FreeCryptoCurrency.Me

Free stocks and money too!

Author: samwsimpson_lyjt8578

Why Crypto Should Modify the Section 6050i Tax Change, Not Fight It

Last week, a four-decades old law about cash was modified to incorporate cryptocurrency. Buried deep inside President Biden’s thousand-page Infrastructure bill was an amendment to an arcane section of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, which sets reporting requirements for payments made with cash. The definition of “cash” was amended to include crypto. Rather than celebrate the law’s ratification of crypto, many in the cryptocurrency community are furious.

Over the centuries a large body of law has evolved pertaining uniquely to cash.

One of society’s oldest cash-specific laws is legal tender. Other ancient laws cover counterfeiting. A newer law, one from the 18th century says that “currency cannot be followed.” If a stolen banknote is innocently accepted by a merchant, the merchant gets to keep it. Stolen goods, however, must be returned to their original owner.

More recent laws governing cash tend to specify due diligence and reporting requirements. Since 1970, U.S. banks have been required to submit currency transaction reports for cash deposits or withdrawals in excess of $10,000.

Into this thicket of laws governing cash, Satoshi Nakamoto kickstarted a novel “electronic cash system.” Since then a whole slew of other bitcoin-inspired cash systems have emerged including Ethereum, Dogecoin and Tether.

Fans of these systems have spent the last decade clamoring for mainstream legitimacy. “Bitcoin fixes this!” they say. And this legitimization seems to be happening. Usage is growing. In some cases, crypto has gone mainstream.

But the second-half of gaining legitimacy is integration with the body of existing laws. Electronic cash somehow has to be spliced into our centuries’ old rules about cash, coins and other bearer instruments.

It’s at this point of the legitimization process that many cryptocurrency advocates who coveted mainstream cash status for their tokens suddenly balk. Legitimization also involves, yikes… extra responsibilities?

This “balking” is precisely what is happening with the recent amendment of Section 6050i of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code to include crypto, passed last week as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

A brief explanation of Section 6050i

On its face, the amendment provides cryptocurrency advocates with the legitimacy they’ve always craved. Cryptocurrency is being included in the definition of cash alongside banknotes and coins.

Being classified as cash, however, brings an associated set of burdens. Section 6050i imposes reporting requirements on cash users that non-cash users don’t face. If you own a jewelry store, for instance, and someone buys $10,000 worth of jewelry from you using banknotes, you need to report their purchase. Not so if they pay with a debit card. It is these new requirements that are causing cryptocurrency fans to balk.

Let’s look a bit closer at the law.

Section 6050i requires people engaged in “trade or business” to collect information about those who make purchases in excess of $10,000 using banknotes and coins. They must report this information by filling out what is known as a Form 8300 and filing it with the IRS or the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). A Form 8300 must also be filled out when purchases are consummated with cashiers’ checks, money orders or traveler’s checks.

And now with the amendment, a purchase in excess of $10,000 made with bitcoin or any other types of crypto will require a Form 8300, too. The changes don’t take effect immediately, though. Reporting won’t become necessary until l 2024.

Lawmakers introduced the Form 8300 requirement in 1984, almost 40 years ago.

The motivating idea was to address tax evasion and laundering of the proceeds of crime. Moving criminally-derived cash into the banking system had already been targeted in 1970 by requiring banks to report cash withdrawals or deposits of $10,000. But criminals can also clean dirty cash by buying goods and services, say cars or real estate. And so the Form 8300 requirement, which extends reporting duties to cash accepting businesses, came to life.

There’s no crypto exemption

Cryptocurrency users may not like the amendment, but requiring Form 8300 reporting for cryptocurrencies is a perfectly reasonable extension of the law. The application of law to cash should be technologically-neutral. That is, irrespective of the form or medium on which it is instantiated, cash is cash – it should be treated equally. If Tesla dealers are obligated to report purchases of Teslas consummated with banknotes, they should have to do the same with bitcoin.

However, I agree with several of the criticisms that members of the cryptocurrency community have aired concerning the amendment to 6050i, particularly those made by Abraham Sutherland, an adjunct professor at the University of Virginia School of Law and advisor to the Proof of Stake Alliance. Although the amendment has already passed, it probably deserves to be revisited.

Here are some suggestions.

The main weakness is the way that crypto has been absorbed into Section 6050i’s definition of cash.

In determining what is to be defined as cash, the law uses a catch-all term “digital assets.” It defines a digital asset as “any digital representation of value which is recorded on a cryptographically secured distributed ledger.”

But as Sutherland points out – and I agree – “digital assets” is an overly-broad category. A non-fungible token (NFT) is very different from a centralized stablecoin like USD Coin. Bitcoin isn’t the same as what regulators refer to as LTDA, or legal tender digital assets (i.e. a blockchain-based central bank digital currency). Nor are dogecoin and dai equal. Yet by bracketing them all under the same category, they have all become “cash” in the eyes of 6050i.

Digital assets shouldn’t be bucketed together because they don’t function the same way. Some digital assets are more like cash than others. Some are more like property, or collectibles.

The best way to resolve this problem would be to break the category “digital assets” up into three types: stable digital assets (stablecoins and LTDA), non-stable fungible coins (bitcoin, ether, dogecoin, etc) and non-stable non-fungible coins (NFTs). The monetary threshold for triggering a Form 8300 reporting requirement, currently set at a flat $10,000, should be indexed to the type of digital asset.

The more “moneylike” a digital asset is – i.e. the more that it gets used as a medium of exchange – the more likely that it is useful for moving the proceeds of crime. Purchases made with these assets should face the lowest, and most stringent, thresholds. The less money-like the digital asset, the higher the threshold.

Stable digital assets such as stablecoins are the most likely to be used for payments, and should therefore face a similar $10,000 reporting threshold as cash. The argument can be made that stablecoins merit an even higher, and looser, threshold than cash, say $30,000, since blockchains provide a degree of traceability – cash and cashier’s checks don’t.

The threshold for payments made with non-stable fungibles like bitcoin should be even higher, say $50,000. This is because their volatility makes them less conducive for payments, and so the money laundering risk they present is lower than cash or stable digital assets.

Lastly, payments with non-stable non-fungibles such as NFTs should not be included at all in the category “digital assets.” If they are included, they should be subject to an even higher ceiling, say $100,000.

I’m using these thresholds for illustrative purposes only. The point I’m trying to make is that some combination of exemptions and staggered reporting thresholds would constitute a fairer way of bringing digital assets into the ambit of 6050i.

Majore compliance challenges will also crop up in decentralized finance, or DeFi. Section 6050i applies to “persons” engaged in trade. But is a truly decentralized protocol a person? Can a smart contract that accepts a $100,000 deposit of USDC be obliged to file a Form 8300 with FinCEN?

I’d suggest that a genuinely decentralized protocol should be exempt from the law’s definition of person. But fakely decentralized protocols – those protocols which are controlled by a person or corporation – should be obliged to report.

Regulated DeFi protocols (such as Swarm Markets) would also be exempt from Form 8300 requirements. So would their users. These gated protocols make an effort to know who is using their protocol, so a Form 8300 requirement would be redundant.

DeFi users who regularly receive digital assets from senders through the intermediation of genuinely decentralized protocols, say decentralized exchanges, may also incur reporting requirements. Compliance will be difficult since the receiving person cannot be linked to the sender. Higher thresholds for non-stable digital assets such as Ether would help reduce the reporting burden. Builders of decentralized protocols may want to consider developing 6050i compliance tools that connect receivers back to the original source of funds.

Lastly, stablecoins can help with compliance. Until now, centralized stablecoin issuers like Tether and USD Coin have taken a hands-off approach to identifying owners of stablecoins. If they were to adopt universal customer due diligence, only known parties would be able to own stablecoins. This would absolve DeFi users of the constant hassle of submitting Form 8300s.

Enjoying the fruits of legitimization means bearing the legal responsibilities that come with that legitimization. But at the same time, one also hopes that lawmakers do a better job of fusing crypto into Section 9050i than their current iteration. Reporting purchases made with crypto won’t take effect until 2024. We have a few years to resolve this.

Go to Source
Author: JP Koning

At Least 77% of NFT Art Sales Going to Male Creators: Study

A recent study on the state of the non-fungible token (NFT) art market points to some of the lasting gender disparities in the world of cryptocurrency, and suggests the industry still has a long way to go.

The study, conducted by a research agency called Art Tactic and reported by Bloomberg and The Art Newspaper, claims at least 77% of the money generated by NFT art sales over the past 21 months went to male artists, with just 5% going to female artists.

A caveat is that 16% of sales were chalked up to creators of “unknown” gender – hence the “at least.” Another caveat is that the study neglects to say how many NFT artists are women. Art Tactic arrived at these percentages by looking at total sales, but a look at the ratio of the amount of women to men in this space might provide a fuller picture of the inequities on display.

Regardless of whether the disparity is on the buyer side or the artist side, it’s a glaring one. The musician Grimes was the only woman on Art Tactic’s list of the top 10 best-selling NFT artists, thanks to a blockbuster sale on the Winklevoss-owned marketplace Nifty Gateway earlier this year.

None of this should come as much of a surprise – crypto has always been synonymous with a kind of toxically libertarian bro culture (though there are signs that’s beginning to change. In the more progressive corners of crypto, collectives such as Web 3 Baddies and aGENDAdao are starting to chip away at the archetype of the white male bitcoin bro.)

Beeple, by far the highest-grossing crypto artist, sold an NFT called “Everydays” for $69 million earlier this year. The work is a collage of 5,000 individual images, drawn over the course of the past 13 years, some of which feature racist and misogynistic themes.

The Art Tactic study also points to some of the broader wealth inequality issues in crypto.

Proponents of a crypto-backed creator economy have claimed that NFTs are a “grassroots” movement, with an eye toward bringing marginalized groups back into the fold. But according to Art Tactic, 55% of all the money generated by NFT art sales over the past 21 months went to just 16 artists.

Go to Source
Author: Will Gottsegen

Mastercard Outlines 3-Pronged Strategy to Support the Growing Crypto Community

MasterCard mapped out a three-pronged strategy focused on security and better services to support the growing cryptocurrency community during a presentation on Wednesday.

  • The credit card giant said during the virtual event at its annual investor’s day conference that it would focus on “crypto enablement,” which encompasses purchasing, spending, cashing out and rewards involving cryptocurrency; crypto security, including identity services; and network access, which covers interoperability, stablecoins and central bank digital currencies (CBDC).
  • Mastercard senior executives believe that crypto payment flows, including remittances, traditional finance (TradeFi) and decentralized finance (DeFi), represent net new volume for the company, Barclays research analyst Ramsay El-Assal wrote in a note to clients Wednesday after the event.
  • Mastercard has been bolstering its crypto offerings lately, with partnerships in Asia Pacific that will allow consumers and businesses across Asia Pacific to obtain crypto-linked Mastercard credit, debit and prepaid cards.
  • Mastercard said in late October it was working with digital asset platform Bakkt to allow merchants and banks in the U.S. to build cryptocurrency into their offerings.

Go to Source
Author: Michael Bellusci

Axie Infinity co-founder joins early-stage token fund 1kx as venture partner

Jeffrey Zirlin, also known as Jiho, the co-founder of the company that made the popular NFT-based play-to-earn game Axie Infinity, has joined the early-stage token fund 1kx as a venture partner. 

According to a tweet thread from 1kx, Jiho will guide the firm’s investment strategy for emerging play-to-earn media. 

“We regard Jiho to be the best community builder in all of crypto and an incredible force to have on the team,” 1kx wrote on Twitter. “We are incredibly lucky to work with him.”

Jiho’s firm Sky Mavis obtained a $3 billion valuation after the wild success of its game Axie Infinity, which at its peak had over 900,000 users and a 30-day rolling volume of $8.4 million, The Block previously reported.

Axie Infinity still dominates weekly gaming NFT trading volume. The Block’s Data Dashboard shows that the game saw $184 million in volume during the final week of October. 

Following Axie Infinity’s success, half of the $3.4 billion in crypto venture funding in October went to NFT and blockchain gaming startups.

© 2021 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.

Go to Source
Author: MK Manoylov

Proptech latinoamericana La Haus aceptará bitcoin para adquirir propiedades

La Haus, startup latinoamericana de proptech, aceptará bitcoin para la adquisición de propiedades a través de transacciones on-chain y mediante Lightning Network, anunció la compañía el miércoles.

El pago con bitcoin estará disponible para invertir en condominios en Kahaal, un desarrollo de viviendas de lujo en Playa del Carmen, México, dijo la compañía, y agregó que planea ampliar pronto la aceptación de la criptomoneda a más propiedades en su inventario, que posee más de 80.000 listados.

“A medida que nos expandimos por América Latina, bitcoin puede resolver algunos de los problemas que surgen al comprar una casa con monedas locales. El mundo de bitcoin y el de los bienes raíces tienen una excelente sinergia”, dijo Rodrigo Sánchez-Ríos, presidente de La Haus, en un comunicado.

La Haus, con presencia en Colombia y México, facilita más de $1.000 millones en transacciones brutas al año, con más de un millón de usuarios mensuales, informó la compañía.

Lanzada en 2017, la startup ha levantado más de $150 millones en financiación de capital riesgo de firmas como Acrew Capital, Bezos Expeditions, Kaszek Ventures y TIME Ventures.

La compañía también ha reclutado como vicepresidente a Jehudi Castro-Sierra, exasesor de la presidencia colombiana en temas de transformación digital.

“Bitcoin mejorado por Lightning permite la liquidación instantánea y global de una manera más eficiente”, dijo Castro-Sierra, quien agregó que la compañía explorará iniciativas en torno a Web 3, tokenización y desintermediación.

El más grande jugador de e-commerce en América Latina, MercadoLibre, presentó en abril una sección dentro de su plataforma de real estate para la compra-venta de propiedades con bitcoin.

Go to Source
Author: Andrés Engler

Country Music Association to release NFT collection for its latest award show

The Country Music Association (CMA) has partnered with the music non-fungible token (NFT) platform Solo Music to drop an NFT collection that celebrates the 55th annual CMA Awards Show.

The CMA Awards brought in over seven million viewers in 2020 and over 11 million the year prior, according to The Hollywood Reporter, making it one of the biggest music awards shows on television. 

The collection will have 1,000 digital art NFTs based on the Polygon Network, according to a release shared with The Block. They’ll each cost $25 and be available on November 12. 

Those who purchase a CMA NFT will become part of the CMA’s digital community and have the ability to gain exclusive access to CMA events, purchase future CMA NFTs and receive branded rewards. 

Solo Music is a Nashville-based digital music asset platform startup backed by seed funding from songwriter-producer Tommy Cecil, Brain Candy Management founder Ayla Kress and NFT collector Luke Porter, among others. 

“While NFTs are our first step towards driving adoption throughout the music industry, we plan to harness the power of blockchain technology through ticketing and tokenized royalties in the future,” Barron Solomon, Solo Music’s co-founder and CEO, told The Block.

© 2021 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.

Go to Source
Author: MK Manoylov

Market Wrap: Higher Inflation Expected to Send Bitcoin and Gold Higher Into End of Year

Bitcoin reached an all-time price high of about $68,950 on Wednesday after a report showed higher-than-expected inflation in October. The cryptocurrency eventually returned some gains as short-term overbought signals appeared on the charts.

Gold also rose to its highest level since June following the U.S. inflation report. The precious metal reversed its negative correlation with bitcoin on Wednesday as seen in the chart above.

“The knee-jerk reaction to the hottest inflation reading in 30 years triggered risk aversion which was accompanied with a strong dollar and weakness across the top cryptos,” Edward Moya, an analyst at Oanda, a foreign exchange brokerage firm.

“Wall Street is quickly realizing that inflation is not fading just yet and demand for inflation hedges will remain strong into the end of the year,” Moya wrote.

Latest Prices

  • Bitcoin (BTC): $65,916.17, -2.37%
  • Ether (ETH): $4,641.23, -3.04%
  • S&P 500: $4,464.71, -0.82%
  • Gold: $1,852.17, +1.23%
  • 10-year Treasury yield closed at 1.563%.

Get ready for stagflation

“Our view that there has been a profound paradigm shift in the global economy: The risk of inflation being durably above official targets is now a serious risk, and it is featuring prominently in corporate and household decisions once again,” Deutsche Bank strategists wrote in a research note on Wednesday.

In response to the inflation report, Deutsche Bank lowered its near-term economic growth forecasts and said it now expects a period of “stagflation” – a period of stagnant demand and high inflation.

“For markets, financial conditions remain incredibly accommodative by historic standards, and even as break-evens [market-based inflation expectations] have risen over the last couple of months,” Deutsche Bank wrote.

Bitcoin exchange outflows continue

The supply of bitcoin on exchanges continues to decline, which could indicate a preference among investors to hold BTC in wallets instead of making their coins available to trade on exchanges.

“As a result of continued exchange outflows, the aggregate BTC exchange balance has fallen to multiyear lows of 12.9% of circulating supply,” Glassnode, a crypto data firm, wrote in a blog post.

Exchange outflows continued during BTC’s price consolidation last week, which provided a bullish signal ahead of the fresh all-time high on Wednesday.

Altcoin roundup

  • Tether to launch on Avalanche: Tether’s USDT will become available on the Avalanche blockchain to support the long-term growth and sustainability of the network, CoinDesk’s Helene Braun reported. This is the ninth blockchain that Tether has launched on, after previous integrations on Polkadot and Solana, among others. The world’s largest stablecoin by market capitalization will also begin trading on cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex to provide investors with fast and low-cost access to the token.
  • Ethereum Name Service tokens soar after $500 million airdrop: Ethereum Name Service, a protocol that issues non-fungible tokens (NFTs) that can represent Ethereum addresses as well as web domains, launched an airdrop portal, which led to a surge in price for its decentralized autonomous organization, CoinDesk’s Andrew Thurman reported. Airdrops are a token distribution method that awards a portion of circulating tokens to Ethereum addresses that fulfill certain parameters, for example the purchase of an NFT.
  • Beeple’s ‘Human One’ sculpture and NFT sells for nearly $29 million: HUMAN ONE, a 3-D video sculpture by artist Beeple has sold for $28.9 million to a Switzerland-based online bidder, Barron’s reported. The sale also included an NFT. The video sculpture is a hybrid of physical and digital technology and shows a striding person in silver garb wearing what seems to be a space helmet. The final sale price was double the amount estimated for the art piece.

Relevant News

Other markets

Most digital assets in the CoinDesk 20 ended the day lower.

Notable winners as of 21:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):

  • Algorand (ALGO): +4,28%
  • Chainlink (LINK): +3.14%
  • Litecoin (LTC): +2.06%
  • USD Coin (USDC): +0.01%

Notable losers:

  • The Graph (GRT): -11.71%
  • Cardano (ADA): -8.21%
  • Polkadot (DOT): -7.66%

Go to Source
Author: Damanick Dantes, Helene Braun

New bill before Congress aims to standardize ransomware reporting requirements

On November 10, Patrick McHenry, the senior Republican on the House Financial Services Committee, introduced the Ransomware and Financial Stability Act. 

The bill aims to establish “rules of the road” for financial institutions hit by ransomware attacks. Those include requirements to report such attacks to the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, as well as exemptions from regulatory enforcement as long as they made good-faith efforts to provide such reports.

The bill also would require financial institutions making ransomware payouts greater than $100,000 to get special authorization from the Treasury. On the flipside, it requires the Treasury to keep information on those ransomware attacks confidential.

As often comes up in policy conversations on ransomware, many firms would rather pay ransoms quietly as a cost of business than deal with the public relations fallout of having been hit by a ransomware attack.  

In some ways, the provisions in McHenry’s bill resemble financial institutions’ requirements under the Bank Secrecy Act, which mandates reporting of suspicious activity to FinCEN.

The bill also appears to have no co-sponsors and no Senate version. A member of McHenry’s staff had not responded to a request for confirmation.

But despite a wave of congressional interest in ransomware over 2021, all legislative attention has been on the infrastructure bill and the Build Back Better Act. Both of those bills have faced extensive delays, though the former passed Congress at the end of last week. 

FinCEN already keeps data on reported ransomware payments gathered in its suspicious activity reports. Just last month, the agency published its data for 2020 and the first half of 2021, revealing a rise in both ransomware payment activity and reporting by financial institutions. 

© 2021 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.

Go to Source
Author: Kollen Post

Why Shouldn’t the Navajo Mine Bitcoin?

Navajo Nation is prime bitcoin mining country.

While Texas and Wyoming have taken the limelight since China’s bitcoin mining ban, the groundwork for bitcoin mining is already present in the American Southwest. It’s a good match, too: Bitcoin mining incentivizes healthy economic growth the Four Corners region has desperately needed for generations.

In 2017, West Block, a firm from Calgary, Alberta, approached the Navajo about building a mining center on Navajo land. Earlier this year, the Canadian firm broke ground on an extension of the mine to double in size to 15 megawatts (MW). Using energy sources from the area, the mine can spit out about 400 bitcoin per year (depending on the network conditions).

Will Foxley-Smith is the multimedia director at Compass Mining and a former tech reporter for CoinDesk. Compass Mining hosts customers’ machines at the WestBlock Capital facility.

It’s shortsighted to view bitcoins as the only output of the mine, however. The mine creates prospects for multiple avenues of societal growth, including financial access and energy usage, both of which have been long-standing thorns in the Navajos’ side, according to numerous in-person interviews with Navajo Nation members, tribal delegates and government officials conducted as part of a recent documentary on the subject.

And not in a selfish sense but wholly in a self-interested sense. Bitcoin promises a sovereignty the Navajo and others First Nations have always been promised but have never received.

The case for bitcoin

The Navajo Nation is the largest Native American reservation in the United States and the second-largest tribe by head count at around 300,000 members. It’s also one of the most impoverished communities in the U.S. A third of Navajos live under the poverty line while chronic unemployment has become the norm at around 48%.

Much of this poverty has roots in the treaty of with the U.S. government, Tribal Delegate Amber Kanazbah Crotty told Compass Mining. Its legacy is still very much alive, especially in the nation’s relationship with the banking sector, she said.

“We’re a nation working with the nation of the United States. But they will not recognize that sovereign-to-sovereign agreement when it comes to U.S. currency,” Delegate Crotty said. “They want complete control.”

This control is most often noticed in Native Americans’ underbanked status, or what is referred to as the “buckskin curtain.” In fact, Native Americans constitute the least-represented American minority group in the U.S. banking system today.

This exclusion results not just in limited opportunity, but baked in structural disadvantages involving government-to-government interactions. It is especially feared that working with the U.S. banking system could harm the institution of Navajo sovereignty, Crotty said. For example, is it in the Navajo Nation’s interest to interact with the politicized web of financial institutions backed by the dollar? Would doing so harm Navajo sovereignty as a “nation-within-a nation?”

Regardless, the Navajo remain in an odd predicament as a nation. Its citizens are liable for federal taxes to be paid in dollars, but unable to access the myriad of financial tools created for that currency 2,000 miles away on the East Coast. This situation has led to the Navajo exploring alternatives, Crotty said.

Future challenges

Bitcoin adoption isn’t without its challenges. One such difficulty bitcoin miners face is the legacy of physical mining on the reservation and a history of exploitation and unemployment around the sector among its people.

“For many decades, the coal industry provided the Navajo Nation with high-paying jobs and financial support through royalties for our many programs and initiatives,” Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez wrote in a June 2021 letter to Congress. “Now, the mines are closed, the Navajo Generating Station (NGS) is shuttered and all we’re left with is an ecologically devastating and socially unhealthy mess that no one is stepping up to fix.”

It’s no question that bitcoin mining is a confusing subject. Any locality with a history of earth-based mining will have questions. Although similarities are present – such as high energy usage – the term “mining” is better thought of as an analogy in this case. Bitcoin mining involves no earth extraction, no long-term health consequences or damage to local water tables.

In reality, bitcoin mining is a near-perfect alternative for locations with access to high energy resources. Navajo land is full of both non-renewable and renewable resources, such as coal, hydropower, natural gas and sunlight. Moreover, bitcoin mining’s demand for low-cost reliable based load energy incentives renewable sources, the local Navajo utility said.

And this demand for renewable energy is already playing out. The Navajo mine is powered by 59% renewable energy sources. Compared that to 19% for the U.S. energy grid itself.

A digital alternative

For bitcoin, then, the question becomes one of marketing. Can the bitcoin industry convince the Navajo and other First Nations that bitcoin is not only in their interest financially but also in the best interest of their land?

From the bitcoin mining industry’s perspective, the case is clear-cut. Financially, bitcoin invites anyone to participate. Anyone can transact freely, enforce the rules with a node or even earn bitcoin by simply plugging into the network. Compare that to the incumbent financial system that has sidelined millions of Navajo since 1868. In terms of energy usage, bitcoin mining incentivizes the use of energy at the source, a key differentiator compared to past energy consumers in megacities hundreds of miles away. Moreover, bitcoin demands constant cheap energy – something the Navajo have in abundance through sunshine. The current mine is a great example, as the majority of its power is derived from renewable solar sources. In fact, it’s even incentivizing further solar build outs on the reservation by consuming a steady baseload of energy.

Yet, for now, the story remains to be played out. Bitcoin has yet to gain the trust of the lion’s share of the Navajo Nation, and education initiatives remain of importance. In the meanwhile, more mines are scheduled to come online in the coming months. And with greater bitcoin mining adoption comes greater awareness of bitcoin as an asset for self-sovereignty.

Go to Source
Author: William Foxley

Spot bitcoin mining hardware prices are lagging behind BTC’s rally because of a rack space crunch

Spot prices for bitcoin mining hardware on the market are lagging behind BTC’s rally to all-time highs in a rare situation — all thanks to a global hosting capacity crunch following China’s crackdown.

Bitcoin’s price has been trending up since last weekend, briefly hitting $69,000 on Coinbase on Wednesday. That comes three weeks after it surged to nearly $67,000 following a six-month downward period since an earlier all-time-high in April.

During the same period, while the spot prices for Bitcoin mining equipment have also bounced back, they are still at a discount compared to record highs seen in April. 

That means whoever has available power and rack capacity to plug in mining rigs right now would have access to cheap hardware to shorten the payback period.

According to data compiled by Luxor, one of the top 10 bitcoin mining pools, all generations of spot equipment on the market are still 15% to 20% off their records from six months ago.

Similarly, based on quotes seen by The Block on WeChat, Chinese mining rig brokers have been asking for $100 per terahashes per second (TH/s) for Bitmain’s AntMiner S19 Pro. The price for the same model in April and May was about $120 per TH/s.

“The continued shortage of physical rack space to plug in ASICs has resulted in a lag of rig prices relative to Bitcoin,” said Ethan Vera, co-founder and COO at Luxor. “Many mining companies still have ASICs sitting in their warehouses, waiting to get plugged into racks. These companies are prioritizing dollars spent on infrastructure and future ASIC orders, rather than spot buys.”

Source: Luxor Technology

Power and rack space

Typically, mining hardware manufacturers and brokers will increase the prices for both spot and future stocks swiftly and proportionately based on any price rallies.

During bitcoin’s bull run at this point last year, the supply for both spot and future equipment started to run dry, causing rig prices to climb, The Block reported at the time.

Between mid-December to mid-April, Bitcoin’s price and Bitcoin rig spot price both increased by about 2.5 times from around $19,000 to nearly $66,000.

But China’s crackdown on the mining space has altered the balance between supply and demand

“In addition to the recent influx of equipment that has hit the market from China, which is likely attributing to the lag, we are seeing purchases of machines from groups that have no power available… [who] are then left with the decision to either sell the units for a premium today or hold them until power becomes available,” said Zach Bradford, CEO at CleanSpark, a Nasdaq-listed Bitcoin mining firm, adding:

“I expect this to continue through summer 2022. This supply of sellers will likely continue to keep [spot] machine prices trading at a discount to the BTC price until supply normalizes with power availability.”

Although Bitcoin’s price has more than doubled since its July low of just below $30,000, spot rig prices have only bounced back by around 50%, Luxor’s data shows. 

The Block mapped out in August a Bitcoin mining infrastructure boom in North America, with multiple companies either building or planning to build nearly 3 gigawatts of power capacity. Since then, more companies have announced plans to develop additional capacity.

© 2021 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.

Go to Source
Author: Wolfie Zhao


Follow by Email
Facebook20
Pinterest20
fb-share-icon
LinkedIn20
Share