feedback, gesture control, walk detection and app connectivity. The sneakers will support NFC-NFT linking and NFC-NFT authentication with a special chip.

Credit: RTFKT

In a Monday tweet, RTTFKT hinted that the sneakers might have a move-to-earn system, perhaps comparable to the Solana-based game Stepn that rewards users for walking or running. The company didn’t immediately respond to a request for more information from The Block.

Public mints for the shoes start on December 14, and the drop is only available to users in the U.S. in a move that irritated some based elsewhere who expressed their displeasure on Twitter. The company said the geographic limitation was “due to advanced tech and product regulation.”

RTFKT raised $8 million in seed funding led by the crypto investment firm a16z in May of last year. Nike acquired the company in December of 2021.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: MK Manoylov

Analysis of Alameda’s Venture Portfolio

Quick Take

  • December 6, 2022, Financial Times leaks Alameda’s Venture portfolio
  • Reflects ~$5.3bn in aggregate investments across ~13 investment entities’
  • Latest development in the ongoing FTX / Alameda collapse
  • Unclear whether or not investments were made with customer funds 

This research piece is available exclusively to
members of The Block Research.
You can continue reading
this Research content on The Block Research.

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Author: Greg Lim

Apecoin holders are losing their staked tokens when paired Bored Apes get sold

Holders of Bored Apes and Mutant Apes are losing their staked apecoin because they failed to delist their paired NFTs before staking their tokens.

Apecoin staking went live on Dec. 5 and already some Bored Apes and Mutant Apes holders have fallen victim to the issue, related to how the staking feature works, according to security firm PeckShield. Two traders have already earned between $8,000 and $10,000 in profits from targeting Bored Ape holders. In both cases, the victims lost their staked apecoin after selling their NFTs.

These incidents are possible because of the way apecoin staking works. Users can stake their tokens directly or pair them with their Bored Ape or Mutant Ape NFTs. When they pair them, only the tokens are locked in the smart contract. The NFTs can still be sold on OpenSea or any other marketplace. However, when this happens, the holder loses the staked apecoin to the NFT’s buyer because the paired NFT acts as the access key.

Smart-contract savvy arbitrageurs have targeted this apecoin staking feature. The process involves buying a Bored Ape or Mutant Ape whose owner has staked apecoins. These traders usually take a flash loan to obtain the capital needed to purchase the NFT. Once the NFT is sold, the new buyer receives the staked tokens. The next step involves selling the NFT and apecoin for ether. The funds realized from these sales are enough for the trader to repay the loan and still have some profit left over.

$26,000 lost

In one incident reported by PeckShield, the victim lost 6,400 APE ($26,240) to the trader when the paired NFT was sold. The trader used an 82 ETH ($103,000) flash loan from Dydx to buy the NFT and claim the staked tokens. The trader then sold both the NFT and the apecoin for 88 ETH in total. This gave the trader enough funds to cover the loan and still have 6 ETH left over as profit. These transactions happened in one single block — since that is how flash loans work — and cost only $14 in fees.

In another incident shared by PeckShield, a trader scooped almost 8 ETH in a transaction costing $17.

While Bored Ape developer Yuga Labs has faced criticism over these losses, warnings over apecoin staking have been part of the discussions in the ApeDAO community governance forum for months. Web3 wallets like MetaMask also display a warning when connecting to the apecoin staking website.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Coinbase sees ‘regulatory guardrails’ needed for crypto confidence boost

The UK needs to beef up its regulation of crypto for public confidence to return to the still reeling sector in the wake of the FTX collapse, Coinbase Vice President for International Policy Tom Duff Gordon said in a podcast interview.

“Certainly if you look at the UK for example, one way to restore confidence is to usher in and accelerate some basic regulatory guardrails,” Gordon said in an episode of “Following the Rules” released on Tuesday, adding that companies may need to be proactive and seek out regulation.

While regulators may not always move as fast as government wants, Coinbase has been engaging with British parliamentarians “across the political divide” through parliamentary groups on crypto and other events, Gordon said, adding that he’s been speaking to the lead economic spokesman for the Labour Party, Rachel Reeves.

“I think it’s important and we don’t make any bets on election outcomes, but we do want to make sure that across the political divide that there is support for digital assets,” he said.

It is certainly not rare to find industry leaders in the same rooms as policymakers and regulators, especially as governments open their doors for consultations on how to best approach the nascent market. Crypto payment platform Ripple, for example, published a regulatory whitepaper for UK policymakers last month.

Stablecoin opportunity

New laws for regulating crypto in the UK rest largely with the Financial Services and Markets Bill, which is currently in parliament discussions. While targeting the UK’s financial sector more broadly, the bill sets working definitions for crypto assets and hands the national regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority, more supervisory power.

Despite incremental build-up, some regulators and industry leaders are looking for regulation to par up to more comprehensive frameworks, like the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets.

“There’s an opportunity for a basic set of guardrails for crypto asset service providers where the UK takes the good bits of MiCA, which is the markets in crypto assets regulation from the EU, and builds upon those and perhaps looks to focus less on some of the parts of MiCA that are less necessary or work less well,” Gordon said.

The good bit, according to Gordon, is how MiCA leaves the responsibility of asset listing to the crypto asset service provider. He said the part of the regulation he’d leave behind includes limitations on stablecoins, such as the cap on the use of non-euro denominated stablecoins. 

“There’s a real opportunity for the UK to bring in some sensible and proportionate rules for stablecoins and to see the sterling stablecoin market grow,” he said.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Inbar Preiss

Analysis of Silvergate Capital’s FTX and BlockFi Public Letters

Quick Take

  • December 5, 2022 Silvergate CEO Alan Lane releases public letter addressing FTX, Alameda and the recent market turmoil 
  • Closed December 5, 2022 trading at $24.24 / share, a (8.5%) change in 1-day trading 
  • Currently trades at $23.04 intra-day on December 6, 2022
  • November 28, 2022 Silvergate files 8K detailing sub $20mm exposure to BlockFi following BlockFi’s Ch. 11 filing 

This research piece is available exclusively to
members of The Block Research.
You can continue reading
this Research content on The Block Research.

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Author: Greg Lim

Chainlink staking is now live, a major step in its new Economics 2.0 plan

Staking for decentralized oracle network Chainlink is now live on Ethereum, in what Chainlink co-founder Sergey Nazarov claims is one of the most highly anticipated events for its network.

Until now, token holders had been limited in how they could put their LINK to work and receive rewards for securing the network. With staking enabled, holders of LINK can contribute to the network’s security and receive rewards.

Chainlink is the most widely used oracle network in the industry, according to Dune Analytics. Oracle networks are critical blockchain infrastructure allowing developers to securely use real-world data in their applications and enabling the majority of on-chain use cases today.

Chainlink will initially launch a beta release, accessible solely for staking to secure the Ethereum ETH/USD price feed. The pool is capped at 25 million LINK tokens, which is about 2.5% of the total LINK supply with a value of $177.5 million, at the time of writing. Chainlink plans to allow staking for other services in the future and is using this beta to test and improve future launches.

Staking is initially open to node operators — contributors who operate the hardware and software that powers the network — and members of the community who qualified for early access. Users can stake up to 7,000 LINK tokens and start receiving rewards, and are subject to a 9-12 month lock up period. This is because the next version of staking is expected to launch in that timeframe, at which point stakers can either unlock their tokens or migrate them to the new version.

Staking will be open to the general public on Dec. 8.

How staking fits into Chainlink’s long term plan

Staking is the first step in what Nazarov said is a “new chapter in Chainlink’s life” and its Economics 2.0 plan, which aims to increase the network’s security and revenue.

“It’s a feature that while useful on its own, is actually part of this larger Economics 2.0 plan. I think that’s the thing that people don’t fully get,” Nazarov told The Block. Economics 2.0, a plan with several initiatives including staking, aims to solidify Chainlink’s market dominance in the oracle sector and make it a “global standard.”

Having a large user base and a strong network effect are required to kickstart a sustainable economic model, according to Nazarov. He said Chainlink has hit the minimum threshold of users and activity needed to start its economics. This was one of the main reasons staking and other parts of the Economics 2.0 plan have not launched until now. 

Staking, along with other initiatives such as its BUILD and SCALE programs, all have the goal of increasing the network’s economic sustainability. “This will help scale the network’s security and its usage as more on-chain use cases are created,” Nazarov said.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Mike Truppa

Senators want more info on Silvergate’s ‘egregious failure’ on FTX

A bipartisan group of senators want more information from Silvergate Bank, a bank that caters to crypto and fintech clients, about the bank’s current financial wellbeing, while also taking the company to task for its management of FTX and Alameda funds. 

“Your bank’s involvement in the transfer of FTX customer funds to Alameda reveals what appears to be an egregious failure of your bank’s responsibility to monitor for and report suspicious financial activity carried out by its clients,” wrote Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., John Kennedy, R-La., and Roger Marshall, R-Kan., in a letter to Alan Lane, Silvergate’s CEO. The group of senators cite, “reports suggesting that Silvergate facilitated the transfer of FTX customer funds to Alameda.”

Warren and Kennedy both sit on the Senate Banking Committee, while Marshall is a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, which is debating legislation to reform regulations on some digital assets and crypto exchanges due to that committee’s oversight of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. 

“Were you aware that FTX was directing its customers to wire money to Alameda’s account with your bank?”, the senators write to Lane. The senators also want to know whether Silvergate flagged such transactions to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and why former Chief Risk Officer Tyler Pearson left the bank. 

Lane sought to reassure investors and customers of the bank’s financial health and compliance with federal laws in a public letter yesterday, saying he sought to combat, “misinformation … spread by short sellers and other opportunists” following the FTX collapse. The bank’s stock lost approximately half of its value in the month since the failure of its highest-profile client. 

Last week, Warren spoke of the dangers of crypto firms getting entangled with the banking system. Since its founding, Silvergate Bank has been one of the critical U.S.-based junctions for crypto firms looking to get access to fiat bank accounts. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kollen Post

Amber Group says it’s ‘business as usual’ amid reports of more layoffs

Digital asset platform Amber Group is reassuring clients and stakeholders that it is “business as usual” at the firm following reports that the company laid off staff. 

The Hong Kong-based firm laid off “hundreds” of employees in this latest round, according to Wu Blockchain. The company also cut 10% of its workforce in September, citing the bear market.

“Weathering through market cycles, we have to constantly adjust and pivot our business strategies, product offerings, and, as a result, internal teams and functions,” Amber Group said in a statement.

Chinese-language social media posts have raised concerns that former employees have not received agreed-upon compensation following the layoffs. Employees also said they have had difficulties contacting senior management, including CEO Michael Wu. Amber Group did not respond to a request from The Block for comment.

To add to the confusion, staff based in China were also told not to come back to offices due to the coronavirus pandemic in an email on Dec. 5.

One Twitter user asked the company’s head of business development Annabelle Huang if their funds were safe.

Withdrawals open 

“It is. We continue to operate business as usual. If you have any concerns, withdrawals are open as usual,” she responded.

Valued at $3 billion in February during a $200 million raise, Amber Group failed to raise again at a higher valuation between $5 billion and $8 billion due to the market downturn. Amber Group reverted to its older valuation in November as it sought to raise $100 million, according to reports.

Shortly after, the firm revealed it had been an active trading participant on FTX, though less than 10% of its total trading capital was locked up on the exchange. Amber Group claimed no exposure to FTX’s native token FTT or sister trading firm Alameda Research.

The company has also had to contend with the death of one of its co-founders. Tiantian Kullander, known as TT, died in his sleep at the age of 30 on Nov. 23.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Callan Quinn

Judge signs off on subpoenas to 3AC’s Su Zhu and Kyle Davies

A federal bankruptcy judge approved subpoenas for the founders of Three Arrows Capital, a Singapore-based crypto hedge fund that went belly up earlier this year. 

The subpoenas call on the 3AC founders and leaders Su Zhu and Kyle Davies to produce all financial information on the company “including books, documents, records, and papers, relating to the Debtor’s property or financial affairs.”

Zhu, Davies, and other individuals named — including Kelly Kaili Chen, who is married to Davies and co-owns entities related to 3AC, as well as executive Mark James Dubois — have two weeks to produce the requested documents and information. 

Under the subpoena, Zhu, Davies, and other individuals named must produce private keys, seed phrases, and any other means of accessing or controlling fiat assets and digital assets. The hedge fund is in Chapter 15 bankruptcy proceedings in the Southern District of New York’s Bankruptcy Court as well as the British Virgin Islands, where the fund was incorporated in May 2021. 

Zhu and Davies abruptly vanished from public view following 3AC’s collapse in July, though both have returned to Twitter activity since crypto exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy last month. They list their current locations as the United Arab Emirates.

Creditors have already begun taking control of some assets for liquidation, though the subpoenas signal that the judge does not feel enough information has been provided on available assets.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kollen Post


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