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Bankman-Fried-backed bill to feature in Congress’ first FTX hearing

The regulatory legislation supported by embattled former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried will be back in the spotlight during the first congressional hearing on FTX’s collapse.

Though the Senate bill’s authors have pledged to push forward on the bill, to create guardrails for U.S. consumers against crypto collapses similar to FTX’s, other senators aren’t sure about moving forward with the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act.

The bill, which was a major topic during Bankman-Fried’s numerous visits to Washington over the last several months, will be a major topic of conversation during today’s hearing, as its other major proponent — Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Rostin Behnam — testifies before the committee again on the topic. The agency head previewed a defense of the bill earlier this week during a public interview.

”I think it’s important that we fill this regulatory gap before more harm is done to retail investors and institutional investors as well,” Behnam told a Financial Times crypto asset conference. 

But despite the spotlight, one of the senators writing the legislation acknowledged that the bill would not move until next year, due to the realities of the congressional calendar, complexity of the subject matter, and strong debate around the legislation.

“I don’t think it’s going to happen this year,” said Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., the top Republican on the Senate Agriculture Committee and co-author of the bill with Senate Agriculture Chair Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich. Boozman told reporters that, “this process is long and arduous, which it should be, to get a good product.”

Boozman added that the committee wanted to advance the bill “a few months ago,” but acknowledged that, “we couldn’t get agreement amongst all the stakeholders.”

DeFi Divisions

The bill divided representatives for digital asset companies and projects, with decentralized finance advocates in Washington (and online) fiercely opposed. The division turned toward hostility for Bankman-Fried, who was the loudest industry advocate for the DCCPA. Industry or individual opponents argued the legislation would create regulatory moats for decentralized projects, because it would create a framework for centralized crypto exchanges.

The FTX implosion has outspoken proponents of stronger financial regulations in the Senate criticizing the bill from the opposite direction, and saying that the Senate should hit pause.

Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, who sits on the Agriculture Committee told The Block that he believes the legislation should be paused, and that Stabenow knows his view on the matter.

“This bill leans too much to the industry,” elaborated Brown. “The industry has betrayed the American public, not to mention, all the ways cryptos are jeopardizing national security with what they’ve done,” Brown continued, citing sanctions evasion. “Congress weighing in is fine, but not with the bill that the industry helped write.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., the Senate’s biggest financial regulatory hawk, argued that the CFTC wasn’t the right regulator for an everyday investor product.

“The CFTC has no experience in investor protection,” said Warren, “which makes them the worst possible candidate for regulating a financial product that has been used to rip off millions of people.”

The Massachusetts Democrat disagreed when asked if Bankman-Fried’s lobbying in favor of the bill colored her perception of it.

“That’s what the content is, and the content is not the direction we should go.”

Many cooks, with more coming

Though there’s agreement in both parties in Congress, as well as senior regulators and policymakers in the Biden administration that more laws are needed around digital assets, achieving consensus as to what new rules should look like remains far from happening.

“That’s part of the reason we haven’t marked up,” Boozman said, referring to when a committee debates amendments and final language in a bill before it. “We’re working with all the stakeholders,” including the Senate Banking Committee, the Arkansas Republican said.

More urgency — and attention — around crypto regulations will also attract more ideas, potentially complicating an already busy picture even further.

Brown demurred when asked if he would author his own bill, though he sent a letter to the Treasury Department earlier Wednesday saying that he looked forward to working on legislative recommendations made by regulators last month, prior to the FTX collapse. Portions of the report making those regulations flagged concerns over companies with “integrated” structures, like FTX’s broad-reaching corporate affiliations — most of which are now in bankruptcy court.

The Biden administration has had a seat at the table negotiating a stablecoins bill in the House of Representatives, but the bipartisan effort hit an impasse that incoming-House Financial Services Committee Chair Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., blamed on administration officials.

Asked if she was working on her own crypto bill, Warren left the possibility open, though vague.

“We’re working in the area,” she told reporters.

Kollen Post contributed to this report.

© 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: Colin Wilhelm

TP ICAP gets FCA approval to offer crypto services to institutional clients

Capital markets firm TP ICAP has received approval from the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to register as a cryptoasset exchange provider. 

TP ICAP’s new exchange, known as Fusion Digital Assets, will use the firm’s electronic OTC platform, Fusion, to give clients access to a non-custodial cryptoasset exchange for order matching and trade execution. The interdealer broker’s new trading venue will be for institutional clients only.

The firm’s new venture will also integrate with Fidelity Digital Assets for safekeeping clients’ assets and settlement services. The platform will offer diversified Liquidity from proven market makers around the globe.

The wholesale crypto market has “lacked the credible infrastructure and assurance necessary for the firm’s traditional client base to allocate capital,” said Duncan Trenholme, co-head of digital assets at TP ICAP Group. 

The firm’s segregated model, track record of operating venues, and ability to distribute are well recognized by institutional players, Trenholme added. 

Despite the current crypto downturn, Trenholme said blockchain technology would lead to the tokenization of traditional asset classes. “This will result in a more efficient, automated, and risk-mitigated trading and settlement process for financial markets,” he added.

The venture is committed to a multi-custody model. The firm will work closely with several custodians to provide segregated interoperable custody services to its clients. Custodians will come online in line with demand and prioritization over the next few years.

© 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

Sam Bankman-Fried’s bizarre apology tour goes prime time

Many in his position would have likely laid low, but disgraced crypto entrepreneur and one-time billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried is nothing if not unusual.

In another surprising twist, Bankman-Fried moved into the live phase of his apology tour on Wednesday, giving a prime-time interview to the New York Times, admittedly against his lawyers’ advice.

“We messed up big,” he said, oftentimes visibly shaking, sipping seltzer or looking down at the ground as he spoke. “I was responsible, ultimately.” The interview comes after risky positions and the apparent commingling of assets between the firms saw millions of customers defrauded and billions of dollars in losses for investors.

Bankman-Fried took responsibility for a lack of oversight that he said led to a discrepancy regarding risky market positions Alameda Research held with FTX, which he said were not displayed on dashboards the former CEO had been working from to gauge the the two firms’ solvency.

However, when probed over whether or not he knowledgeably committed fraud and illegally commingled customer assets to back Alameda, Bankman-Fried flatly denied any willful wrongdoing. “I didn’t ever try to commit fraud,” he said, adding that a month prior he was “excited about the prospects” for FTX.

Failure of risk management 

Comments from Bankman-Fried come amid an ongoing bankruptcy proceeding for FTX, as authorities continue to investigate the nature of the relationship between Alameda Research and the now-capsized exchange.

Embroiled in the fallout of the defunct trading firm and exchange are users who cannot withdraw digital assets as well as a number of crypto lending platforms and companies with assets under the management of, or otherwise exposure to FTX and Alameda Research. The rapid decline of the companies also impacted wider digital asset markets, as some liken it to crypto’s version of Enron or the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

For his role in the matter, Bankman-Fried said he had not actively managed Alameda to avoid any potential conflict of interest, and failed to appoint administrative staff to manage risk. He said the same of his failure to put someone in charge of the positional risk of FTX customers.

The claim of faulty risk management as a credible excuse doesn’t appear to be cutting it for some. “He denied that he was involved with any criminal activity and tried to paint the picture that this fiasco was solely the result of poor risk management rather than outright fraud,” said Sam Callahan, a bitcoin analyst at Swan Bitcoin, adding that, from his perspective, Bankman-Fried “played the embarrassed, innocent, and clueless founder to perfection.”

Others were much kinder in their assessment. “Call me crazy, but I think SBF is telling the truth,” tweeted billionaire investor and Pershing Square Capital Management CEO Bill Ackman.

Before Bankman-Fried’s live interview, the New York Times’ Andrew Ross Sorkin spoke to a wide range of notable figures and respected business leaders including Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings and actor Ben Affleck.

Crypto’s Lehman moment

While Bankman-Fried granted live interviews to the New York Times and ABC News, FTX’s new chief executive John Ray told the company’s employees earlier this week that Bankman-Fried is not involved in day-to-day operations. Although he has been deposed as FTX’s leader, it is likely that Bankman-Fried is still the company’s largest shareholder despite accumulating losses of around $8 billion.

During her time on stage Yellen called the collapse of Bankman-Fried’s FTX “a Lehman moment” for the digital asset industry. “It’s a Lehman moment within crypto, and crypto is big enough that you’ve had substantial harm [to] investors…and that’s a very bad thing,” she said.

Besides Bankman-Fried saying that the largest number of those wronged by his actions were FTX customers, he also said that not only have those close to him been hurt, but that he had had a hard time coping as well. “I’ve had a bad month,” he said.

While the live audience laughed, on Twitter some users took offense. “It sounds so disconnected from reality, really disgusting to watch,” wrote Julien Bouteloup, founder and CEO at Stake Capital Group Julien Bouteloup.

Toward the end of the unusual live interview, the one-time toast of the crypto world was asked if he had been truthful with his answers. 

“I was as truthful as I, as, you know, I’m knowledgeable to be,” 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: Jeremy Nation and RT Watson

Coinbase shuffles APAC leadership, appoints new regional policy lead

Crypto exchange operator Coinbase today announced leadership changes in its Asia-Pacific team.

The San Francisco-based company said in a blog post that John O’Loghlen, who joined as country director for Australia from Ant Group in July, has taken on the additional role of regional managing director of APAC.

Nana Murugesan, VP of business development and international at Coinbase, said in a statement that O’Loghlen “will be tasked with leading the region with a more focused approach in 2023, while building for our long-term success.”

Coinbase also said it had hired Katie Mitchell as APAC head of policy to spearhead the company’s engagement with local regulators. Mitchell previously worked as global head of public policy and government engagement at Crypto.com, and prior to that spent a decade at Visa in policy-related roles based in Washington, D.C., and Asia-Pacific offices.

O’Loghlen is on the board of Blockchain Australia, the industry body, while Mitchell serves as an advisory board member to Emerging Payments Association Asia.

Meanwhile, APAC head of market operations Marc Robinson and Justin Choi, head of corporate development and ventures for APAC, have both left the company, according to people familiar with the matter. Both had been based in Singapore, where Coinbase was recently given in-principle approval by regulators to offer regulated digital payment token products and services.

Robinson joined in April this year from derivatives exchange Bitmex, where he had served as global head of custody. Before getting into crypto, Robinson spent more than a decade in banking — including a notable stint as head of high frequency trading product at JPMorgan Chase, according to his LinkedIn profile. Choi joined Coinbase roughly a year ago from CVC Capital Partners, the private equity firm, where he was a managing director focused on technology, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Robinson and Coinbase declined to comment. Choi did not immediately respond to request for comment.

As of October, Coinbase employed 100 people in Singapore, its regional hub. As of the same date, the company had invested in over 15 Singapore-based crypto startups.

© 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: Ryan Weeks

Bitcoin mining stock report: Wednesday, November 30

Most bitcoin mining stocks tracked by The Block rose alongside Bitcoin, which returned to the $17,000 level by market close, roughly a 3.6% increase from yesterday, according to data from TradingView.

BTCUSD Chart by TradingView

TeraWulf shares rose by 14.% today after falling by 7.9% yesterday. The firm made an operational update on Monday that outlined a 76% increase in self-mined bitcoin from September to October and new initiatives to cut its run-rate by 25% over the next 12 months.

The firm also announced that it was mining approximately 4.6 bitcoin per day, at a hash rate of approximately 2.0 EH/s. 

Argo Blockchain saw its shares fall by almost 13% on the London Stock Exchange, while Cipher Mining fell 12%.

Shares of Greenidge Generation Holdings rose today by 13%. 

Here’s how crypto mining companies performed on Wednesday, Nov. 30:

© 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: Sam Venis

Sam Bankman-Fried set to speak at New York Times event: A live look

Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire just collapsed. Now he wants to explain himself (again).

The former FTX CEO will soon speak publicly, 19 days after FTX filed for bankruptcy protection and Bankman-Fried resigned from his role at the company.

Bankman-Fried will appear at The New York Times’s DealBook summit. It’s the latest unusual move for an embattled ex-CEO who has made plenty of them. Bankman-Fried has posted on Twitter and spoken to several media outlets in the wake of the FTX crash, blaming himself for the collapse, throwing shade at regulators, suggesting he was a secret Republican megadonor and even saying he regrets filing for bankruptcy protection in the first place.

Stay with The Block for live coverage of Bankman-Fried’s appearance at the summit. We’ll be listening closely to Bankman-Fried’s comments — and even keeping a running count of how many times he says he’s sorry.

Take what Bankman-Fried says with a grain of salt: The executive who just took over at FTX says the firm’s situation is the worst he’s ever seen, and he cleaned up Enron’s epic bankruptcy.

© 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: Stephanie Murray, Nathan Crooks and RT Watson

Analyzing Founders Fund’s Crypto Portfolio

Quick Take

  • Founders Fund is a San Francisco-based venture capital firm founded in 2005 by Peter Thiel, Luke Nosek, Sean Parker, and Ken Howery
  • Founders Fund has made 42 investments in the crypto/blockchain sector while utilizing a diversified approach
  • In total, The Block has mapped out 33 unique companies across six categories that Founders Fund has invested in 

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: Edvinas Rupkus

Bitcoin trades over $17,000 following Powell’s speech, December decisions loom large

The Fed is likely to slow its rate increases in December, while upcoming inflation data and the first U.S. House committee hearing on the FTX collapse also loom large for markets. 

“It will take substantially more evidence to show that inflation is declining, as such inflation is still far too high,” Chair Powell said during his speech at the Brookings Institution today. The Fed will “stay the course until the job is done,” he said.

Chair Powell’s rhetoric showed signs of softening, as he appears to have changed tack slightly from Nov. 2, when he said the path to a soft landing “has narrowed over the course of the last year.”

Bitcoin whipsawed as Powell spoke. Before the speech at 1:00 p.m. EST, bitcoin was changing hands at $16,777, and ether was trading at $1,265 — both had dropped over 0.8% prior. Following the speech, prices moved higher.

Bitcoin was changing hands at $17,070 at 2:30 p.m. EST, up 1.7% in the hour since Powell’s speech. 

Last week the Fed released the minutes from its Nov. 1 and 2 meetings. The minutes showed a consensus to slow the pace of increases in the target range for the federal funds rate. “In addition, a substantial majority of participants judged that a slowing in the pace of increase would likely soon be appropriate,” it read

December decisions and data drops

Before Powell’s speech, the CME’s FedWatch tool was pricing in a 65% chance of a 50 basis point increase at the Dec. 14 meeting. The tool measures the likelihood of the Fed’s next interest rate change, as implied by 30-day fed funds futures pricing data.

Following the meeting, this rose to 77%, showing traders are now more convinced of a 50 basis point increase after the speech, instead of the more aggressive 75 basis point hikes the Fed engaged in earlier this year. The probability had narrowed week-on-week, from 75% on Nov. 23 to 66% on Nov. 29.

Beyond the interest rate decision, December also brings new inflation data. U.S. inflation data for November will drop on Dec. 13.

In its latest market update, crypto trading firm QCP Digital said this poses an upcoming risk to crypto markets. The firm added that the first U.S. House Financial Services Committee hearing on FTX is also a potential risk. 

© 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

SCB 10X opens new web3 collaborative space in Bangkok: Exclusive

SCB 10X — the venture unit within Thailand’s oldest bank group, Siam Commercial Bank (SCB) group — opened a a 10,000-square-foot web3 collaborative space in Bangkok.

Called DistrictX, the space consists of two areas — hacker house and exponential hub — SCB 10X said. The hacker house includes a six-month incubation program in which SCB 10X will recruit developers and entrepreneurs to build web3 startups and create potential unicorns. The exponential hub is a co-working space for SCB 10X’s partners, which include Fireblocks, Nansen, The Sandbox and RakkaR Digital.

The news comes as support for digital asset projects has become scarce, and shows the company’s belief and commitment to the industry. Venture funding in the industry tumbled roughly 35% in the third quarter from the previous one, according to The Block Research.

“Collaboration is key during this bear market,” Mukaya (Tai) Panich, CEO at SCB 10X, told The Block. “It’s important now more than ever to remember that developers — not traders — are the people who are powering this industry and moving it forward. We have always been big supporters of the builder community and believe it’s mission critical to nurture and grow the resources that they are able to access.”

DistrictX had been under development since April, Panich said. She declined to comment on how much SCB 10X spent.

SCB 10X plans to incubate six startups by the first half of 2023, said Panich, adding that the firm is interested in areas such as web3 infrastructure, DeFi and gaming or metaverse.

As for DistrictX’s co-working space, Panich said it is fully occupied by SCB 10X’s portfolio companies and partners, but it can be expanded to other firms in the future. The co-working space’s prices are competitive compared to other co-working spaces, Panich said.

SCB 10X was established in 2020 with a “moonshot mission” to achieve growth through technology innovation and investment. DistrictX will host “moonshot meetup,” a bi-monthly workshop to engage community by sharing knowledge and building projects.

© 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: Yogita Khatri

Telegram sells usernames worth $50 million on the Open Network blockchain

In slightly less than one month, Telegram has sold $50 million usernames on The Open Network, a blockchain that the company developed, Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov claimed. 

Last month, Telegram in October gave users the ability to buy usernames for its app via a blockchain-based platform called Fragment. The platform lets interested parties buy available usernames and secure ownership on its “The Open Network” blockchain, known as TON.

When buying a name, users pay with the TON cryptocurrency, the native asset of the network. In the last four weeks, Fragment sales surpassed $50 million, Durov said in a Telegram message. Some individual Telegram usernames have brought in large sums of money on Fragment. For example, the username @news was auctioned for 994,000 TON, about $1.7 million, per data from the official website.

Durov said that in future Fragment will expand beyond usernames and build a host of blockchain tools for Telegram including crypto wallets and decentralized exchanges. Such services may be accessed from within the Telegram app, Durov suggested.

“Telegram’s next step is to build a set of decentralized tools, including non-custodial wallets and decentralized exchanges for millions of people to securely trade and store cryptocurrencies,” Durov 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: Vishal Chawla


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