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Author: samwsimpson_lyjt8578

Bitcoin Whale Holdings Reach 2021 High Amid Inflation Fears

Bitcoin whales or large investors with ample capital supply appear to be buying again as fears of inflation lurching out of control strengthen the case for investing in store of value assets.

Large investors, holding at least 1,000 BTC, snapped up 142,000 coins last week, taking the cumulative tally to nearly 200,000 BTC – the highest in 2021, blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis’ market intel report published on Tuesday said.

The renewed buying amid rising inflation expectations across the globe suggests investment is the primary use case for bitcoin.

“Its a confirmation of the view that bitcoin is seen as digital gold, or perhaps institutions are just making a longer term trade on the bitcoin price,” Chainalysis said.

The U.S. 10-year breakeven rate, which represents how the market foresees long-term price pressures, recently rose to a decade high of 2.64%, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Bitcoin rallied nearly 40% in October, hitting a record high of $66,975.

Analysts at JPMorgan have attributed the rally to the perception that bitcoin is an inflation hedge contrary. The perception stems from bitcoin’s mining reward halving. This programmed code reduces the pace of supply expansion by 50% every four years, putting the cryptocurrency’s monetary policy at odds with the Federal Reserve’s decades of money printing.

However, bitcoin needs to expand its footprint into crypto sub-sectors like Web3 and decentralized finance to remain relevant relative to ether in the long run, according to Chainalysis, .

“Bitcoin usage has not reached the sophistication of Ethereum or other Layer 1 assets,” Chainalysis said. “A decentralized way of wrapping bitcoin is needed to unlock the use of bitcoin as high-quality capital in DeFi.”

“If bitcoin can be used as capital in Web 3.0 then it will have a future as both a scarce fungible asset and as a useful asset in the more innovative side of crypto,” Chainalysis added.

The uptick in whale holdings suggests the recent rally is backed by strong hands and is sustainable. Bitcoin’s bullish momentum lost steam in the first quarter as whale holdings started declining. The market crashed in May.

The cryptocurrency was last seen changing hands near $62,900, representing a 0.5% drop on the day, according to CoinDesk 20.

Also read: Bitcoin Eyes Fed Meeting After Biggest Monthly Price Gain Since December 2020

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Author: Omkar Godbole

Australia’s largest bank is reportedly planning to add crypto support to its app

The Australian Financial Review reported Tuesday that Commonwealth Bank, the country’s top bank, is planning to integrate crypto into its digital app.

Citing sources with knowledge of the process, the AFR said that the bank will announce the ability to buy and hold bitcoin, as well as other digital assets. Per the report, the added support will begin next year.

An announcement is expected Wednesday. The AFR also said that Commonwealth Bank may also make public deals with Gemini, a U.S.-headquartered exchange, and Chainalyis, a blockchain analytics firm, both of which will be playing support roles for the app integration.

 

© 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

Marathon Digital Holds $457M in Bitcoin After Increase in October Mining

Marathon Digital (NASDAQ: MARA) produced 417.7 bitcoins in October, a 23% increase over the previous month that boosted the value of the company’s total bitcoin holdings to about $457.4 million, the bitcoin miner said on Tuesday.

  • Marathon Digital now has about 7,453 bitcoins. Its mining fleet consists of 27,280 active miners producing approximately 2.96 exahashes (EH/s).
  • “With shipments of our previously purchased miners accelerating over the coming months, we continue to expect our bitcoin production to become more consistent as we scale,” Marathon Digital CEO Fred Thiel said in a statement.
  • In a press release, Marathon Digital said that it had received 42,381 top-tier ASIC miners from Bitmain this year with another 3,285 ASIC miners currently in transit.
  • The company has been expanding rapidly. After it receives all its outstanding purchase orders for miners by mid-2022 and deploys the machines, Marathon expects to have approximately 133,000 operational miners generating about 13.3 EH/s.
  • In October, Marathon Digital announced that it had secured a $100 million revolving line of credit with Silvergate Bank in bitcoin and U.S. dollars and would use the loan to fund the company’s bitcoin mining operations and to acquire new equipment.

Read more: Crypto Miners Are ‘Stockpiling’ Bitcoin Amid Recent Rally, Kraken Says

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Author: Michael Bellusci

Celsius acquires high-security custodian GK8 for $115 million

Crypto lending platform Celsius is acquiring a high-security custodian, announcing the purchase of Israeli-based GK8 for $115 million.

GK8 touts its platform as an all-in-one custody platform for banks, supporting hundreds of tokens in addition to some staking and decentralized finance protocols. The firm provides an air-gapped vault to mitigate cyberattacks and is so confident in its product it set a $250,000 bounty in bitcoin for anyone able to hack its cold wallet. Now, those assurances belong to Celsius.

“With the GK8 acquisition, Celsius now has the only end-to-end platform that combines a truly offline cold vault with a keyless MPC with an unlimited number of automatic co-signers,” said Celsius in a post.

The acquisition allows Celsius to provide “the all-in-one platform built for banks and financial institutions,” said the firm in its post.

Its offerings have drawn the eye of regulators in recent months. New Jersey’s Bureau of Securities ordered Celsius to halt activity in the state in September, and Texas, Alabama and Kentucky subsequently launched similar inquiries into the platform.

But growth seems to continue despite these regulatory snags. This acquisition comes just after closing a $400 million round last month led by WestCap. That brought Celsius’s valuation to $3 billion.

© 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: Aislinn Keely

Deadmau5, Gregory Siff Merge Digital and Physical Art With Solana NFT Drop

Electronic music staple Deadmau5 is tapping Looks Rare, a new metaverse studio, to launch non-fungible tokens (NFTs) on the Solana blockchain.

The NFT collection will be made by abstract artist Gregory Siff at the Red Rocks Music Festival in Colorado on Nov. 4. The pieces will be turned into NFTs by Looks Rare on the spot, letting fans walk away with both the physical art and a digital collectible.

It’s just the latest bit of NFT experimentation on Solana as the number of drops on the high-speed blockchain mounts in recent months. The three largest NFT marketplaces on Solana processed $34 million in volume over the course of one week in October, according to data compiled by DappRadar.

Deadmau5, who has long dabbled in crypto, is no stranger to NFTs. He pumped out $100,000 in NFTs in December 2020 before reupping with another drop in August. Last month he even performed at a metaverse concert in Decentraland, a virtual world constructed atop the Ethereum blockchain.

Looks Rare is coming off the launch of its first Solana NFT project, CryptoVeras, a collection pegged to the celebration of Día de los Muertos.

In October, crypto exchange FTX.US announced it would host its own NFT marketplace on the Solana blockchain.

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Author: Eli Tan

Crypto anons buy 2,000 lb tungsten cube NFT for $250,000

A decentralized organization (or DAO) has purchased an NFT that represents — and can be redeemed for — a very large tungsten cube. 

The organization, which includes notable pseudonymous NFT collector Vincent Van Dough, bought the NFT for 56.9 ETH ($250,000). According to the auction details, 10% of the proceeds will go to a charitable cause.

Memeing into reality

For those who don’t spend all day on Twitter, here’s some context. 

Last month, Coin Center’s director of comms Neeraj Agrawal made a fake Bloomberg headline that crypto traders were buying up tungsten cubes, causing prices to skyrocket. This led to crypto traders actually doing so, and, in turn, led to journalist Joe Weisenthal turning it into a real Bloomberg headline. So, it’s a meme but people have been buying these cubes — because they’re particularly dense.

Midwest Tungsten, one of the few providers of such cubes, has enjoyed the surging sales and attention from the crypto crowd. Since this began, the company has started accepting bitcoin payments for cubes. Then it turned to NFTs.

On October 25, Midwest Tungsten created an auction for its first tungsten cube NFT. The NFT represents a physical 2,000 lb cube held at its headquarters in Illinois. The buyer is able to visit the cube once a year, where it is stored in a room only accessible by the cube owner. If the buyer decides to burn the NFT (destroy it permanently) then Midwest Tungsten will ship the cube to them. 

As for who bought the NFT, it was Tungsten DAO, which Van Dough created on October 23, describing it as an “experimental meme incubation studio.”

Van Dough is an NFT collector who has spent more than $20 million on NFTs. They also recently revealed the formation of a new NFT fund, in partnership with Three Arrows Capital co-founders Su Zhu and Kyle Davies.

They explained that anyone can submit a meme that has garnered significant traction and if approved, it will get minted as an NFT. Most of the sales of the meme will go to the DAO’s treasury with 10% to the meme creator.

As for what they will do with the tungsten cube NFT, Van Dough tweeted: “The cube will remain at @MTS_Store’s factory until the NFT representation of it is burnt, which will trigger delivery of the cube via freight.”

Other cube business

This NFT auction is not to be confused with the collection of 500 tungsten cube NFTs that was recently sold for around $200,000. All the proceeds of the sale and ongoing royalties for this collection are being sent to crypto advocacy groups, including Coin Center. 

FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is auctioning off cube #69 from this collection on FTX.US’s newly launched marketplace. He said the winning cube will be signed/engraved by him and that all proceeds will be donated. In addition to the NFT, Midwest Tungsten will provide the buyer with a physical 4” tungsten cube. 

So far, the highest bid is 200 SOL, worth some $40,000.

Disclaimer: The author of this article owns a tungsten cube.

© 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

On-chain profit strategies and MEV extraction

Quick Take

  • This is a written version of The Block Research’s video presentation about on-chain profit strategies and MEV extraction
  • Smart contract platforms with DeFi are full of profitable opportunities based on inefficiencies or harm to other users
  • Arbitration is the most frequent occurrence among on-chain opportunities
  • Flashbots successfully reduce negative externalities and generate additional income for miners

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: Igor Igamberdiev

FTX Leads $150M Funding Round in African Payments Firm Chipper Cash: Report

Cross-border payments firm Chipper Cash has raised $150 million in a Series C extension round led by crypto exchange FTX, according to a report from TechCrunch.

  • The latest raise, which TechCrunch said values the African firm at slightly over $2 billion, comes after Chipper raised $100 million in May in a Series C round led by SVB Capital.
  • Investors from the May funding who also participated in the extension round included SVB Capital, Deciens Capital, Ribbit Capital, Bezos Expeditions, One Way Ventures and Tribe Capital, according to TechCrunch. The identity of new investors was not immediately known.
  • Chipper Cash was founded in 2018 as way of providing no-fee, peer-to-peer cross-border payment services for Africans. Its services are used across Ghana, Uganda, Nigeria, Tanzania, Rwanda, South Africa and Kenya, and recently expanded to provide people in the U.K. and the U.S. with the ability to send money to Chipper’s African markets.

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Author: Nelson Wang

Carbon Offsets Are a Distraction for Crypto

BitMEX, the Seychelles-based derivatives exchange, is looking to mitigate its environmental footprint by purchasing $100,000 worth of carbon credits. Those credits represent 7,110 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, the amount BitMEX figures it’s on the line for through its bitcoin-based business.

It’s a fine effort especially because, to my knowledge, no one is criticizing BitMEX for its energy draw. The move, which would offset BitMEX’s share of bitcoin transactions and its corporate servers, would make it one of the first “carbon neutral” crypto exchanges, it said in a blog post. (Rival derivatives platform FTX has made a similar pledge.)

This article is excerpted from The Node, CoinDesk’s daily roundup of the most pivotal stories in blockchain and crypto news. You can subscribe to get the full newsletter here.

There is a hitch: Carbon credits don’t work as advertised, being frequently fraudulent and ineffective. While BitMEX’s “net zero” pledge is laudable, it’s following a familiar corporate playbook of shuffling deckchairs on a sinking ship.

As I write, more than 130 heads of state and thousands of attendees are gathered in Glasgow, Scotland, for a two-week-long conference dedicated to averting dangerous climate change.

As of February 2020, nearly a quarter of all Fortune 500 companies had signed pledges to go carbon neutral by 2030. And carbon offsets are a large part of this trend to go “green.” A generic term for a wide range of assets and activities, offsets are essentially promises to reduce environmental degradation in one area to compensate for environmental degradation elsewhere. A company can make a green-sounding pledge to go “carbon neutral” by buying credits from some other company that has polluted less that year.

In short: Offsets allow normal economic activity to continue apace. They operate on the understanding that X amount of emissions will be released no matter what, and that heavy polluters can be made better if other companies pollute less. A new survey from Ecosystem Marketplace found that the voluntary carbon offset market is on track to cross $1 billion for the first time, as all-time market value hits $6.7 billion. Guilt is distributed.

“Offsetting essentially means for every ton we remove, we emit a ton somewhere else,” Kate Dooley, a research fellow at the University of Melbourne who studies the impact of carbon accounting, said in a recent interview. “We have no space now for continued carbon dioxide emissions. Emissions need to go to zero within a few decades, and we need removals on top of that to reduce atmospheric concentrations.”

Offsetting is financialization at its worst: reducing activism to arbitrary economic activity. While carbon credits can and do help fund renewable efforts – typically reforestation, but also solar fields and the like – those efforts may be less than advertised. Greenpeace notes that carbon sinks have a short shelf life: Once a forest burns, or is logged, or dies naturally the carbon it traps is re-released.

The only solution, real-hardcore climate activists admit, is to reduce consumption and the amount of carbon released into the environment.

It’s funny, because BitMEX researchers would likely agree with all this. In their report, they note the limited applicability of carbon offsets. The crypto industry should confront its problems and avoid “hollow promises and vague ESG pledges,” the BitMEX researchers said.

Crypto solutions

Crypto has a target on its back precisely because of its energy use. Bitcoin has no choice but to burn vast amounts of energy to secure its network. It transforms a shared commodity – electricity – into a scarce digital asset, a money backed by its supporters, not a state, through “proof-of-work.” You can argue (and I would disagree) that this is literally wasted energy, but you can’t really stop it because that’s the point of being decentralized.

Read more: Bitcoin Mining After the China Ban: US Dominance Is Set to Continue

There’s also controversy around how to measure Bitcoin’s energy footprint. Although the network is publicly audible, no one can guarantee what is powering it. It’s arguable that bitcoin is a greener money than others, because miners are incentivized to find cheap power sources (renewables are often subsidized or naturally cheaper) or make use of “stranded” energy (like from gas flares).

BitMEX took a somewhat heterodox approach to measuring bitcoin’s carbon footprint, deciding to put a kilowatt figure on transaction volume. (Many industry activists have said you cannot compare Bitcoin, a base layer monetary network, to Visa, a payments rail, when it comes to transactions and energy use; Visa, by transaction count, has a far less intensive energy draw.)

BitMEX estimated that every $1 spent on BTC transaction fees can incentivize up to 0.001 tons of carbon emissions. So “assuming a $50 per ton cost of carbon, for every $1 spent on transaction fees, [an exchange] would need to spend 5 cents offsetting the carbon costs, 5%,” BitMEX wrote. That money is better spent elsewhere.

BitMEX notes its consumption model is “imperfect” and “controversial.” I’d argue it’s hardly a solution. But there is still hope. Bitcoin, and crypto generally, can incentivize investments in renewable energy. We’ve already built network scaling solutions like SegWit, transaction batching and the Lightning Network that reduce Bitcoin’s footprint.

There are also crypto-based systems for tracking or trading carbon credits, with the idea that blockchain could make these markets less opaque and more liquid. These are notable efforts but are not true solutions. If crypto companies want to make a difference, they ought to put their outsized profits in building actual infrastructure: propagating scaling layers, building out solar and wind farms, funding carbon trapping research. Real solarpunk stuff, not more financialization.

Crypto can work quietly on solutions to fix the climate crisis. We’re not responsible for the worst of what’s to come. But this is an industry that’s unafraid to experiment and built from the ground up. It’s totally conceivable Bitcoin goes carbon neutral in the not-too-distant future (social pressure is good for that).

But for that to happen, we have to admit that carbon credits are little more than a distraction.

CORRECTION (NOV. 3 14:00 UTC): BitMEX is Seychelles-based, not Bahamas-based as originally reported.

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Author: Daniel Kuhn

Getting Ahead in Crypto Education, With Amber McLeod

“If you’re just now getting started, you’re behind.”

“On Purpose” host Tyrone Ross is joined by Amber McLeod, director of customer success at Onramp Invest for a conversation on adviser education in all things crypto. Whether an adviser is starting at ground zero, ready to trade or a full-blown crypto believer, there is always more to learn and a bevy of educational resources to draw from.

In the crypto investment class, clients also bring varying levels of understanding, from those who are wary of the volatility to those who are ready to jump in but aren’t sure where to start. Sometimes, advisers can even be behind their advisers when it comes to understanding the complexities of crypto.

To create the best possible relationship between advisers and their clients, an in-depth understanding of crypto is required, as well as an innovative and inquisitive mindset, ready to think outside the traditional RIA box.

This episode was produced, announced and edited by Michele Musso with additional production support from Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is “Walk with Swag.”

Transcript

Tyrone Ross

All right, welcome to the latest episode of the “On Purpose” podcast. I am your host, Tyrone Ross, CEO and co-founder of Onramp Invest. Incredibly special episode today, lots of pivots and moving along behind the scenes, but I brought along a special guest with me, the Director of Customer Success at Onramp, Amber McLeod. How are you, queen?

Amber McLeod

I’m doing well, happy to be here.

Tyrone Ross

Happy to be here in short notice, thank you. Thank you for grabbing the microphone and getting ready to chat. So, lots of ways to take this conversation, definitely want to talk about, first, you tell the folks who you are, and then we can get into the dumpster fire that has been helping build Onramp every day and how you smooth things out. And ultimately, again, what you’re hearing on the front lines from advisers who were walking into a new asset class as you’re learning it yourself. So, I think you have a very unique perspective that I want to get to. So first, I will just give you the floor. So you can tell everyone who you are, and what makes you so special.

Amber McLeod

So again, Amber McLeod, I have had quite the history in the front lines, working in operations, supporting customer success and customer service. I have a particular interest and passion for creating processes and environments where we can help people succeed in whatever it is they want to see for their business. I guess that’s kind of a synopsis of where I came into Onramp, and what I wanted to do for the team and help with this mission that we have.

Tyrone Ross

Awesome. So starting there, you’ve moved around a bit since you’ve come into the company, and starting in being a project manager, right, and helping us just figure out what we’re doing at any second of the day. I think that has been helpful, because you probably know more of the business than I do, to be honest. So talk about that, like first coming in, developing those processes, and then ultimately, moving to where you are now, which is literally being on the front lines and talking to advisors as they engage with us for the first time. What has that journey been like over the last what, how many months now? Eight, nine months?

Amber McLeod

Eight months.

Tyrone Ross

Eight months, wow.

Amber McLeod

I’m like a vet. So, I think my journey has been very unique, but just so vital to what I’m doing right now. Starting with working with the development team, the engineers, the product, understanding where the vision was, for the product, the nuances of what we needed to do, why we were collecting the specific information that we had to, was just so, so vital for me to understand this space, to understand the business and what we were trying to accomplish. And one of the things that I think also is very unique in my experience, and going from kind of like the backend and building to front end and supporting advisors is we talk a lot about the challenges and what exists in the traditional space now, and where we want it to go. So, having the ability to sit in and gain that knowledge was vital to what I’m doing now. And honestly, gave me a really good baseline or foundation in supporting the advisors.

Tyrone Ross

But let’s stay right there. So what was the hardest thing, right? Because obviously, your knowledge of crypto was just me talking about bitcoin all the damn time. But so there was a steep learning curve, right? And, you know, the learning curve of crypto, learning curve of being an early-stage startup, which is incredible, nothing prepares you for that, right? That’s just the truth, not even having children, probably the closest thing. But talk about that, what were some of the things that were extremely difficult? And then other things that you kind of fell right into, which again, I guess the love of process was easy, because we really didn’t have too many.

Amber McLeod

It was a combination of a few things. So I very quickly had to, thanks to Eric Ervin, he dumped on my front step a whole slew of material for me to get caught up within the space and understanding product, and what kind of product we were trying to build. So while we were in the process of trying to build and trying to, you know, cultivate these processes, I was also trying to learn this space at the same time. There were a lot of things going on at once. And I think one of the parts that was easiest to kind of pick up on and understand was like the vision ultimately, that you and Eric had for, for what the space needs to be. That was probably the easiest part to interpret. When I saw what you guys were trying to build and I understood the story, it was very easy to fall in alignment with what we needed to do. Probably the most challenging part of it all is like the mindset, right? We talk about being innovative, we talk about trying to find new ways, or new processes to make the experience better for the client and the advisor. But it’s so easy to fall back into what you know, or what you’re most comfortable with. So challenging yourself to think outside of the box, challenging yourself to look at an issue and trying to find a solution that is both beneficial to the client in the advisor, and something that we can build is probably the constant challenge. We got all these great ideas, but ultimately, when it comes to building it, the infrastructure is not always easy in practice. So I think that’s been the most challenging piece.

Tyrone Ross

Yep. And I think that is also one of the things that I say to folks is, just you to hear me apologize all the time, is that it’s so complicated what we’re doing in terms of having to know the RIA space, which you can get a PhD on, understanding RIAs alone, having to understand crypto, bring in the right mindset, you know, we’re essentially early, so we’re building the future. So, you have to be a really good storyteller and get people to understand that. So, I think for the purposes of this conversation, right, it’s advisors who listen to this, there are advisors who are probably skeptics, there are advisors who are way down the rabbit hole, like myself, and I think folks just want to know, right? And I always say, I’m a bad proxy, because I’ve been doing it forever. It’s hard for me to relate now to the advisor still trying to figure out the difference between Bitcoin and Ethereum. I understand, I relate, I’ve been there. But, being so far away, it’s really good to get people who are on the frontlines and talking to them. So, let’s spend a little bit of time there. What are you hearing and or seeing, right, in conversations with advisors who you talk to every day, in terms of what their concerns are, what they’re excited about? Because I think that’s what people really want to know, what questions are advisors asking, what are their concerns? And I don’t think there’s anybody better to answer that than you.

Amber McLeod

We have a running list of items that we constantly talk about with advisors and questions that they’re asking. So I guess, to start with questions that come up quite often, is implementation. Honestly, that’s really where it starts, like practice management, understanding how they’re supposed to be carrying these conversations out with their clients, understanding what this model looks like, as you know, a service that they’re offering, where do I start? We can go into the, you know, the 50 questions of what that means. But, that’s ultimately where we wind up with advisors is alright, I’m starting to understand the space, I see that you guys have the Academy for me. And that’s a great place to start. But as far as implementing this into my practice, what do I do next?

Tyrone Ross

And implementing into practice the other thing where, you know, shout Lacey, who just spoke to on the previous episode is billing, right? Billing being, you know, a big one, everything changes, right, your business model may have to change and everything else, as far as the Academy goes, right? And we’ve seen a lot of demand for the Academy, we’ve seen a lot of people just reach out, and hey, where do I get started? Is that what you see most? It’s the Academy, and then I’ll get to everything later? Also, I’m getting asked a lot, what are the size of the RIAs, or is it smaller RIAs, or is it… And I know for you, you’re learning that $5 billion is small. So, so talk, talk a little bit about that, about that segmentation of folks, you know, the behemoth advisors, what they’re looking for versus that nimble advisor, that could be $100 million or so.

Amber McLeod

I think that that one is actually pretty unique. What we discussed in the early days, what we expected versus what actually happened in reality, with our larger RIAs, we see that education is where they want to start. That’s where they feel most comfortable. They know that they have clients that have held away, they may have begun having conversations with them, but don’t really have a game plan on how they plan to implement outside of giving some preliminary advice to their clients. So the larger RIAs are still in that, “let’s learn a little bit more.” And then, what we’re seeing with the smaller RIAs, or the independents, is they’re ready to go. They are ready to trade. They’re serving a demographic that is right in the middle of where crypto is, that 20 to 40 year-old customer base, and they’re ready to trade. They have been a lot more eager and excited to jump on the platform, link held away accounts. They want to have access to more coins because they’ve been in these conversations with their clients for a little bit of time now.

Tyrone Ross

Alright, so we’re gonna do it now. We’re gonna have some real talk and I said the finance advisors listen, and I’m a financial advisor through and through, and I love my peers. But let’s just be honest, talk about some of the things that you get from advisors that are kind of a pain in the butt. Just so they know, again, it’s funny because we pick it each other, but what are some of the things that again, from having conversations or whatever, and, you know, advisors are a little pecuniary, they don’t really like to spend money, and very much process-oriented as well. But what are some of the interesting quirks, let’s call them that, that you hear from advisors when you talk to them? Not only in terms of crypto, but just, I’m sure you understand how guarded they are of their practice and their client.

Amber McLeod

Absolutely. I think that one of the things that I’ve learned in my journey with learning about crypto and all of the brilliant minds that I have around me, you cannot be so apprehensive about crypto, that you’re not even willing to learn and understand the asset class. That’s number one, I think that there is a lot of myth busting. That we are  trying to do, and making sure that advisors understand. Regardless of how you feel about crypto, you have to, have to, have to, to be a good fiduciary, be comfortable about talking about it. And we have some advisors who, quite frankly, they get on calls with us. And I think they almost want to convince us why crypto is so scary. So that part is a little challenging, especially with where the space is going. If you’re just now getting started, you’re behind. Right? This is an asset class where a lot of advisors are behind where their clients are. As education is concerned around the space, I think the other piece that gets a little challenging on the front end is they are almost expecting for us to give them the blueprint, right? Of walking into the space. And while we 100% as a whole, we’re working to educate, right? We want to give them education, we want to make sure there’s access for investors, there’s tools to help them along the way. But to be quite frank, there’s work that the advisor is going to have to do as well. How you plan to implement, what you need to do as far as updating documentation for your firm. Billing, but ultimately, it’s their responsibility. So I think we teeter back and forth there, right? Where advisors are expecting us to almost give them the syllabus and say, “All right, here you go, it’s ready to go,” where there’s going to be some work that they have to do on their end.

Tyrone Ross

Right. So last question here. And then I definitely want you to give your, you know, your contact information. So folks to reach out with questions, obviously. So, last question. Before we get to that, and we kind of wind things down here. Talk to me about what again, fresh perspective, walking into the space, really understanding very little about RIAs, and just enough to hold, you know, a two minute conversation on crypto. For those of us right, myself included, right, that are looking to educate advisors, that are looking to get them to understand and to be empathetic about what advisors are going through, put that hat on, right? What would you encourage all of us who are very much crypto hippies, and way in the future? And just how do you not see this? What would you caution all of us to pay attention to or do better to get folks to understand?

Amber McLeod

Well, I think creating an environment where the advisor feels comfortable saying what they don’t know, or what they don’t understand is, is number one. For myself, that was very important for me and my journey, I had to have conversations with you. And with Eric and with others on our team, where I’m like, “I don’t understand this at all. You got it, you got to explain it to me.” When you start with crypto, there’s just so many nuances and all these little pieces that you have to kind of put together to really understand the space and when you do that, it almost becomes less scary, if you will, to go down that rabbit hole of understanding the space. So, like you always say, it’s your especially infamous line spacing grace, right. We have to offer spacing grace to these advisors, and create an environment where they feel comfortable saying that they don’t know. The other piece is just being in tune with the conversations that you have with advisors. Some people suffer from imposter syndrome, right? They’d much rather pretend they know instead of saying they don’t know, and there’s no need to call someone out if you are if you understand where they are, but just start where they are, right? And then the other piece is always being willing to share whatever material you have that assisted you in your journey. Being generous with your knowledge, being generous with the resources that you have, I think is a huge help, what I think is most beneficial to the advisor, and ultimately them being a fiduciary for their client.

Tyrone Ross

Awesome. All right, so before I let you go, cuz I know you got your little meeting coming up, where can folks reach out to you if they’re listening to this and they have questions about Onramp, or you, or just customer success, where can they reach you in the most efficient manner?

Amber McLeod

So for any of us who’s interested in learning more about Onramp and the services that we offer, or just having a conversation about what the platform can do for their for their business, or they can reach us at info@onrampinvest.com, and if there are any specific questions for myself, feel free to email me at amber@onrampinvest.com.

Tyrone Ross

Awesome. Alright, so before we get us out of here, I have a couple of things to do. First of all, I have to shout out my whole CoinDesk family, all the advisors out there, you should be signed up for the Crypto for Advisors newsletter, subscribe to that immediately. If you remember those of you that attended the Bitcoin for Advisors conference, we sent you an email, if you will, that had a bunch of materials in there for you to prepare your practice. We also have an FA council so you’ll be able to read a lot in the newsletter from those on the FA council. So shout to them as well. Everyone is on the Advisory Council at CoinDesk with myself. So again, Crypto for Advisors newsletter, sign up for that. Also, again, you guys know if you made it this far into the program, nokidhungry.org If you found this beneficial in any way, please help me and my CoinDesk family do our part to make sure no child goes hungry in this country. It makes entirely no sense. Lastly, I will say this, we are at some incredible inflection points in the RA space and for wealth management. If you are a financial advisor listening to this, this is the best time in the history of our space to simply get educated. Sit down, get conversant. It is moving quickly and the time is now and we’re happy to be a resource myself, and everyone here at CoinDesk. So until the next one. We’ll see you all soon. I appreciate you.

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Author: Tyrone Ross


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