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Blockchain.com raises fresh capital in round led by Kingsway Capital: Bloomberg

Blockchain.com raised an undisclosed amount of additional capital in a round led by UK-based investment firm Kingsway Capital, Bloomberg reported.

While the company didn’t disclose the total amount, Blockchain.com said that the deal closed sometime during the third quarter and also included Baillie Gifford and Lightspeed Venture Partners as investors.

Blockchain.com was valued at $14 billion earlier this year in a Series D funding round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners.

The crypto company provides services ranging from trading to lending and custody. Just recently, it gained Singapore’s approval to offer payment services. Founded in 2011, it is also one of the oldest in crypto.

The firm had significant exposure to Three Arrows Capital, having lent out $270 million before the hedge fund collapsed.

“Three Arrows is rapidly becoming insolvent and the default impact is approximately $270 million worth of cryptocurrency and US dollar loans from Blockchain.com,” said a shareholder letter written by Blockchain.com CEO Peter Smith in July.

© 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: Catarina Moura

xNFTs: The Dark Horse Of Mass Adoption

Quick Take

  • Mass adoption of web3 has often been deemed a pipe dream due to inherent user experience flaws.
  • XNFTs are trying to address this issue by means of a one-stop shop for digital assets.
  • In essence, xNFTs are decentralized applications that are natively embedded in an operating system.
  • Although still being a germinal idea, xNFTs are emerging as a versatile primitive that appears promising.

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Author: Thomas Bialek

Fed governor says the U.S. doesn’t need a digital dollar

At least one governor of the Federal Reserve Board is a hard no on a digital dollar.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller threw the coldest of waters on the prospect of a Fed-issued digital currency during a speech on Friday that reiterated and expanded upon his opposition to the idea.

“The factors supporting the primacy of the dollar are not technological, but include the ample supply and liquid market for U.S. Treasury securities and other debt and the long-standing stability of the U.S. economy and political system,” Waller said in prepared remarks delivered at Harvard University. “No other country is fully comparable with the United States on those fronts, and a CBDC would not change that.”

Waller elaborated that he is skeptical of arguments put forward by CBDC advocates that a digital dollar would address fraud, theft and money laundering or improve payments more than existing technologies.

“Meaningful efforts are underway at the international level to improve cross-border payments in many ways, with the vast majority of these improvements coming not from CBDCs but improvements to existing payment systems,” said Waller.

Discussions around a U.S. CBDC began in earnest after China started experimenting with a digital yuan. But the Fed governor cast doubt on a foreign CBDC supplanting the U.S. dollar’s global reserve currency status, an argument put forward in support of a digital dollar.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell and Vice Chair Lael Brainard have also begun publicly putting brakes on the possibility of a U.S. CBDC happening anytime soon

Even if a foreign CBDC takes off, Waller said, the effects of companies using it, “will likely only be on the margin because they rely on a large enough number of individuals and businesses being nearly indifferent between the dollar and the foreign currency in CBDC form.”

Waller sees privately-issued stablecoins strengthening, rather than weakening, the dollar, since so many are pegged to the world’s dominant fiat currency. The Fed governor argued that “they may increase rather than reduce the primacy of the dollar abroad, since demand for stablecoins increases demand for dollar-denominated reserve assets held by the stablecoin issuer.”

The new payments technology must also be, “risk-managed and subject to a robust supervisory and regulatory framework,” said Waller, echoing similar warnings from the Financial Stability Oversight Council, the American super committee of financial regulators, and the Financial Stability Board, an international advisory consortium for central bankers and other senior officials.

Negotiations continue over stablecoins legislation in Congress, though the lead Republican negotiator, Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., told The Block earlier this week that the Biden administration is holding up progress on the bill.

© 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

Stronghold ends Northern Data hosting deal in an effort improve ‘operational control’ and liquidity

Bitcoin miner Stronghold has terminated a hosting deal with Northern Data and agreed to pay the firm a total of $4.5 million.

Stronghold believes that this settlement will save the company between $500,000 to $1.1 million in profit share payments per month through 2023 based on certain mining economics and that it will improve cash flow by around $7 to $20 million until Sept. 2024, it said in a document filed Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The deal eliminates the $2.6 million that Stronghold had to pay Northern Data and gives it the right to operate about 50 megawatts of power capacity from Northern Data’s modular data center for two years at a cost of $1,000 per year. At the end of that period, Stronghold has the option to buy the containers for $2 million to $6 million, again based on mining economics at the time.

The deal will give Stronghold more “operational control” of its bitcoin business while improving cash flow generation over the next two years, according to co-chairman and CEO Greg Beard.

“Overall, we believe that we continue to make significant progress towards improving our balance sheet, liquidity and cost structure to deliver shareholder value,” Beard said.

The company recently announced a deal to eliminate $67.4 million in outstanding debt with NYDIG by returning about 26,200 mining machines, while also restructuring a loan with WhiteHawk and adding up to $20 million of additional borrowing capacity. So far, it has paid down $65.3 million of the loan, with around $2 million remaining

Stronghold said in August that it would be shifting focus towards selling power from its two waste coal plants in Pennsylvania and away from mining bitcoin with it for the foreseeable future, citing the decline of bitcoin’s value and rise in power prices as factors.

“These closings continue our meaningful transition towards a deleveraged company that can either sell power to the grid or use its low cost self-generated power to mine for Bitcoin,” said Beard.

Stronghold said that the 26,000 miners it returned to NYDIG would go for around $40 million or less in the current market — significantly below the $67 million in debt that they reduced.

© 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: Catarina Moura

Mango Markets community set to approve $47 million deal with hacker

The Mango Markets community is voting heavily in favor of making a deal with the hacker who stole $114 million from its DeFi protocol.

Under the terms of the offered deal, the hacker will return roughly $67 million of the tokens and keep the remaining $47 million as a bug bounty. The governance vote also states that the project will use treasury funds to write off any remaining bad debt and won’t pursue criminal investigations once the portion of tokens is returned.

The governance vote has 119 million tokens voting in favor of it and 4.6 million against the deal. The vote has achieved quorum, meaning it will likely pass when the vote ends early on Oct. 15. 

This governance vote was created by the Mango Markets team and the hacker doesn’t appear to have voted on it from the main wallets associated with the attack. Prior to this vote, the hacker had originally created a governance vote and voted on it with 33 million of the stolen tokens.

Per the deal, the hacker would also send back some of the tokens shortly after the vote opened as a “show of good faith.” According to on-chain data, those tokens — worth just shy of $8 million — have been returned.

If the bug bounty is accepted it would be one of the largest bug bounties in crypto history, as noted by The Block Research. That said, it’s unclear whether the agreement will be legally binding in terms of not seeking criminal prosecution.

Mango Markets is a trading and lending platform on Solana. The exploit took place due to manipulation of the price of Mango Market’s native MANGO token. This occurred through the manipulation of blockchain oracles, which provide blockchains with token price data.

The hack was the sixth-largest DeFi exploit in history, falling just behind Cream Finance’s $130 million hack.

 

© 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: Tim Copeland

Nexo once again extends due diligence period on potential Vauld deal

Crypto lender Nexo has again extended the due diligence period to decide on its potential acquisition of Vauld, an embattled rival, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told The Block.

Nexo initially signed a 60-day exclusive due diligence agreement with Vauld on July 5, a day after Vauld halted client withdrawals. That agreement was extended by 30 days last month and it expired last week.

Now the new extension would be “as long as needed,” the person said, adding that Nexo is “cautiously optimistic” about the potential deal after meeting Vauld’s executives in Singapore.

Last week, Nexo co-founder Kalin Metodiev said in an ask-me-anything session that the due diligence period has been extended, without providing a specific timeline. Metodiev said “any distressed transaction is not easy” and that Nexo is hopeful for a win-win situation.

“I’m happy to say that our conversations at the executive level at Vauld have been going very well,” said Metodiev. “We feel that we see this path forward in a very similar way that not only we care about how we can help people recover their losses immediately, we also have a plan for how this can happen over a more extended period of time.”

Metodiev went on to say that the ultimate plan if the deal goes through is to let Vauld users have their balances restored to the largest possible extent and provide them with the Nexo platform where they can find a new home. “Hopefully it’s a win-win situation for everybody in the long term,” he said.

While Nexo could theoretically take as long as it needs to decide on the Vauld deal, it will be limited by court timelines.

Vauld has until Nov. 7 to decide its path forward, having received three months from the Singapore High Court in August to continue exploring its options. After that date, Vauld could be forced into liquidation unless the court grants another extension.

Vauld owes $402 million to creditors, as The Block has reported previously. Of that sum, $363 million — or 90% — comes from individual retail investors’ deposits.

If the Nexo deal doesn’t happen, Vauld has said it has other plans, including raising more capital, waiting for some of its deployed money to be returned, converting debt to equity and issuing its own token. 

Vauld did not respond to a request for comment. 

© 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

Gensler supports granting CFTC more power over spot markets

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission just gained a powerful ally in its push for authority over crypto spot markets.  

Speaking at an event at Georgetown University, Securites and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler endorsed the idea of Congress granting more direct authority over certain tokens to the U.S. commodities regulator, which he used to chair. 

“I think the CFTC could well have greater authorities. They currently do not have direct regulatory authorities over the underlying non-security tokens,” Gensler told an audience for Georgetown University’s Financial Markets Quality Conference in Washington. 

The CFTC itself has pushed for direct authority over digital assets that the U.S. classifies as commodities. Those currently consist of bitcoin and ether, the two largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, though Gensler suggested last month that the latter could be a security.

In remarks today he added that, “you can count on the fingers of a hand or two,” the projects that don’t fall under the SEC’s jurisdiction. 

Gensler’s support for broadening the CFTC’s authority follows a recommendation from the Financial Stability Oversight Council, a super committee of U.S. regulators, which also made the recommendation in a unanimous vote. Gensler sits on that panel. 

© 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

UK’s Financial Conduct Authority names new digital assets head: Exclusive

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the UK’s financial regulatory body, has appointed Binu Paul, the former fintech specialist lead from the Financial Markets Authority (FMA) in New Zealand, as its head of digital assets.

Paul announced his leave from the FMA on Sept. 11 after a two-year role leading efforts to support innovation in New Zealand’s financial services sector. Previously, he managed the FMA’s intelligence team, with an earlier career in investment and portfolio management.

Paul takes the place of Victoria McLoughlin, who has held the fort as the interim head of digital assets since April.

The FCA currently has 56 crypto firms on its official register. Its current licensing process for crypto is based on compliance to strict anti-money laundering requirements. The cumbersome and lengthy procedure previously caused some companies to give up on the prospect and seek approval in other jurisdictions. 

The financial regulator is seeking ways to encourage regulated innovation through programs such as the Regulatory Sandbox, a testing ground for fintech proposals, and Innovative Pathways, a springboard for innovative financial products.

Elsewhere in the UK, legislation outlined in the Financial Services and Markets bill may allow stablecoins to be used as payments in the country in the future. 

© 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

Law firm Roche Freedman removed from suit against Tether and Bitfinex: Bloomberg

A U.S. judge removed law firm Roche Freedman from its plaintiff representation in a lawsuit against crypto exchange Bitfinex and stablecoin issuer Tether after accusations of market manipulation, according to a report by Bloomberg Law.  

The move follows a series of condemning videos published in August on Crypto Leaks, a whistleblower website, that accuse founding partner Kyle Roche of weaponizing litigation.

The hearing on Thursday confirmed that Roche Freedman would need to be removed or else it could derail the lawsuit’s litigation process, Bloomberg Law saidKyle Roche had already withdrawn from the Tether class action in late August following the leaked videos.  

Roche Freedman initiated the class action against Bitfinex and Tether in 2019, alleging over $1.4 trillion in damages suffered by plaintiffs. The suit claims a “sophisticated scheme” that defrauded investors, manipulated markets and concealed illicit proceeds.

Bitfinex and Tether took action to end Roche Freedman’s participation in the case due to concerns about the firm’s motivations, Bloomberg reported.

Roche Freedman didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Block.

© 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

Budweiser turns scoreboards into NFTs for FIFA World Cup

Beer giant Budweiser’s latest NFT collection will feature live scoreboards for the upcoming FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

Minting 10 a.m. ET today, the Budverse x FIFAWorldCup Live Scoreboard NFT Collection allows buyers to select the country they wish to follow and mint a scoreboard that will track its progress throughout the competition.

Minters can also claim a World Cup starter kit, access a holders-only Discord and mini-game, as well as win a trip to the FIFA world cup finals in Doha.

The company has ramped up its web3 offerings over the past year. Budweiser has 12 other NFT collections listed on OpenSea, 11 belonging to its Royalty series of collaborations with up-and-coming musicians, as well as its first collection, Budverse Cans Heritage Edition. 

The company launched the latter as its first NFT collection last November. With a current floor price of 0.34 ETH, this latest mint is providing some extra utility for holders of the collection: They will be able to claim a free scoreboard NFT. 

Budverse Cans sales data via OpenSea

Budverse Cans sales data. Source: OpenSea

Budweiser isn’t the only beverage that has gotten into NFTs. Pepsi released its Mic Drop NFTs in December. Bud Light, which like Budweiser is owned by Anheuser-Busch, launched its first collection in January.

The FIFA World Cup kicks off in Qatar’s capital Doha on Nov. 20.

© 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


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