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CryptoCompare Gets FCA Authorization to Operate as Benchmark Administrator

London-based data aggregator and index provider CryptoCompare has received authorization from U.K. regulatory body, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), to operate as a benchmark administrator, the company announced Thursday.

  • CryptoCompare said its data and index subsidiary, CC Data Limited, has received FCA approval to issue benchmarks for financial instruments and measure fund performance.
  • The firm provides data and benchmarks for digital assets based on market research and methodologies.
  • “I am delighted that CryptoCompare has now achieved FCA authorisation, creating new avenues for institutional and retail investors to gain exposure to our standard-setting digital asset indices,” said Charles Hayter, CEO of CryptoCompare, in a statement.
  • A number of other firms provide data by tracking the performance of crypto instruments and funds, including TradeBlock, which is owned by CoinDesk, and the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Indices that was launched by Bloomberg Index Services Limited and Galaxy Digital Capital Management.

Read more: CoinDesk Acquires TradeBlock, Adding Indexes and Pricing to News, Events Offerings

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Author: Tanzeel Akhtar

Enjin floats $100M Efinity Metaverse Fund to boost NFT marketplace

Enjin has announced the creation of a $100 million fund to boost the development of its planned metaverse.

According to the announcement issued on November 4, the fund dubbed the Efinity Metaverse Fund will be used to support gaming and non-fungible token (NFT) developers in the Enjin ecosystem.

Enjin launched the Efinity ecosystem as a blockchain for NFTs on the Polkadot network back in March. At the time, the company secured $18.9 million in a funding round led by cryptocurrency exchange service Crypto.com.

Detailing plans for the metaverse fund, Enjin said the move was a conscious effort to support a free and open metaverse.

The news comes as several major tech brands, including Facebook and Microsoft, have begun outlining metaverse-related plans of their own.

Cross-chain compatibility

The $100 million fund will be used to lay the groundwork for integrating the different projects and marketplaces within the Efinity and broader Enjin ecosystems.

According to the announcement, the fund will also be used to support collaborative metaverse projects with a focus on cross-chain compatibility.

Given its presence in the emerging blockchain gaming space, Enjin will also be looking to support blockchain games, as well as NFTs.

“Our team will consider equity investments in seed / Series A fundraising rounds and purchases of new project native tokens for potential use in our ecosystem,” said Enjin in its announcement.

Enjin, like several other gaming and NFT-related tokens, has posted significant price gains in 2021. ENJ, the project’s native token is up 2,300% year-to-date, according to data from CoinGecko.

© 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.

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Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Ether to Extend Outperformance Versus Bitcoin Following Recent Breakout, FSInsight Says

Ether should rally to as high as $4,951 “with little to no resistance” after outperforming bitcoin recently and breaking through September highs, according to a report by FSInsight, a markets strategy and research firm.

FSInsight notes that ether prices have moved higher “without becoming noticeably overbought” on momentum gauges. “Further relative gains for ether over bitcoin still look to continue short term.”

Read more: Ether, Bitcoin to Strengthen in Coming Weeks, FSInsight Says

The firm’s first upside target for ether is $4,951, followed by $5,826.

FSInsight expects bitcoin’s breakout to new weekly highs to lead to a retest of the October peak near $67,000.

Solana’s SOL token “remains a near-term standout” after reaching $235, but may see some minor consolidation following the latest rally. FSInsight predicts further gains up to $308.60 and suggests buying during dips. If, however, there is a pullback, FSInsight sees first support in SOL at $178.56 and then at $152.54.

Bitcoin was trading recently around $61,800, ether at $4,530, and SOL at $242 as of publication time.

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Author: Will Canny

Layer by Layer Issue 14: Polkadot, Avalanche, Fantom, and Tezos

Quick Take

  • In this weekly series, we dive into some of the most interesting data and developments across the Layer 1 blockchain landscape, from DeFi and bridges to network activity and funding
  • In the burgeoning DeFi ecosystems on L1s today, governance and funding decisions can have an outsized impact on the future of these new, competitive landscapes
  • This week, we take a look at Polkadot, Avalanche, Fantom, and Tezos

This research piece is available to
members of The Block Genesis.
You can continue reading
this Genesis research on The Block.

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Author: Kevin Peng

FC Barcelona Joins NFT Rush With Moments From 122 Years of History

FC Barcelona, the world’s second-most valuable soccer club, is joining the rush to issue non-fungible tokens with a plan to offer NFTs based on photos and videos from the club’s 122-year history.

  • The NFTs will be offered for auction through Ownix, a marketplace on the Ethereum blockchain.
  • The official launch takes place Nov. 24, according to a countdown timer on the Ownix website.
  • Barça, as the team is known, is second in value only to Spanish rival Real Madrid, according to a ranking by Brand Finance, which says the team might drop down the ladder after Lionel Messi – who has his own NFT collection – left the club for Paris St. Germain in a deal that also included NFTs.
  • “Creating these NFTs is a unique opportunity to continue growing and consolidating the Barça brand by bringing unique moments that have made Barça fans dream and FC Barcelona a well-known club on every level,” Joan Laporta, the club’s president, said in a statement.
  • Sports teams worldwide have been exploring NFTs as a way of generating income and raising fan engagement. In September, Spain’s La Liga became the first of Europe’s top soccer leagues to offer NFTs of all its players through French digital soccer collectibles platform Sorare. European rivals including Atletico Madrid, Porto, AS Roma and England’s Liverpool have already announced NFT deals.

See also: In Europe, Football NFTs and Tokens Are No Fantasy

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Author: Sheldon Reback

Galaxy Digital’s October AUM Grew More Than 40% to $3.1B

Galaxy Digital’s assets under management (AUM) grew to over $3.1 billion in October from $2.2 billion in September, with its ether-focused exchange-traded fund (ETF) cited as one of the main driving forces.

  • The Mike Novogratz-led asset manager reported the preliminary AUM figure on Wednesday.
  • Compared to the equivalent figure in 2020, the firm’s AUM has grown over 600% from $446.3 million at the end of October 2020.
  • October’s performance can largely be attributed to Galaxy’s roster of Canadian ETFs, particularly its Toronto Stock Exchange-listed CI Galaxy Ethereum ETF (ETHX), the company’s global asset management head Steve Kurz said in an interview with Bloomberg.
  • ETHX, which invests directly in the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency by market value, saw its price grow by over 28% in October, tracking a surge in the underlying asset’s value of over 40%.
  • “From a market infrastructure and development of the asset class perspective, ether is picking up steam, probably the way bitcoin did a year and a half ago,” Kurz said.

Read more: Options Traders Bet Big Ether’s Turn for an ETF Is Coming Soon

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Author: Jamie Crawley

Kazakhstan Introduces Crypto Investment Limits for Retail Players: Report

Kazakhstan has limited the amount of money local retail investors can put into crypto, domestic news website Kapital.kz reported on Wednesday.

  • Retail investors can invest 10% of their annual income or 5% of their total assets, excluding their main residence, up to $100,000 per year, as long as they provide evidence of their finances to the regulator, the site reported.
  • Should investors not provide any evidence for their finances, they can invest up to $1,000 per month, according to Kapital.kz, which said it attained the information from the Astana Financial Services Agency (AFSA) directly.
  • The AFSA was not available for comment at the time of publication.
  • The limits have been introduced to protect retail investors from crypto-related “high risks” that can include the complete loss of capital, the AFSA told Kapital.kz.
  • The AFSA has also created a roadmap to develop the crypto market in the country. Under the plan, crypto exchanges will operate as a pilot starting at the end of 2021 and for one year.
  • The rules set by the AFSA took effect on Oct. 26, the report said.
  • The agreed rules are harsher than those proposed by the Astana International Finance Center (AIFC) earlier, according to Kapital.kz. An AIFC committee had proposed a monthly limit of $2,000 for retail investors.
  • Kazakhstan has seen a massive influx of crypto miners since China started a crackdown on the crypto mining industry in May. The country is facing severe electricity shortages, in part because of the influx of miners, and is planning to limit the electricity consumption of new mines.

Read more: Kazakhstan to Limit Power for Crypto Mining to 100 MW Nationwide

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Author: Eliza Gkritsi

BTS Agency Hybe to Set Up Joint Venture on NFTs with Korean Crypto Exchange Upbit

Hybe, the agency behind K-pop band BTS, and Dunamu, the operator of crypto exchange Upbit, have agreed to set up a joint venture to work on non-fungible tokens (NFTs), according to a regulatory filing on Wednesday.

  • The two companies will exchange shares through a third-party allotment capital increase, according to the announcement. Hybe will acquire a 2.5% stake in Dunamu worth KRW 500 billion ($423 million), while Dunamu will buy KRW 700 billion of newly issued Hybe shares, which represent a 5.6% stake in the music agency.
  • The joint venture will create NFT photocards related to the K-pop stars, which will eventually be traded on Hybe’s app Weverse, the chairman of the two firms said at a briefing early on Thursday. Weverse is an app for content and communication between artists and fans.
  • Hybe shares were up 4.9% at press time on Thursday.
  • Upbit is one of Korea’s biggest crypto exchanges and one of four that are allowed to offer Korean won trading pairs, after successfully jumping through regulatory hoops in September. The other three are Bithumb, Coinone, and Korbit.
  • BTS is one of the most successful K-pop bands in history. Last week, Hybe issued a warning against a coin that was marketing itself as related to BTS.

Read more: Hours Before South Korean Registration Deadline, Only 10 Exchanges Have Applied

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Author: Eliza Gkritsi

In Craig Wright Trial, Plaintiffs Lay Out Pattern of Fraud, Deceit and Hubris

Attorneys for Ira Kleiman and W&K Info Defense Research, LLC began to paint an unflattering portrait of Craig Wright, his business practices and interpersonal dealings in court Tuesday and Wednesday.

It started with former Bitcoin developer Gavin Andresen, who testified that Wright – the Australian computer scientist best known for his much-debated claim to be Satoshi Nakamoto, the cryptocurrency’s pseudonymous creator – “bamboozled” him.

In a pre-recorded video deposition shown in court Tuesday, Andresen testified that he began to doubt Wright’s claim after he notoriously failed to deliver cryptographic proof that he had access to Satoshi’s private keys.

“I’m starting to doubt myself, and imagining the clever ways you could have tricked me…” Andresen wrote to Wright on May 3, 2016, in an email presented in court.

“The gobbledygook proof he published was certainly a deception, if not an outright lie,” Andresen told attorneys for the plaintiffs. “He bamboozled me, there.”

Andresen’s testimony was just a taste of what was to come on Days 2 and 3 of the Kleiman vs. Wright trial, which is being closely watched because of the defendant’s history of claiming to be the inventor of Bitcoin but failing to conclusively prove it.

If the plaintiffs win, Wright could be ordered to give them a portion of intellectual property rights and a share of up to 1.1 million bitcoins, worth $68 billion, that the plaintiffs claim he controls. However, many in the crypto community have called into question the existence of these coins and, if they do exist, whether Wright in fact controls them – and even if he does, whether the court will be able to force him to abide by the jury’s decision.

‘I never got a cent’

Jamie Wilson, director of the Australian cybersecurity company Cryptoloc, testified via pre-taped video deposition about his former business relationship with Craig Wright.

Wilson told the plaintiffs’ attorneys that he met Wright in 2012 after learning about bitcoin in 2011, and accepted a director role in several of Wright’s companies including Hotwire and Coin Exchange.

On October 23, 2013, Wilson sent Wright an email resigning from his positions at four of Wright’s companies effective immediately.

“I wasn’t feeling comfortable,” Wilson told the attorneys when they asked him his reason for resigning. “I didn’t like the way he went about business, his ethics and morals, the way he treated people.”

Wilson said he became suspicious of Wright when he noticed “a lot of bitcoin” and money that originated in the United States on company balance sheets. Concerned that the money was the result of a U.S. government contract he was unaware of, Wilson said, he took his concerns to Wright who told him the money was from unspecified research and development activities.

When Wilson dug deeper into company records, he told attorneys, he found that the money originated at W&K – the entity plaintiffs say represented a business agreement between Dave Kleiman and Craig Wright to mine bitcoin and develop intellectual property relating to blockchain technology.

Wilson said his suspicion was increased by Wright’s change in behavior and lifestyle after Dave Kleinman’s death in April 2013. Before Kleinman died, Wilson described Wright as driving “a very cheap car,” living in rental properties, and wearing hoodies.

After Dave’s death, Wilson described Wright’s newfound interest in “watches, flashy suits…a massive change in lifestyle.”

“His arrogance, believing he had to change himself, it just caused a lot of problems,” Wilson testified.

Wilson also said Wright never paid him – or any other employees at Hotwire – during the time period of Wilson’s employment.

“I did not receive one cent,” Wilson said. He added that he was never reimbursed for travel expenses or the down payment on a rental property for an office, and that Wright’s other employees were forced to borrow money from friends and family to stay afloat.

Wilson testified that he wasn’t expecting to receive a salary, however, and only found out about his supposed $150,000 per year salary when the Australian Tax Office (ATO) informed him he needed to pay taxes on it, because Wright had reported the payment.

“I never got a cent, anyway,” Wilson reiterated.

Ira Kleiman takes the stand

David Kleiman’s brother Ira, the personal representative of the Kleiman estate and plaintiff in this case, took the stand on Wednesday.

Kleiman told the jury that he first met Wright in February 2014, approximately a year after Dave’s death, when Dave’s friend Patrick Paige forwarded Ira an email from Wright (dated Feb. 12, 2014) discussing their alleged partnership to mine bitcoin.

A day after receiving Paige’s email, Ira reached out to Wright asking for more information about his brother’s purported involvement in the creation of bitcoin:

“Can I ask you if Dave played a part in writing the original PDF under the Asian alias?” Kleiman wrote to Wright, in an apparent reference to Nakamoto’s seminal bitcoin white paper. “I have no interest in public attention from it. I just think that it would be cool if David played a part in creating something so incredible.”

The court then heard about two months of communication between Ira Kleiman and Wright, where the two discussed the role Wright claimed he and Dave played in the bitcoin’s creation.

“I had math skills and some coding that frankly was crud (better than some, but really),” Wright told Ira Kleiman in an email dated March 7, 2014. “Dave could edit his way through hell and back. I am not a team player. I am a terrible boss and a slave driver, but with Dave I was far more…Satoshi was a team.”

Growing mistrust

But in April 2014, the relationship between Kleinman and Wright appears to have begun to sour.

Ira Kleiman showed the jury an email he received on April 15, 2014, from Andrew Miller, an employee of the Australian Tax Office, about Dave’s estate.

Ira told the jury that, through Miller’s email, he learned for the first time that Wright had sued W&K in an Australian court, and that Wright told Australian authorities he’d paid Dave’s estate $40 million AUSD to “fund the projects” of W&K.

In the email, Miller asked Kleiman a series of questions about W&K including whether he was aware that Wright had taken legal action against the company in Australia, or that Dave’s estate had purportedly received a bond worth $40 million AUSD from Wright to fund W&K’s projects.

Miller’s email also said there was a settlement agreement for the transfer of property from W&K to an entity owned by Wright, and that a then-21-year-old Vietnamese woman named Uyen Nguyen had been appointed director of W&K. Miller asked Kleiman if he had instructed Nguyen to accept the settlement agreement.

Kleiman told the jury that, at the time of Miller’s email, he was not aware of W&K and had never met or heard of Nguyen. He also said that the estate had received no money from Craig Wright or any related entities.

On April 23, 2014, Kleiman reached out to Wright via email for answers. ”I feel like there are discrepancies in the contracts between you and W&K, such as Dave’s signature, his resignation, transfer of all accountable value, Uyen’s role of director, BAA projects, etc…I do believe we need to remedy the lopsided contractual exchange,” Kleiman wrote.

“From these documents, it appears clear to see a systematic transfer of assets out of W&K back to you. Up until April 15, I was a complete believer in what you were telling me,” Kleiman wrote in another email to Wright. “But you never mentioned any of the actions you were taking against W&K prior to contacting us.”

Attorneys for the plaintiffs showed the jury a contract allegedly signed by Dave Kleiman on April 2, 2013 – 24 days before his death – that gave Wright control of W&K’s assets.

The signature shown to the jury – crisp and slanted – differed vastly from prior signatures of Dave Kleiman’s, such as the one shown from his will, where he signed with a large, looping “D” followed by a scribble.

“That’s not my brother’s signature,” Kleiman told the jury, referring to the signature on the contract.

Later that month, on April 29, 2014, Miller wrote another email to Kleiman, asking him to confirm the veracity of a contract from March 2014 filed with the ATO by Wright.

“It suggests that you acquired $10,500,000 worth of shares in an Australian company ‘Coin Exch’ Pty Ltd. Were you aware of this, and if so, in what form did you pay this share of capital?”

Kleiman told the jury he never bought shares of Coin Exchange.

Former nChain lawyer speaks

Jimmy Nguyen, a former attorney for nChain, the London-based company where Craig Wright is chief scientist, also gave testimony about the nature of Wright’s involvement at nChain and his claims to be Satoshi Nakamoto.

Nguyen testified that Wright told him that he and Dave Kleiman both posted from Satoshi’s accounts.

He also testified that, in 2014, Wright claimed he had “more money than Rwanda.”

Wright is set to take the stand on Thursday.

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Author: Cheyenne Ligon

El Salvador’s Bukele announces new bitcoin education project

El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele announced yet another public project funded through a surplus in the country’s bitcoin fund: schools to educate citizens about the cryptocurrency. 

Bukele tweeted plans for the first project made possible with the fund — a modern-looking pet hospital — on Oct. 9. During a Nov. 1 press conference centered on a bricklaying ceremony for that clinic, the president also revealed plans to create the country’s first 20 bitcoin schools. The facilities will be remodeled with the necessary technology to teach people about cryptocurrency, he said. 

In his October tweets about the first pet hospital, Bukele explained that it would be funded with surpluses from the trust fund designed to help bitcoin adoption in the country. El Salvador’s lawmakers approved the $150 million fund in late August, a few days before the nation officially made Bitcoin legal tender alongside the U.S. dollar on Sept. 7.

Bukele said at the time that the fund had a surplus of $4 million due to increases in bitcoin’s value. He confirmed that the country would not be selling any bitcoin, but using the trust’s U.S. dollars instead. However, questions remain about how the fund works.

Now, it appears the country has additional funds for the bitcoin schools. During his speech, Bukele said the fund now has a surplus of a couple million dollars more than when he announced the pet hospital a few weeks ago (El Salvador’s presidential Twitter account quoted this number as “a few” million). He clarified that the funds “don’t touch a cent” of El Salvador’s national budget or citizen taxes, and was made possible through the country’s bitcoin law.)

Bukele said the country could hopefully see more projects coming, as long as bitcoin’s value keeps rising. Using the pet hospitals will cost just 25 cents for any treatment, he said, which people can pay with their Chivo wallets. The first location will employ 300 people.

It also appears that El Salvador is planning additional pet hospitals outside the capital of San Salvador, which may potentially be funded with the surpluses from the bitcoin fund as well. 

The same day of the school announcement, Bukele shared a video clip of himself on stage in a dimly-lit auditorium talking about his so-called Plan Cuscatlán, which involves the state creating three “cheap” clinics in the country. These include locations in the cities of Santa Ana and San Miguel in addition to San Salvador.

Because El Salvador has been buying bitcoin privately, the country’s purchases have mainly been revealed through Bukele’s tweets. The president said on Oct. 27 that the country had bought 420 more bitcoins, bringing its total to 1,120.

© 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.

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Author: Kristin Majcher


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