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Someone took out a $1.4 million loan with an NFT as collateral

A loan has been issued for $1.4 million using the crypto platform NftFi. The terms of the deal are 30 days at 9.69% APR.

And the collateral? Well, it’s an NFT.

As The Block has reported recently, NFTs are starting to be used as collateral when taking out loans. It works like any other kind of collateralized loan. If you don’t repay the loan, the other party takes your collateral, in this case the NFT.

It’s a set-up that worked well for one lender. They lent out 3.5 ETH (worth $7,350 at the time) and when it wasn’t repaid, they received the collateral, an “Elevated Deconstructions” NFT, worth $340,000.

These NFT-backed loans have been increasing in frequency over the past few months, as more users have become more comfortable with the concept. There have been five new loans so far today, according to the tracker bot in the project’s Discord channel, as well as a bunch of new offers for loans and several loans being repaid.

The $1.4 million loan was the biggest NFT-collateralized loan yet, according to NftFI. It began on October 28 and the NFT was Autoglyph #488. 

Autoglyphs are a generative art collection where the algorithm for creating the art is stored on the Ethereum blockchain — meaning the token and the art are much more closely connected than is the case for most NFTs. The current floor price for an Autoglyph is 299 ETH ($1.3 million).

The loan was provided by MetaStreet DAO. Its stated objective is to provide funding to those who want to access capital and are willing to put up NFTs as collateral. The loan was paid to a pseudonymous crypto user called KrypToniK in the stablecoin DAI.

© 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: Tim Copeland

The Cube Movement

The mainstream media has caught on to the latest huge crypto trend, which isn’t a new non-fungible token (NFT) line or a fresh dog token, but small desk tchotchkes made of one of the densest elements humans can safely touch – tungsten. Spearheaded by Neeraj Agrawal at CoinCenter and investor Nic Carter, the Cube Movement has surged through Crypto Twitter over the last month or so. Midwest Tungsten – the true Cube connoisseur’s American supplier of choice – has seen massive sales spikes. Twitter users have reported wait times of more than a month for new Cube orders.

Yesterday, NBC did its take on the “Tungsten Cube Bull Market” and offered a few tentative insights into the big question: Why are people into these things?

It started off as another Crypto Twitter meme obliquely commenting on speculative manias, but has become A Thing for literally material reasons: The cubes are so weirdly heavy that holding one feels like a kind of tactile illusion. To my shame, I do not own a Cube, but I have experienced its inscrutable allure, the almost supernatural sense that something so dense must be in some unspeakable way alive, an aliveness beyond the horizon of our petty human concerns. As Tim Copeland at The Block perfectly phrased it, when you hold a Cube, you sense that “it yearns to be one again with the earth.”

The Tungsten Cube is basically a Magic Eye poster for your hands, in other words. But, at the risk of taking all the fun out of it (which, OK, I guess is my job), the Cube phenomenon is deeply layered and has a bizarrely large amount to tell us about not just crypto, but where we are as a society.

The Cube is about Zoom and the coronavirus pandemic. The Cube is about market froth. The Cube is about the metaverse. The Cube is about income inequality.

One level up from the pure sensation of its weird density, the Cube is a digital-age reminder that we have bodies and that those bodies really, really, really matter. In purely hedonistic terms, holding The Cube is just an extreme version of the experiences that await you every minute of every day if you just get up from your desk for a little while and go take a walk or, better yet, head into the woods and take a hike.

Sure, the Cube is cool, but have you ever picked up a random good-looking rock from the side of a river? Have you ever overheard a really interesting conversation when walking to the corner store? The Cube’s weight is a memory and reminder of the rich reality that’s out there for the taking the second we log off. The Cube is a symptom of our Plague Years, embraced by a professional class that has been isolated behind screens and has had enough. (It should also, as a purely frivolous luxury good, be a reminder of all the GrubHub drivers and “essential workers” whose physical risk and discomfort the work-from-home cohort has been able to conveniently hide behind app screens.)

The Cube is also a righteous middle finger to the wave of metaverse pitches coming fast and furious from the likes of the former Facebook and now Microsoft. The Cube rebuts the absurd idea that virtual reality is going to replace playing ping-pong or fencing in real life. Both of those were featured in Facebook’s Meta presentation and (to return to Earth from the realm of poets) they are gobsmackingly stupid pitches. The kind of haptic feedback and low latency needed to have even a reasonable approximation of these visceral experiences in a virtual world are decades, if not centuries, away. Using them as examples is probably the clearest evidence that Mark Zuckerberg’s “Meta” is essentially a con meant to sell a bill of goods that will never truly arrive.

It might seem equally absurd to claim this rhetorical weight for a meme emerging from Crypto Twitter, which is almost as full of terminally online brain-poisoning victims as Politics Twitter. But as I’ve explored at length in my book “Bitcoin is Magic”, the deep purpose of crypto and blockchain is to imbue digital objects with the permanence of the physical world – to give them, if you’ll indulge me, digital density.

The Canadian media philosopher Marshall McLuhan analyzed the history of media in terms of a tradeoff between enduring communication technology (e.g., the Pyramids) and high-speed communication technology (e.g., email). Bitcoin and crypto are a novel melding of the durable and the fast. The technology’s costs and inconveniences (I’m looking at you, gas fees) are not a bug, but a feature inextricable from this ambition.

Yes, OK, at the end of the day there’s no denying that Tungsten Cube Mania is mostly just another fad, fueled by the newly crypto-rich who can splash out two hundred bucks or more for a 21st century Hummel figurine. But as with any fad with real legs, if you look a bit deeper you’ll find a weighty truth within.

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Author: David Z. Morris

Coinbase Users Can Borrow Up to $1M With Bitcoin as Collateral

Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is now allowing customers to borrow as much as 40% of their bitcoin value up to $1 million with no credit checks, the company tweeted on Tuesday.

  • The borrowing minimum and maximum amounts may vary by state, Coinbase added.
  • The loans will be issued with an annual percentage rate of 8%, and borrowers won’t be required to show credit checks, Coinbase said.
  • Customers can obtain the cash using their PayPal or bank accounts. They will need to make minimum $10 monthly interest payments, and Coinbase is offering flexible repayment schedules.
  • Coinbase said that it won’t lend or otherwise use the collateralized bitcoin but instead continue to hold it.
  • Earlier this year, Coinbase dropped plans for a crypto lending product after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission raised concerns. The lending product was supposed to power a crypto savings account that would earn customers a 4% annual percentage yield (APY), a return that’s multiples higher than most savings accounts at traditional banks.

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Author: Michael Bellusci

Crypto Trading Platform AscendEx Raises $50M From Backers Including Alameda Research

Singapore-based cryptocurrency trading platform AscendEx has raised $50 million in a Series B funding round led by Polychain Capital and Hack VC, the company said in a statement. Investors also included Jump Capital, Alameda Research, Uncorrelated Ventures, Eterna Capital, Acheron Trading, Palm Drive Capital and Nothing Research.

  • AscendEx, which was launched under the name “BitMax” in July 2018, offers exchange, custody, and staking services.
  • The company plans to use the funds to “accelerate international market entry, and catalyze further product innovation, specifically focused on blockchain-based yield generating protocol,” global head of business development Shane Molidor said in the statement.
  • AscendEX said it serves over one million retail and institutional clients, and has reached over $200 million in average daily trading volume.
  • No valuation for the company was disclosed.

Read more: Sam Bankman-Fried Hands Control of Crypto Trading Firm Alameda to Two Deputies

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Author: Michael Bellusci

Stellar Validators Vote In AMM Integration That Could Boost Liquidity

In a protocol upgrade Wednesday morning, tokenized money transfer protocol Stellar has launched an automated market maker (AMM) that will operate alongside its order book-based router and matching engine.

The voted-in proposal could bring greater efficiency and utility by deploying a longtime staple of the decentralized finance (DeFi) world.

Stellar is a blockchain protocol designed to facilitate cross-border payments between different forms of tokenized money, such as digital dollars and tokenized gold. Until today, the protocol operated with an orderbook-style matching engine, connecting buyers and sellers of various tokens.

AMMs are a decentralized form of exchange pooling two assets, such as ETH and DAI, which automatically adjusts the price relationship between the assets based on trading volume. They are a particularly popular form of asset exchange in DeFi.

In an interview with CoinDesk, Stellar’s head of ecosystem, Justin Rice, said that the addition of an AMM at the protocol level was a popular ask among developers and users, and that the implementation takes cues from Ethereum-native AMMs such as Uniswap v2.

Users will now be able to deposit liquidity into pools for trading fees, and the implementation could prove to be a boon for market makers and arbitrageurs trading between prices on the order book and the AMM.

Additionally, Rice said that this integration will make adding new assets to the protocol easier, as AMMs allow long-tail or exotic assets to trade despite limited liquidity.

The AMM functionality went live at 11 a.m. Eastern time, or 15:00 UTC.

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Author: Andrew Thurman

US lawmakers call on SEC chair Gensler to approve a spot bitcoin ETF

U.S. Representatives Tom Emmer and Darren Soto are calling on the Securities and Exchange Commission and its chair, Gary Gensler, to approve a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund.

In a letter released Wednesday, Emmer and Soto questioned why the SEC cleared the way for futures-linked bitcoin ETFs but not those that actually hold bitcoin itself. The historic listing of the ProShares bitcoin ETF, which took place last month, paved the way for several other similar products to list in the U.S. for the first time.

As the two members of Congress note:

“Last month, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) allowed trading to commence for two Bitcoin futures exchange-traded funds (ETF) that provide exposure to CME-traded Bitcoin futures. While this is a step forward for millions of Americans who are demanding access to simple ways to invest in Bitcoin, these products are potentially much more volatile than a Bitcoin spot ETF and may impose substantially higher fees on investors due the premium at which Bitcoin futures typically trade, as well as the cost of rolling futures contracts each month.”

“We question why, if you are comfortable allowing trading in an ETF based on derivatives contracts, you are not equally or more comfortable allowing trading to commence in ETFs based on spot Bitcoin,” the letter continued. “Bitcoin spot ETFs are based directly on the asset, which inherently provides more protection for investors.”

The letter’s contents are unsurprising, given the source. Both Emmer and Soto are crypto advocates within Congress, having authored legislation that would clarify the scope of regulation around the technology within the U.S. 

“The SEC is in a position to approve Bitcoin futures ETFs, as reflected by the trading of these products, so it should also be in a position to approve Bitcoin spot ETFs,” the two concluded.

© 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: Michael McSweeney

Biden formalizes nominee to lead the US national bank regulator. What does she think about crypto?

On Nov. 2, the Biden administration formalized Saule Omarova, a professor at Cornell’s Law School, as its nominee to lead the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Omarova will still need to face confirmation, which will entail a series of hearings and a vote in a tightly locked Senate, none of which have been scheduled yet. While the administration announced its plan for the nomination in September, the formal process has now begun. Omarova’s confirmation has, in the interval, become the epicenter of something of a political storm.

Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee have, in particular, been sounding the alarm as to tendencies they call “anti-bank.” Sen. Pat Toomey, who leads the Senate Banking Committee’s Republicans, has publicly called Omarova a radical candidate. 

Omarova, who grew up in Kazakhstan and finished her undergrad at Moscow State University in 1989, shortly before the fall of the Soviet Union, authored a thesis titled “Karl Marx’s Economic Analysis and the Theory of Revolution in The Capital,” which Toomey has called on Omarova to publicize. Elsewhere, Sen. Sherrod Brown, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, came to Omarova’s defense. 

“Before today, I thought, red scare McCarthyism was rightly relegated to the dustbin of history,” said Brown, in a statement. “Any American citizen who fled communist repression — whether it be FDIC Chair Jelena McWilliams or OCC nominee Saule Omarova — should be lauded for their courage and conviction.” 

But Toomey is not alone in his concerns. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board subsequently called Omarova “a banking regulator who hates banks.” 

But what is the intersection between that role and crypto? Currently, under Acting Comptroller Michael Hsu, the OCC is the leading regulator of national banks. It took on a starring role within the crypto industry under the tenure of Brian Brooks, who pushed forward policies favorable to crypto’s role within the banking system. Critics accused Brooks of unilaterally undermining bank oversight. 

In many ways, it was Brooks who first got the crypto industry’s attention on the OCC. Omarova’s thoughts on crypto will, consequently, be critical, both for the OCC’s independent ability to regulate the authorization of new national banking charters and for its roles in the President’s Working Group and the Financial Stability Oversight Board, which will be determining the fate of stablecoins

In 2019 research she wrote for Cornell, Omarova sought to demonstrate:

“Why specific fintech applications — cryptocurrencies, distributed ledger technologies, digital crowdfunding, and robo-advising — are poised to amplify the effect of these destabilizing mechanisms, and thus potentially exacerbate the tensions and imbalances in today’s financial markets and the broader economy. It is this potential that renders fintech a public policy challenge of the highest order.”

While that was research published back in 2019 — and therefore conducted well before — it’s a sentiment she re-upped on Twitter in May in response to Goldman Sachs’ new cryptocurrency trading team. In June, she tweeted a line that Senator Elizabeth Warren would later paraphrase, writing: “Crypto was bound to become new ‘shadow banking.’”

In addition to suspicion towards crypto trading, Omarova’s views on a central bank digital currency line up more closely with proposals for FedAccounts that appeared in early versions of last year’s pandemic-era stimulus legislation.

Just weeks ago, Vanderbilt Law Review published work by Omarova called “The People’s Ledger” that pushes a vision of the Federal Reserve as a central public payment platform. It ruminates on the ability of CBDCs to disintermediate commercial banks — a prospect that obviously worries banks as well as those skeptical of the Fed’s ability to manage such a system.

In that article, Omarova points to the rise in cryptocurrencies as well as Reddit-fueled trading of so-called meme stocks as examples of a “broader quest for more equitable and inclusive modes of finance.”

Omarova’s takeaway: “Ultimately, however, it takes a system to beat a system.”

The OCC declined to comment on this article. Staffers for Senator Brown and Senator Toomey declined to go on the record when reached and had not returned requests for comment as of publication time. 

© 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: Kollen Post

The global supply chain crisis is disrupting shipments to US bitcoin mining firms

U.S. Bitcoin mining firms are experiencing delays for their equipment on order from China amid a global supply chain crisis.

Several large Bitcoin mining operations listed in North America, including Riot Blockchain, Bitfarms and Marathon Digital, have revealed shipment disruption in their recent production updates as a result of the ongoing global logistics issue over the past two months.

Texas-based Riot Blockchain said in early October that as of the end of September, its operating mining fleet had about 25,646 miners. It said that 2,000 units of Bitmain’s AntMiner S19J Pro were shipped in late September and another 4,000 units were scheduled to be shipped from Bitmain’s factory in Malaysia in early October. 

But per Riot’s update on Wednesday, its deployed mining fleet has only increased by 1,624 units in October. It said now 11,500 units of AntMiner S19J Pro under previous purchase orders are expected to be shipped to its Texas facility in November. But it remains to be seen how many of the pending amounts can be delivered by the end of this month.

Riot said although the global logistics problems have disrupted some miner shipment schedules, the impacts to date “have not been material” and it’s working with Bitmain and logistics providers to mitigate the issue where possible. 

Canada-headquartered Bitfarms, on the other hand, already experienced shipments disruption in September. It was originally scheduled to receive 7,230 units of Bitmain’s AntMiner S19J Pro from September to December. The first batch of 2,200 units was supposed to arrive by the end of September but it only received 540 units. 

“Due to supply chain and shipping delays, the other 1,660 Bitmain S19j Pro miners originally scheduled for September delivery are en route and expected to be received in October,” Bitfarms said in early October.

By the end of October, Bitfarms received and deployed 2,869 units of the S19j Pro, about 40% of the pending batch. “The remaining 4,361 Bitmain S19j Pro and 400 MicroBT M30S miners scheduled for delivery this year are en route and are expected to be received in multiple batches in November,” Bitfarm said.

Marathon Digital also anticipated potential logistics disruption two months ago. As of September 1, it had 111,416 units of AntMiners on order scheduled to be fully delivered by the end of June 2022. That means it needs to receive, on average, about 11,000 units every month to eventuallyachieve its expected growth rate.

Marathon received about 5,400 units throughout September. “In September, global logistics issues began to impact shipments, elongate delivery times, and affect the original deployment schedule of miners,” Marathon said in an update in early October.

But it appears the firm has managed to somewhat mitigate the logistics issue last month by paying up premiums. Marathon said on Tuesday that it received over 15,000 units of the pending orders in October alone.

“We also began chartering planes in October to expedite the delivery of our miners and to mitigate the adverse effects of global logistics issues on our growth. By chartering planes, we decreased the average time it took for miners to be shipped and delivered by approximately 50% from September to October,” Marathon said on Tuesday, adding:

“Providing it remains economically viable to do so, it is our intention to continue chartering flights to ensure the on time delivery of our miners.”

© 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: Wolfie Zhao

Key crypto hires and moves: October 2021

Quick Take

  • Last month, the were a number of big moves within the crypto industry.
  • VC firms, crypto exchanges and banks have all been making key hires.

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this Daily feature on The Block.

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Author: Tim Copeland

A deep dive into Aave’s DeFi ecosystem with founder Stani Kulechov


“When I started to read about smart contracts… my mind exploded.”

That’s Stani Kulechov, founder and CEO of Aave, who joined host Frank Chaparro for the latest episode of The Scoop podcast to discuss his entry into the world of decentralized finance (DeFi) and offer a deep dive into Aave’s ecosystem. 

Among the topics: Aave Arc, the project’s institutional product. During the conversation, Kulechov said that he believes smaller banks and private firms will be among the institutional world’s early adopters of DeFi.

“I think the biggest banks are more in the state of actually learning and getting education on the fly, and they will not be the early movers,” he said. “But the early movers will be the banks that are smaller banks, private banks, and are exposed one way into the crypto space.”

‘MetaFi’

As one might expect, the interview with Kulechov swung toward a popular one in the crypto space today: virtual worlds, gaming and the so-called Metaverse, the latter being a catch-all phrase for the different platforms and services that compromise an immersive digital experience.

Kulechov likened the way users spend time playing games in the Metaverse to the way people log time in a physical space like a cafe or workspace.

“Games becomes more of an economy the same way as we’re spending times sitting in a cafe, workspaces or having dinners or meeting friends.” He also related the use of finance tools in DeFi protocols to playing games and shopping in a brand’s store in the metaverse. 

For Aave in particular, this area is being explored via the launch of Aavegotchi, which began its first land auctions this October. “It’s just like a completely new world that can be not just an experiment, but it could become reality,” said Kulechov.

Beyond DeFi

While DeFi remains the focus of Aave, Kulechov sees a range of possibilities for similar architectures outside of DeFi.

Kulechov discovered that while DeFi protocols applied nicely to finance, a similar architecture could be created to build a social platform. Aave is currently working on this Ethereum-based Twitter alternative meant to give users more control over their content.

“You don’t have this component where you have this centralized entity abstracting the value from the users and bringing the value to the shareholders,” he explained. “Instead, the community owns the network and also you own the social graph and you can decide how you monetize it.” 

© 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: Frank Chaparro


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