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Bored Apes creator Yuga Labs raises $450 million in round led by a16z: report

Yuga Labs, the creator of the Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT collection, has reportedly completed the raise of a $450 million funding round.

The fundraise, reported by The Verge, values the firm at $4 billion. Leading the round was Andreessen Horowitz, which per earlier reports has been circling a Yuga Labs fundraise. Other contributors include Animoca Brands, Coinbase and MoonPay.

The Financial Times had previously reported that Yuga Labs was raising funds at a multibillion-dollar valuation. 

The funding comes as the company and its broader NFT ecosystem commence an ambitious agenda, including the planned creation of a gaming-focused virtual world dubbed Otherside. Last week, a standalone cryptocurrency, dubbed ApeCoin, was launched. 

© 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

NFL loosens rules around crypto company sponsorships: report

The NFL will now allow teams to seek sponsorships with blockchain companies, but wider restrictions regarding cryptocurrencies that can be exchanged for merchandise or experiences remain, according to a memo obtained by CNBC.

After completing an evaluation of the technology, the league stated it will allow “promotional relationships without undertaking excessive regulator or brand risk” according to the memo. “In this evolving regulatory environment, it remains essential that we proceed carefully when evaluating potential commercial opportunities involving blockchain technologies, and conduct appropriate diligence on all potential partners and their business models.”

Recently, the NFL and players union made a deal with Dapper Labs to create digital video collectibles.  

Overall, the NFL spent over $600,000 lobbying the SEC and various government agencies on blockchain technology, according to some reports.  There weren’t details provided of the efforts, but the NFL was trying to determine if crypto can be a part of the league’s overall business, which brings in about $10 billion in annual revenue, according to CNBC.

Today’s memo also grants limited permissions on NFTs. “Subject to League approval, Clubs may now accept advertising (without use of club marks and logos, unless in connection with a League NFT deal) for NFTs and NFT companies,” the memo reads. But the league won’t allow “engaging in product licensing arrangements or sponsorships for NFTs or NFT companies (other than as permitted in connection with League-level NFT partnerships),” it reads.

Some individual players are already invested in the world of crypto. NFL star Tom Brady’s Autograph, an NFT platform, raised $170 million in January. Rob Gronkowski has also created limited edition NFTs.

© 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: Anushree Dave

Mapping out StarkNet’s ecosystem

Quick Take

  • StarkWare, an Israel-based company, was founded in 2018 by Eli Ben-Sasson, Uri Kolodny, Michael Riabzev, and Alessandro Chiesa
  • StarkNet is a decentralized, permissionless, and censorship-resistant Zero-Knowledge rollup (ZK-Rollup) that utilizes STARK proofs and is verified on Ethereum’s main net layer
  • The Block has noticed and mapped 107 projects across 12 verticals within StarkNet’s ecosystem

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Author: John Dantoni

Web3 infrastructure startup Mysten Labs unveils its Layer 1 blockchain

Mysten Labs, a web3 infrastructure startup founded by four former Meta engineers, has unveiled its inaugural product: a Layer 1 blockchain called Sui.

Sui is a permissionless proof-of-stake blockchain network being developed by Evan Cheng, Sam Blackshear, Adeniyi Abiodun, and George Danezis — who all worked at Novi (the crypto unit of Meta) before founding Mysten Labs. At Novi, they helped develop the Diem blockchain and the Move programming language.

Sui is now an advanced version of Diem, being designed from the ground up by the quartet. Mysten says Sui will have theoretically no limit on throughput or transactions per second. It will also support smart contracts development via the Move programming language, meaning developers can build decentralized applications on Sui.

“Development on Sui is fast and on point,” said Lucky Kat Studios, creators of the Panzerdogs game, in a statement. “Not only is its transaction speed impressive, but its ability to mirror NFTs and its dynamic handling of on-chain assets can bring new value to users and the assets that they own.”

Mysten Labs today launched the public software development kit of Sui and is showing off demos to developers, Cheng told The Block. The blockchain’s testnet is expected in the next few months and its mainnet later this year along with a native token.

Mysten is backed by high-profile investors, including Andreessen Horowitz and Coinbase Ventures, and the startup raised $36 million in December. It aims to bring more developers to Sui and billions of users to crypto, as The Block reported recently. 

© 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

Idle machines and spectacular pay: the byproducts of a banner year for bitcoin miner Marathon

Quick Take

  • Marathon’s recent results show massive increases in revenue and hashrate over the course of 2021, in line with surging crypto markets. 
  • A lucrative incentive scheme meant that former chairman Merrick Okamoto has cashed in on the company’s big year in spectacular fashion. 

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Author: Ryan Weeks

New York legislators weigh moratorium on crypto mining, while some look to an executive order from the governor

New York state lawmakers will discuss a bill proposing a two-year moratorium on proof-of-work crypto mining on Tuesday.

The New York State Assembly’s Environmental Conservation Committee is holding a meeting on the amended version of the bill, which was first introduced in May of last year and has faced an uphill battle through the Assembly and Senate.

Environmental groups have pushed for the state to intervene as miners flocked to New York last year, in some instances taking over power plants. A study recently published by Columbia Law School’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law concluded that, in theory, the New York governor has the authority to put in place a moratorium via executive order.

In practice, this would mean preventing new permits from being issued to certain mining operations until the New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) can study their impact with a Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS).

The current bill addresses mining facilities that get their energy delivered behind the meter, meaning that it is used on-site without passing through a meter.

Greenidge Generation’s 107-megawatt plant, in particular, has drawn much attention for its use of natural gas at a former coal plant in the Finger Lakes region. The mining firm is currently waiting for a decision on its air permit renewal application.

The DEC received over 4,000 public comments on the matter and is expected to put out a decision by March 31. Officials have hinted that the mining facility falls short of the environmental requirements of New York’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), which was passed in 2019, after Greenidge set up shop.

The act calls for the state to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 85% below 1990 levels by 2050 and to achieve 100% zero-emission electricity by 2040.

“DEC has not made a final determination on the permits and Greenidge has not shown compliance with NY’s climate law,” DEC commissioner Basil Seggos said on Twitter in September. 

As per the Columbia Study, a GEIS study would be reason enough to put new permits on hold, but it is less clear whether a ban on permit renewals would hold up. The study also argues that the DEC would have the authority to treat Greenidge Generation’s application as if it were an application for a new permit based on the fact that the CLCPA has since come into law and that Greenidge’s facilities have changed from power generation to proof-of-work mining.

The company got a $2 million grant from the state in 2015 to renovate the plant in Dresden. The plan for proof-of-work mining was not stated in the original permits, according to the study.

“The state of New York should have sued them because they misrepresented in their business plan why they wanted the pipeline,” said Cornell professor Anthony Ingraffea, who testified during a State Assembly public hearing last year on mining and climate change.

Asked whether Gov. Kathy Hochul is considering a moratorium on crypto mining, a spokesperson responded with the following statement:

“Governor Hochul is taking bold, nation-leading actions to confront climate change head-on, and the State is actively reviewing proposals regarding the role of cryptocurrency mining in New York’s energy landscape, especially in light of the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.”

The Columbia study points out that the bills that have been proposed by the New York state legislature “have stalled.”

After an earlier version of the bill died in the Assembly in June of last year, a staffer for Assemblywoman Anna Kelles, who sponsored the bill, told The Block that “the roadblock was the unions.”

One of them, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, said in a statement that “the bill fails to take into account the valid benefits of the technology behind the industry.”

The most recent draft calls for a moratorium on new permits for facilities that use carbon-based fuel to power proof-of-work mining operations with behind-the-meter energy. It also does not allow for permit renewals in instances where there is an increase in the amount of energy consumed. It effectively freezes operations at current levels for two years, other than those using renewable sources of energy.

According to legislators, proof-of-work mining “will greatly increase the amount of energy usage in the state of New York, and impact compliance with the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.”

The public hearing on the moratorium bill will start at 12 pm on Tuesday and will be broadcasted here.

© 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

Expenses fintech Jeeves eyes crypto transfers as it raises $180 million

Expense management platform Jeeves raised $180 million in a round led by Chinese investor Tencent as it looks to implement stablecoin transfers.

The fundraise, which included participation from a16z, Stanford University and GIC, quadrupled the firm’s valuation from $500 million to $2.1 billion.

Jeeves is an all-in-one expense payment platform for fast-growing companies, offering them a multi-region corporate credit card, bank to bank payments, and venture revenue financing. The firm says it has a client base of more than 3,000 companies, with revenue growing by 900% since its September Series B round. 

It began its operations in Spanish-speaking Latin America and has since expanded to the US, Canada, and Europe. CEO and founder Dileep Thazhmon, however, says that the company is currently toying with expansion in Southeast Asia and the MENA region — which is partly why it tapped funding from Singapore’s GIC and Tencent — and also is launching in Brazil at the end of the second quarter. 

A stablecoin future 

Along with further global expansion, Thazhmon says the company will likely start exploring crypto later this year. 

“I don’t see a future in three to four years’ time where we don’t have a crypto product,” says Thazhmon, explaining that part of the reason their CTO Arpan Nanavati was brought on in January was to test how the company could implement crypto. 

“There’s a very strong use-case for using crypto for cross-border payments”, says Thazhmon. “If you want to send funds between two countries today, we currently have [regulated] bank accounts in each country. But you could potentially use stablecoins instead to do transfers.” 

Wallet-to-wallet stablecoins transfers are often touted for their near-instantaneous speed and low cost.

Thazhmon says that crypto transfers are a very natural fit for Latin America, the region the company began in, given the popular remittance corridors of the US and Mexico and the US and Brazil, as well as the region’s broad acceptance of digital assets. Thazhmon says that the company would experiment with this potential stablecoin product in the Latin American region to iron out any quirks before implementing it widely.  

Jeeves is not the only fintech firm to think this way. In December, remittance fintech firm TransferGo told The Block that it trialed stablecoin transfers for business-to-business use cases in Africa. Earlier this month, newly launched money transfer company Atlantic Money also floated the idea of exploring cryptocurrencies.

© 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: Tom Matsuda

Crypto exchange Kraken brings in new CFO to lead ‘next growth phase’

Crypto exchange Kraken has brought in fintech veteran Carrie Dolan as its new CFO, in a move it says will mark the company’s next growth phase. 

Dolan joins from Tradeshift, a digital payments and trade finance platform, and replaces Kaiser Ng who had held the position for the past five years, according to a statement on Tuesday. 

Before Tradeshift, Dolan had worked in leadership positions at Lending Club, Metromile, Charles Schwab and Chevron. At Lending Club, she managed its 2014 initial public offering, which raised $1 billion. 

“Carrie is a big believer in the future of crypto and brings a strong track record of experience across legacy finance, fintech startups and global marketplaces,” said Kraken CEO Jesse Powell. 

Dolan joins at a time of rapid growth for the exchange. In 2021, combined spot and future volumes were more than five times higher than in 2020. It also doubled its workforce in that time. 

In December, Kraken said that it plans to push into NFTs, adding that the exchange will help take some of the NFT activity “off-chain, which would help keep both minting and transaction fees down to a minimum.”

According to Ng’s LinkedIn, he has joined an as yet unnamed “c

© 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: Lucy Harley-McKeown

Investment app Acorns catches crypto bug, adds bitcoin exposure

Investment app Acorns has added the option for its user to invest up to 5% in BTC via their investment accounts.

Acorns is an investment fintech that popularized the feature to invest spare change into prebuilt portfolios along with banking services such as a checking account. 

According to the announcement, the Galaxy Digital-backed company says that it implemented the feature as their 4.6 million subscribers expressed interest in cryptocurrencies. CEO of Acorns Noah Kerner, however, stressed that it is “not trading” and instead is a way for customers to invest in a volatile asset as part of a long-term diversified portfolio. 

Acorns will not allow users to purchase bitcoin directly, but rather gain exposure via ProShare’s Bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund. 

“We believe in opening access to invest the right way, responsibly for the long term,” said Acorns chief investment officer Seth Wunder. “Adding a small allocation of bitcoin exposure to a diversified portfolio is the perfect way to introduce everyday Americans to the asset class.”

In an interview with The Block, Wunder said that the company’s move into crypto reflects the changing financial demands of investors following the COVID-19 pandemic. In Wunder’s view, investors want to be more actively involved in their investment decisions than before and expand outside of cooking-cutter portfolios. That’s evident in the number of brokerage accounts that have opened in the wake of the pandemic and various government-enforced lockdowns. 

To meet these new needs, Acorns also plans to offer customizable portfolios and the ability to trade individual stocks.

“You have to meet them where they are,” said Wunder, who took on the position of CIO about six months ago. “Society went through a pendulum swing…will the same fervor in investing exist when we move past the pandemic, maybe?”

He added:

“Our job is to make sure our customers have the best assets to invest in in the best risk-adjusted framework. When you look at bitcoin it has 10 years of history under its belt and five years of a real trading framework.”

Acorns join a growing list of fintechs that have caught the crypto bug.

Earlier this month, Nordic neobank Lunar announced it was rolling out crypto tools alongside a $77 million raise. The UK’s Revolut has long offered crypto investment tools and is said to be exploring a native token. Germany’s N26 is also reportedly due to launch a crypto trading tool through a partnership with Bitpanda.

In the US, robo advisers have entered the market, with Betterment acquiring a crypto portfolio service earlier this year. Wealthfront, which was acquired by investment banking and wealth management firm UBS, also allows its clients to access crypto exposure. 

Founded in 2012, Acorns manages more than $12.5 billion. Most recently, the fintech firm abandoned its SPAC plans in favor of a $300 million raise led by private equity firm TPG. 

© 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: Tom Matsuda and Frank Chaparro

Grayscale launches fund holding Ethereum alternatives

Grayscale has launched a new fund providing exposure to a variety of smart contract ecosystems that have emerged amid the growth of decentralized finance (DeFi).

The Grayscale Smart Contract Platform ex Ethereum Fund (GSCPxE) holds Cardano (ADA), Solana (SOL), Avalanche (AVAX), Polkadot (DOT), Polygon (MATIC), Algorand (ALGO) and Stellar (XLM) as of March 16. The idea, according to Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein, is to enable investors to have stake in a variety of developing platforms rather than betting on one to emerge as the primary venue for decentralized activity.

“Smart contract technology is critical to the growth of the digital economy, but it’s still too early to know which platform will win
– from attracting and retaining the most vibrant developer communities, to ensuring the platform is high-speed, flexible, and scalable,” he said in a statement. “The beauty of GSCPxE is that investors do not have to choose one winner, and instead can access the development of the smart contract platform ecosystem through a singular investment vehicle.”

The fund excludes ether, since Grayscale expects many investors already engage with Ethereum. This product is a means to cast a wide net of exposure for the rest of DeFi.

The fund uses an index offered by CoinDesk indices to track the assets, with the portfolio’s holdings weighted by market capitalization. Cardano and Solana are the two highest weights in the fund, each making up more than 24% of its holdings. Avalanche and Polkadot follow with each making up 16%. 

This is Grayscale’s third diversified fund, following its Decentralized Finance Fund and its Digital Large Cap Fund. At the start of this year, it announced a reshuffling of assets in its Decentralized Finance Fund as part of its quarterly rebalancing, removing Bancor and UMA and adding AMP. 

© 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: Aislinn Keely


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