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UK financial regulator unveils stronger ad restrictions — with crypto rules set to follow

The UK’s financial regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), finalized stronger rules today to help combat misleading adverts related to high-risk investment products, according to a press release. 

The new rules, however, will not apply to the promotions of cryptoassets. 

Instead, the FCA is awaiting the UK government to confirm in legislation how crypto marketing will be brought under the FCA’s remit, the press release said. 

In January, the UK government announced plans to tighten rules around crypto advertising and bring crypto marketing within the FCA’s remit. 

Once this is confirmed in legislation, the FCA will publish final rules on the promotion of “qualifying cryptoassets.”

These rules are likely to follow the same approach as those for other high-risk investments,” the press release said. “Crypto remains high risk so people need to be prepared to lose all their money if they choose to invest in cryptoassets.” 

The stronger rules for high-risk investments require the firms that are approving and issuing marketing to have the appropriate expertise. In some cases, they will also need to conduct checks to ensure consumers and their investments are well matched. 

Certain investment incentives, such as “refer a friend bonuses,” will be banned and firms will need to use clearer and more prominent risk warnings. 

“Our new simplified risk warnings are designed to help consumers better understand the risks, albeit firms have a significant role to play too,” Sarah Pritchard, executive director of markets at the FCA, said in the release.  

“Where we see products being marketed that don’t contain the right risk warnings or are unclear, unfair or misleading, we will act,” she added. 

© 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: Kari McMahon

Talos co-founders believe crypto will bounce back stronger than ever

Episode 71 of Season 4 of The Scoop was recorded remotely with The Block’s Frank Chaparro, and Talos Co-Founders Ethan Feldman and Anton Katz.

Listen below, and subscribe to The Scoop on AppleSpotifyGoogle PodcastsStitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts. Email feedback and revision requests to podcast@theblockcrypto.com.


Earlier this year, crypto infrastructure provider Talos closed a $105 million Series B for a valuation of $1.25 billion.

In this episode of The Scoop, Talos cofounders Ethan Feldman and Anton Katz provide insider perspectives on how institutions have been positioning themselves during the crypto market’s recent upheaval, and why they believe the industry will rebound stronger than ever before.

As Katz points out during the interview, the more market participants think about risk, the more stable the industry will become:

“I think a lot of people are revising how they’re thinking about risk… So overall, I think what we’re going to see is actually we’re going to see a much more robust, much safer credit market emerge as a result of this.”

In addition to firms beefing up internal risk management, the Talos co-founders also believe regulation will also play a major role in helping the crypto ecosystem grow.

According to Feldman:

“Regulation is an enabler to some extent, right? This is what’s going to enable the bigger institutions in the world to actually trade spot crypto.”

During this episode, Chaparro, Feldman, and Katz also discuss:

  • How banks are looking to enter the space
  • Why crypto is a more efficient capital market system
  • The upside of the cyclical nature of crypto

This episode is brought to you by our sponsors Chainalysis & IWC Schaffhausen

About Chainalysis
Chainalysis is the leading blockchain data platform. We provide data, software, services, and research to government agencies, exchanges, financial institutions, and insurance and cybersecurity companies in over 60 countries. Backed by Accel, Addition, Benchmark, Coatue, Paradigm, Ribbit, and other leading firms in venture capital, Chainalysis builds trust in blockchains to promote more financial freedom with less risk. For more information, visit www.chainalysis.com.

About IWC Schaffhausen
IWC Schaffhausen is a Swiss luxury watch manufacturer based in Schaffhausen, Switzerland. Known for its unique engineering approach to watchmaking, IWC combines the best of human craftsmanship and creativity with cutting-edge technology and processes. With collections like the Portugieser and the Pilot’s Watches, the brand covers the whole spectrum from elegant timepieces to sports watches. For more information, visit IWC.com

© 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: Davis Quinton and Frank Chaparro

Lime, Salesforce do not have partnerships with Helium: Mashable, The Verge

Decentralized wireless network company Helium does not have partnerships with two well-known firms whose logos it prominently featured on its website, based on two separate reports from Mashable and The Verge.

While Helium had displayed the Lime and Salesforce logos on its website until Friday, the articles indicate that neither company is currently using its technology. 

Helium is the company behind the Helium Network, which its FAQ page describes as a “global, distributed network of hotspots that create public, long-range wireless coverage for Internet of Things (IoT) devices.” Helium has its own blockchain and native token called HNT, which hotspot owners can earn for tasks like validating coverage. Axios reported in February that Helium raised a $200 million Series D round at a $1.2 billion valuation, with Tiger Global and FTX Ventures joining as new investors.

 Mashable first reported on Friday that a highly-publicized relationship between Helium and transportation company Lime does not exist, despite Helium making “numerous mentions of this partnership on its website” and featuring the Lime logo. 

Lime is best known for offering electric scooters and bikes for rent through its smartphone application. Helium claimed for years that Lime was using its technology for geolocation, Mashable reported. 

But a Lime spokesperson told Mashable that it hasn’t had any contact with Helium since a brief, initial test in the summer 2019. Lime had also asked Helium not to use their name in promotional material as a condition of that trial, he told the tech news outlet. 

Lime has not taken legal action against Helium, but it appears it could soon. 

“Now, however, Mashable has learned that Lime is preparing to send a cease and desist to Helium over its use of Lime’s name and logo on its website, and in its marketing,” Mashable reported.

In a follow-up article posted later on Friday, The Verge separately reported that Salesforce was not using Helium’s technology either. 

“Now, Salesforce, whose logo appeared on Helium’s website right next to Lime’s, says that it also doesn’t use the technology,” The Verge wrote. A Salesforce spokesperson told The Verge that “Helium is not a Salesforce partner” and that the graphic with the logo was not accurate. 

The article featured a graphic pulled from Helium’s website, showing the words “Helium is used by” followed by a list of logos from companies including Lime and Salesforce.

Helium’s website still shows a list of 12 logos from various entities, but no longer lists Lime or Salesforce as customers. It removed Salesforce and Lime from the lineup sometime at the end of the business day on Friday, according to The Verge. 

Axios reported Helium’s raise and valuation not long after the New York Times featured the company in a February 6 article. Axios also named Khosla Ventures, GV, Multicoin Capital, Munich Re Ventures and FirstMark Capital as existing investors in the company. Helium declined to comment on that raise when The Block reached out.

An email to Helium’s media inbox was not returned by press time. 

 

© 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: Kristin Majcher

Hedge funds are pouring into ether derivatives ahead of the merge

Ether-based derivatives are heating up as large traders increasingly speculate on the cryptocurrency’s upcoming transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake.

Aggregate open interest of ether options across top-tier exchanges increased from $2.74 billion on July 2 to more than $7 billion on July 29. It currently stands at $5.9 billion. Open interest indicates the value of all outstanding contracts that have yet to settle.

Meanwhile, aggregate open interest of ether futures hit $7.58 billion on July 30, an increase from $4.71 billion on July 2. 

Joshua Lim, head of derivatives at Genesis Global Trading, told The Block that the surge in activity is tied to macro hedge funds positioning themselves ahead of the so-called ethereum “merge.” This term refers to the network’s transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake. 

Ether has seen its price pick up in anticipation of the merge, with the price of Ethereum’s native token rising 59% over the last one-month period. The merge is expected to occur in September.  

“A more recent phenomenon has been the popularity of low-premium options structures in ETH from macro-discretionary hedge funds positioning for the merge,” he wrote. “A common structure might be a call butterfly that pays off if ETH/USD finishes in December 2022 around $3000 spot price. These longer maturity, multi-leg structures are inflating the open interest in ETH options.”

These strategies are more complex and require traders to trade more derivatives, which impacts volumes and open interest. A so-called call butterfly, for instance, involves two short call options and twice the number of the one long call option. 

“Ether options [open interest] market sense just because everyone is speculating on the merge,” another institutional trader told The Block. 

Indeed, aggregate open interest across ether options is larger than aggregate open interest of bitcoin options markets, with open interest in the latter asset standing at $5.1 billion. 

The activity in ether’s derivatives market is striking given the more sanguine bitcoin derivatives market, which has seen the ratio of spot trading volumes and futures volumes surge. That indicates activity in bitcoin trading has moved into trading of the underlying asset versus futures. 

 

The opposite phenomenon is happening in ether. 

 

© 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: Frank Chaparro

Dragonfly Capital leads $3.5 million seed round for Debt DAO

Crypto-focused investment firm Dragonfly Capital led a $3.5 million seed round for crypto credit protocol Debt DAO, according to a press released shared with The Block.

Debt DAO provides revenue-based financing for “cryptonative entities,” which includes DAOs and protocols. It does this through a smart contract called “Spigot,” which the company says “can secure borrower’s on-chain cash flows to automatically repay lenders.”

GSR, Numeus, and Fasanara Capital also participated in the round. Six angel investors also backed the project in the new financing round, including former Coinbase CTO Balaji Srinivasan, TrueFi’s Ryan Rodenbaugh and Chainlink Labs’ David Post.

“Right now, debt is one of the big missing pieces from the DeFi universes, and Debt DAO is one of the strongest teams in this space tackling that problem” Dragonfly Capital general partner Haseeb Qureshi said in a statement. “As on-chain organizations and cash flows proliferate, revenue-generating DAOs will no longer need to sell off their native tokens for working capital. Debt DAO will pull the entire DAO financing ecosystem forward.”

Dragonfly Capital closed its third venture fund in May, coming in at an oversubscribed $650 million. In an announcement, it listed DeFi, DAOs  NFTs and scaling smart contracts among its main focus areas. 

© 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: Kristin Majcher

Tiffany & Co. announces NFT-backed, limited edition CryptoPunk pendants

Luxury jewellery firm Tiffany & Co. is set to sell non-fungible tokens (NFT), which give CryptoPunk holders the right to turn their NFT into a custom pendant, containing gemstones and diamonds.

The 250 tokens are part of a limited edition campaign, the company announced on Sunday.

The campaign was prompted by the company’s vice president Alexandre Arnault, who owns CryptoPunk #3167, turning his NFT into a pendant which he shared on social media in early April.

CryptoPunk holders will be able to purchase one of 250 NFTiff passes powered by blockchain solutions company Chain from Tiffany, with a maximum of three per person, which will enable them to mint a custom pendant based on their CryptoPunk.

Each NFTiff will cost 30 ETH, which includes the cost of the NFT, the custom pendant, the chain and shipping and handling.

Chain CEO Deepak Thapliyal trailed the move on his social media earlier in the month. 

NFTiffs

The company said Tiffany’s designers will work with the 87 attributes and 159 colors that appear across the collection of 10,000 CryptoPunk NFTs to match with the most similar gemstone or enamel color. 

Each pendant will include a minimum of 30 gemstones and diamonds, and feature an engraving of the CryptoPunk’s edition number on the back. Owners will also receive a digital rendering of the pendant and a certificate of authenticity.

The sale for the NFTiff will begin on August 5, 2022 at 10:00AM EST for eligible users.

With this move, Tiffany & Co has joined the slew of luxury fashion houses attempting to establish a foothold in the web3 world and engage with a new generation of customers. As an April Fools joke it announced the launch of TiffCoin, which it then turned into an actual limited-edition gold coin.

© 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

Crypto prices continue to tick upward as recession fears grow: the week in markets

Crypto prices continued to rally over the past week while the global macroeconomic environment was worsening.

At the time of writing, bitcoin was trading at $23,739, down 3.1% over the past 24 hours, while ether was at $1,709 according to CoinGecko. Still, both cryptocurrencies were up significantly over the past seven days – ether rose 10%, while bitcoin gained just over 5%.

Prices had contracted earlier in the week as crypto’s global market cap dipped below $1 trillion ahead of the US Federal Reserve’s decision on interest rates.

After the decision to raise rates by 75 basis points, prices recovered to trend upward, and Thursday’s GDP report — in which the US revealed that the economy had declined in the second quarter — was followed by further positive price movement. 

Here’s what key players had to say about this week’s price action and what to watch for next week:  

Crypto is in a ‘bizarre no-man’s-land’

Cumberland shared its view of the market on Tuesday, saying that digital assets were in a “bizarre no-man’s-land” following liquidations in June and impending macroeconomic and crypto-fundamental catalysts coming down the line.  

The Chicago-based firm said that other than ethereum’s forthcoming merge, most crypto fundamentals on the horizon are linked to legal and regulatory decisions. However, stablecoin legislation will most likely be delayed for several months, during which the Securities and Exchange Commission’s ongoing actions will play a role.  

Cumberland’s head of trading, Jonah Van Bourg, concluded his thread by saying that “when the macro fog dissipates, capital will pile quickly into the best new trades that emerge. We continue to believe that digital assets will be among the most exciting of these emergent theses.” 

The “macro fog” was a reference to turbulent macroeconomic factors around the globe, from US monetary policy debates to the war in Europe to how countries handle the post-pandemic shift.  

Market maker QCP Capital said in its update that it expects markets to trade sideways in the coming weeks, with the Fed’s interest-rate decision out of the way and inflation slowing. 

However, it did note that US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s Asia tour may be cause for concern. Pelosi had planned to visit Taiwan during her tour, which could cause an escalation in US-China tensions.

Earnings season ramping up 

The biggest earnings news in crypto came from Tesla selling $936 million worth of bitcoin and Meta revealing further losses in its metaverse division.

Here’s more earnings to keep an eye on this week:

Tuesday’s schedule contains a plethora of reports, with Coinshares, MicroStrategy and PayPal being of particular interest to crypto investors. The next day, Robinhood — which has been trading publicly for about a year — will share its earnings, even as Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest recently sold just over half a million dollars’ worth of HOOD shares.  

Tesla will be back in focus later in the week when it holds its annual general meeting. CEO Elon Musk has been in and out of the news all summer since having a bid to buy Twitter accepted, only to attempt to renege on the deal. Crypto investors might also be interested to hear more about why the company sold digital assets and its future plans for any potential crypto payments. 

© 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

An expert explains what is — and isn’t — the metaverse

Dozens of different definitions have been posed for the metaverse. 

Tim McSweeney, CEO of Epic Games, called it “real time 3D entertainment experiences that are social,” while Meta’s president of global affairs Nick Clegg said “it will be a constellation of technologies, platforms and products.”

The murky definition of the term hasn’t stymied the influx of capital pouring into metaverse development projects or even luxury brands like LVMH eyeing the space. And the famous non-fungible token (NFT) project Bored Ape Yacht Club has attempted to launch a metaverse of its own called Otherside. 

In order to help nail down what exactly the “metaverse” is, The Block sat down with Matt Ball, author of a new book: The Metaverse: And How it Will Revolutionize Everything.

Ball has been writing essays analyzing the metaverse’s development since 2019. He was the former global head of strategy for Amazon Studios and is currently the managing partner for EpyllionCo, a venture capital and media production firm funding web2 and web3 projects.  

This interview was edited for length and clarity. 

What got you interested in reporting on the metaverse? 

I’ve been familiar with the term and the many early efforts to build it for a few decades. But it was really my experiences playing a lot of Fortnite and building on the Roblox platform in 2018 that made me feel that this long-considered fantastical idea was starting to become a practical opportunity. The move was a reflection of technological progression, yes, but also a cultural shift.  

Over the following years, we saw more and more affirmation of the fact that as virtual worlds became more popular, the experiences we could produce improved, and the cultural impact expanded. 

Then through last year, predating my decision to start the book but running through it, was also the first time in which hundreds of billions of dollars were being spent on purely virtual goods — beyond just the typical users who had been in virtual worlds for decades. 

As we move closer to defining what is the metaverse, tell me what isn’t the metaverse as you envision it? 

Let me start by putting the internet in context. The internet is composed of dozens of different protocols in Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). It reaches nearly every country globally and maintains millions of interconnected applications, hundreds of millions of servers, billions of websites and tens of billions of devices. 

We can literally discuss the internet as a dozen or so underlying protocols that make up TCP/IP. But what we really mean is the ecosystem that reaches nearly every person and part of the global economy today.  

And so, that’s a good way to discuss the question of what is not the metaverse. The metaverse, to me, is a unified experience or tech stack akin to the internet — but supporting 3D.  

And therefore, I would not say that Roblox is a metaverse, that the Sandbox is a metaverse, that Otherside is a metaverse. I would describe them as we do virtual or digital platforms, ecosystems and hardware today. We don’t say the Google internet, we don’t say the Facebook internet. They are parts of it, they connect to applications devices in it.  

In that regard, I would not say that web3 or blockchains are the metaverse either. In fact, there are many who come up with a plausible argument as to why they’re not even necessary for the metaverse. And that’s because we are talking about philosophies and or technologies that are not strict requirements to build a 3D version of the internet. But that does not mean they’re not instrumental in its nature.  

What exactly is technologically realizable may depend on blockchain. But separate from what’s realizable is the question of what is desirable. 

And so, this is where we get into the questions of property rights, the distribution of power and profits, the strength of the individual developer versus the platforms it depended upon. That’s not a technical requirement. I would never conflate that with the metaverse at large, but that isn’t to diminish its potential. 

Now that we’ve described what the metaverse is not, tell me what you think it is?  

I described earlier what makes up the internet; the internet today is primarily a 2D network. We don’t have an ability for different 3D experiences to find one another on the internet. And so we think of the metaverse as a 3D elevation of the internet to support 3D immersion.  

But then on top of that, we talked about it as being synchronous — we can all co-experience it live. Think about how hard a video call is today. We talked about it being persistent: it has memory. What you do endures. We talked about it being built upon interoperability. 

The internet doesn’t always work that way, but that we have the underpinnings for them. And then in a simplified sense, what I’m describing for the metaverse is a parallel plane of existence in virtual space. 

Why is that 3D elevation necessary? 

It’s a good question, for which we can’t falsify one way or another. What we can do is the following: recognize the ways in which changes in the attributes I mentioned earlier, have improved and enhanced and onboarded millions more to the internet over the past several decades.  

The internet was text based — not even colored text. Then it did have text and it had identity in the form of message board usernames or email addresses. We slowly started to individually have space on the internet, in the form of a blog, but that blog was infrequently, asynchronously updated with limited visuals. Then we all had a presence through a profile; we started to express our lives there. 

So there’s one argument that just says let’s look at that trajectory toward richer media more frequently reaching more people living the same shared experience, for which Discord or Zoom would be a good example.  

The second argument is to recognize the many areas in which 3D experiences are more intuitive. And this can be put in the context of humanity. We didn’t evolve for thousands of years to tap a flat piece of glass to interact with the world and information around us. We’re experiential, we’re tactile. You don’t teach a second grader math by saying one plus one equals two. You hand them objects.

So certainly when we take a look at healthcare, infrastructure and education, we can see clearly how 3D does improve those fields.  

Blockchain and crypto could be some of the tools that the metaverse employs, but you say they are not necessary for the metaverse to exist. Could you expand upon blockchain’s role in this space? 

You’ll see two primary arguments for its inclusion. Number one is to the extent one believes in interoperable assets, the challenge has always been what are the standards and how do you onboard the ecosystem to it? In simple terms, Publisher A does not want to use the system designed by Publisher B, especially if Publisher B operates it. 

In crypto, there is an argument that there is a system consumers use and is lucrative, and not only does their competitor not own and operate it, but no one does. 

But the second argument insists that decentralized technology can help keep the metaverse healthy.  

Tim Sweeney, the founder and CEO of Epic Games has tweeted that crypto and NFTs seemed like the most plausible path to a metaverse that is open and where individuals own their data. That’s not technically a requirement, but to combat an internet that exists in centralized, non-democratic regimes. 

The metaverse that we think will thrive, that will be best, that has the most benefits to society in the least adverse effects, requires decentralized strength. The best way to do that is to find the means through which trillion-dollar corporations can be competed with by tapping into the many trillions more that are individually owned, for which blockchain is proving itself a potential solution. 

© 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

Aave DAO votes to approve creation of GHO stablecoin

Aave DAO, the governance body for the Aave DeFi protocol, voted in support of a proposal to create a stablecoin called GHO.

The Snapshot vote, which ended today at 06:00 a.m. EDT, passed with almost unanimous approval from the DAO. Data from the voting page shows DAO members with a total of 501,000 AAVE tokens were in favor of the proposal. This amounted to 99.99% of the total votes cast during the three-day polls.

With the vote passed, the next step will be to implement the creation of the GHO stablecoin via a new Aave improvement protocol (AIP). The DAO will be in charge of administering the stablecoin upon its creation.

Aave users looking to mint GHO can do so by supplying any of the crypto tokens accepted as collateral on the platform. Apart from acting as collateral, these deposits will also earn yield on Aave. The protocol will charge interest on GHO stablecoin loans taken by borrowers.

Aave plans for GHO to function as an overcollateralized stablecoin similar to MakerDAO’s dai (DAI). This means that the value of crypto deposited will exceed the amount of GHO tokens minted. Aave founder Stani Kulechov previously said that the project will look to drive organic adoption for GHO on Ethereum’s Layer 2.

By creating a stablecoin, Aave is set to join a select group of DeFi stablecoin issuers alongside MakerDAO. This list might soon include Curve Finance, another DeFi primitive, based on reports from earlier in the month.

© 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

NFT marketplace volumes fell further this month

The decline in monthly NFT marketplace volume that began this spring continued into July.

As of July 30, the latest monthly volume for NFT marketplaces was $626.11 million. Last month, such marketplaces brought in $884.68 million in volume.

OpenSea continues to be the market leader, producing $484.79 million of July’s monthly volume. The Solana-based Magic Eden saw roughly $81 million in monthly volume during the same period.

© 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: Michael McSweeney


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