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A Need for More Regulatory Clarity

For years fintech leaders, investors and technologists in the cryptocurrency space have whined about the lack of regulatory clarity coming from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

It was only in February 2020, amended in April of this year, that SEC Commissioner Hester M. Peirce proposed her forward-thinking safe harbor rules providing a three-year grace period from prosecution related to securities registration and a regulatory sandbox to develop decentralized networks. Meanwhile, the SEC charged alleged violators of the Securities Act of 1933 as disparate as Ripple Labs, BitConnect, actor Steven Seagal, political lobbyist Jack Abramoff and legendary innovator and outlaw John McAfee.

Such securities law enforcement is proliferating. According to Cornerstone Research, the SEC brought 75 enforcement actions and 19 trading suspensions against companies and individuals in the crypto industry between July 2013 and December 2020.

James Cooper, a CoinDesk columnist, is a professor of law at California Western School of Law in San Diego.

After taking the helm at the SEC, Gary Gensler unsurprisingly announced there was not enough protection for crypto investors. A few weeks later, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) warned that cryptocurrency services were “spinning straw into gold” and that the United States’ financial stability was at risk without strict regulation. Last week, Democrat U.S. senators called for Facebook to refrain from launching its Novi crypto wallet because the company “cannot be trusted to manage a payment system or digital currency.”

Now, it is essential that we all get clear, specific direction on what is and what is not permissible. After years of hemming and hawing, our legislators must determine whether crypto is a security, a utility, a commodity, a currency or the latest tulip mania.

They must act, on the one hand, to ensure that the United States is a leader, if not the leader, in this new area of capital formation and financial technology. But on the other hand, they must also protect small-time investors and the general public from fraudsters, pump and dumpsters and the vagaries of exploding asset bubbles.

The current geopolitical situation also necessitates regulatory clarity. The Chinese government has banned bitcoin mining, forcing a huge migration of ASIC computers out of the country and providing a great opportunity for the U.S. to dominate mining. The Chinese are rolling out their Digital Currency/Electronic Payment initiative nationally in the coming year as the People’s Republic of China implements its sovereign-backed, central bank digital currency, long before the U.S. develops a digital dollar. Some sense of what the U.S. is planning for digital assets and a sovereign-backed digital currency would help incentivize a private industry response here.

There is worry that even much smaller players worldwide (Estonia, Malta or Singapore, for example) may have the first mover advantage in financial technology by being the most lenient jurisdiction for incorporation, funding and development. This race to the bottom is no way to run an industry, even a disruptive one.

But we should be careful what we ask for regarding regulation. Not all new rules will be beneficial. The pending Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act (still a bill at this point) provided the crypto space a little too much regulatory clarity: The new list of actors who are to be considered broker-dealers under U.S. securities laws include miners, programmers and node operators, and they all have reporting requirements to the Internal Revenue Service.

The goal is to raise $28 billion to help pay for new infrastructure in the United States over the coming years, but the pending legislation may create more problems than it solves for fintech, putting compliance requirements on many actors who did not have such duties before. Talk about a chilling effect.

Earlier this month, Coinbase provided the U.S. government with ideas about regulating the crypto space, a sign of maturity in the industry. The main contribution was the innovative call for a new federal agency to regulate digital asset markets. Notwithstanding, this may be viewed as a move toward regulatory capture – an economic theory positing that regulatory agencies may be dominated by the industries or interests they are charged with regulating.

The result would be an agency that acts to benefit existing firms in the industry it is charged to regulate rather than acts in the public interest. But Coinbase is, after all, reacting to the missing regulatory clarity.

A tangential issue is the revolving door between the U.S. government and the crypto industry – another predictable danger. Middle-level lawyers from the SEC, for example, are going to leading law firms to help crypto clients after stints in the regulator seat. Law enforcement leaders are joining digital asset firms, lending legitimacy and expertise to their burgeoning businesses.

This is all part of a maturation process that the digital asset industry requires. It cannot be worth $2.7 trillion without some attention from governments. That kind of attention can be unpredictable. And predictability is what we are all allegedly pining for.

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Author: James Cooper

Who’s behind AGM, the little-known Chinese company that’s suddenly selling lots of bitcoin mining chips?

Quick Take

  • A little-known Chinese software company has suddenly emerged as a bitcoin mining chip maker — and says it already has pre-orders for 55,000 units.
  • Who is behind AGM, and how is it already selling so many chips?

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Author: Wolfie Zhao

Gigante brasileño de movilidad 99 habilitará la compraventa de bitcoin en su billetera digital

99Pay, la billetera digital de la compañía brasileña de red de transporte 99, permitirá la compra y venta de bitcoin en su plataforma, según anunció la empresa el martes.

Los usuarios de 99Pay podrán realizar transacciones sin comisiones con un importe mínimo de compra de 10 reales brasileños y un máximo de 10.000 reales —equivalente a 1.800 dólares estadounidenses— a partir del 3 de noviembre.

99Pay, que forma parte de la empresa china de movilidad DiDi Chuxing, dijo que la plataforma también ofrecerá promociones de devolución de dinero (cashback, en inglés) en bitcoin.

La iniciativa llega en medio del rápido aumento del interés por las criptomonedas entre los brasileños. Según datos publicados por el Banco Central de Brasil (BCB) en octubre, los brasileños han adquirido $4.270 millones en criptomonedas en lo que va de 2021. En el plano legislativo, el Congreso de Brasil tiene previsto debatir un proyecto de ley que regule a los exchanges de cripto.

99 es una empresa compañía de red de transporte (ride-hailing, en inglés), delivery y servicios financieros fundada en 2012. Fue adquirida por DiDi, el equivalente chino de Uber, por $1.000 millones en 2018. La plataforma tiene 20 millones de usuarios activos, según la empresa.

99 lanzó su billetera digital en julio de 2020 dentro de su app y presentó una app independiente de 99Pay la semana pasada.

Los usuarios no podrán utilizar bitcoin para pagar los viajes en 99, porque la criptomoneda tendrá que ser cambiada primero a fiat, dijo el director ejecutivo de 99Pay, Maurício Orsolini Filho, a CoinDesk.

Orsolini Filho añadió que la empresa implementó la función de intercambio de bitcoins tras una investigación realizada a petición de la empresa que mostró una fuerte demanda del servicio. Según los datos, el 81% de los usuarios de los bancos digitales brasileños ya conocen o han oído hablar de las criptomonedas, mientras el 54% no invierte en activos digitales pero ha mostrado interés en entrar en ese mercado.

En 2020, DiDi dijo a CoinDesk que estaba formando un grupo de trabajo para diseñar y ejecutar una prueba de la moneda digital del Banco Central de China en su plataforma de transporte.

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Author: Andrés Engler

Market Wrap: Bitcoin Dips Below $60K as ETF Enthusiasm Fades

Bitcoin continues to decline after buyers failed to sustain last week’s all-time high of around $66,900. Analysts pointed to extreme optimism, leverage and profit-taking as possible reasons behind the latest pullback in BTC’s price.

Support, or the level at which buyers tend to invest, is around $53,000.

A pullback was overdue and more downside volatility could be in the offing, CoinDesk’s Omkar Godbole reported. For example, the estimated bitcoin leverage ratio, which is calculated by dividing futures’ open interest across all exchanges by bitcoin reserves on exchanges, is at the highest level since September, which preceded a crypto sell-off.

Bitcoin’s near-40% price rally over the past month was largely due to investor enthusiasm for the first bitcoin futures-linked exchange-traded fund (ETF) introduced by ProShares last week. But some analysts expect the ETF hype will fade.

“Once investors realize that these futures ETFs create no new demand for BTC and are only a side bet on short-term price appreciation we may see significant price erosion,” Charlie Silver, co-founder of Blockforce Capital, a crypto multi-strategy trading firm, wrote in an email to CoinDesk.

Latest prices

  • Bitcoin (BTC): $59,378.49, -3.92%
  • Ether (ETH): $4,014.58, -4.43%
  • S&P 500: $4,551.68, -0.51%
  • Gold: $1,797.91, +0.25%
  • 10-year Treasury yield closed at 1.536%

“After a week of fresh highs, today’s sell-off is a warning not to be complacent in this market, especially when high levels of volatility are always around the corner,” Nicholas Cawley, an analyst at DailyFX, wrote in an email to CoinDesk.

Still, technical indicators show bitcoin’s pullback could stabilize. “We expect the pullback to mature quickly, within days, above initial support (~$52.9K) for bitcoin,” Katie Stockton, managing director of technical research firm Fairlead Strategies, wrote in an email to CoinDesk.

BITO lags bitcoin

So far, the new ProShares fund’s returns are falling short of the performance of bitcoin in cryptocurrency markets – the very thing the ETF was supposed to track. BITO is also underperforming the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, or GBTC, which at $35.23 billion is the world’s largest bitcoin fund, CoinDesk’s Lyllah Ledesma reported.

From Oct. 19, when the ProShares ETF started trading, through Tuesday, BITO shares were down by 2.45%, based on a chart shared by Grayscale, the company that sponsors GBTC. Bitcoin was down 1% over the same period and GBTC was up 7.5%. (Grayscale is a unit of Digital Currency Group, which also owns CoinDesk.)

Read more here.

Short-term bitcoin holders take profits

Similar to long-term bitcoin holders (discussed in yesterday’s Market Wrap), blockchain data also shows short-term holders are starting to take profits after the ETF-driven price rally. This suggests market participants are uncertain about bitcoin’s short-term price direction.

The chart below shows a spike in short-term holder selling activity on Wednesday, as noted by CryptoQuant. Still, some analysts expect buyers to remain active on price dips, which typically occur during the early stages of a bull market.

“For the first time in a long time, a significant profit-taking has come in bitcoin, giving the market a short-term buying opportunity,” wrote one analyst on CryptoQuant’s live feed on Wednesday.

Altcoin roundup

  • Shiba inu briefly surpassed dogecoin: The self-proclaimed dogecoin killer, shiba inu, briefly surpassed DOGE in market value on Wednesday, CoinDesk’s Muyao Shen reported. Both coins now have a market cap of over $31 billion, and are toggling between 10th and 11th on the CoinGecko’s rankings page. Blockchain data shows that while SHIB continues to attract retail investors around the globe, more sophisticated crypto traders fueled the latest rally. Since the start of this week, addresses labeled as “smart money” started buying SHIB, according to Nansen research analyst Daniel Khoo.
  • DBS joins Hedera Governing Council: Singapore’s DBS bank has become the first Southeast Asian lender to join the Hedera Governing Council, CoinDesk’s Sebastian Sinclair reported. The bank joins a council that includes 39 other organizations including Boeing, Deutsche Telecom and Google in supporting Hedera’s Hashgraph, a software that can process transactions and store a public ledger of those transactions. Council members serve three-year terms that can be extended to a maximum of two terms.
  • Solana-based yield aggregator Tulip raises $5 million: Solana-based decentralized finance (DeFi) app Tulip has closed a $5 million funding round to expand its yield aggregation and crypto lending products, CoinDesk’s Danny Nelson reported. Tulip, which holds over $800 million in crypto assets according to Jump Capital and Alameda Research, is looking to use the investment to double its five-person team, which could prove difficult due to a Solana-focused engineers shortage amid heated competition for DeFi developer talent, CEO “Senx” said in a phone interview with CoinDesk.

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):

  • Aave (AAVE): +1.58%
  • Tether (USDT): +0.05%
  • USD Coin (USDC): +0.03%

Notable losers:

  • The Graph (GRT): -12.6%
  • Chainlink (LINK): -12.35%
  • EOS (EOS): -11.5%

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Author: Damanick Dantes, Helene Braun

El Salvador announces purchase of 420 bitcoin, worth nearly $25 million

El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, said Wednesday that his government has purchased an additional 420 bitcoin, increasing the total amount bought to date to 1,120 BTC.

The fresh purchase is worth roughly $24.7 million at current prices, according to market data from TradingView. As of press time, bitcoin is currently trading on Coinbase at roughly $58.9K, per TradingView. 

The latest purchase comes more than a month after Bukele announced the purchase of 150 BTC, adding to the 550 BTC it bought previously. “We just bought the dip!” Bukele tweeted Wednesday, using a similar framing as the September 20 purchase event. 

Bitcoin became legal tender in El Salvador on September 7 following the passage of a law this summer. 

© 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

Coinbase Experiencing Extended Outages, Including for Credit Card

Crypto trading platform Coinbase was experiencing extended outages on Wednesday that were affecting access to its Coinbase and Coinbase Pro platforms as well as its credit card.

  • On its status page Coinbase was reporting a major outage of its Coinbase credit card and partial outages of its website, mobile apps and API.
  • According to Downdetector, Coinbase has been experiencing a high level of outage reports since 17:00 UTC (3 p.m. ET).
  • The company tweeted at 17:45 UTC, “We are aware that some customers are having issues accessing Coinbase and Coinbase Pro. We are actively working on the issue and will post an update soon.” It followed that up with a tweet at 18:09 UTC saying, “Trades and transactions may be delayed due to the ongoing issue. We’re all hands on deck to get this resolved as soon as possible. Stay tuned for updates.”

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Author: Nelson Wang

Shiba Inu Jumps 70% to Surpass Market Value of Robinhood – Where It’s Not (Yet) Listed

The shiba inu (SHIB) token continued its astonishing ascent in the cryptocurrency markets, surging 70% over the past 24 hours to a reported market capitalization of over $39 billion.

SHIB’s market value now rivals the stock-market value of the trading platform Robinhood (HOOD), at $30 billion. SHIB has also bounded over European banking giants Societe Generale ($28 billion) and Deutsche Bank ($26 billion).

That said, SHIB’s market cap is far more likely to hit the doghouse on a moment’s notice. Only time – often a short duration of which in the wild world of crypto – will tell.

Read more: Shiba Inu Coin (SHIB): A Beginner’s Guide 2021

As of press time, the cryptocurrency was changing hands at a minuscule $0.00007857, according to CoinGecko. Earlier in the day, the SHIB price hit an all-time high of $0.0000763. On a year-to-date basis, the price has jumped 40-fold.

The rise in the price of SHIB, named after the same dog breed that inspired the joke cryptocurrency dogecoin (DOGE), came as a petition “designed to kindly request of Robinhood to please list shiba inu coin to trade” circulated on the website Change.org.

“The focus on the cryptoverse was supposed to be on Ethereum 2.0 and a steady wave of Bitcoin ETF investments, but the retail market has become fixated on shiba inu,” Edward Moya, senior markets analyst at the foreign-exchange brokerage Oanda, wrote Wednesday in a daily email update.

CoinDesk’s traffic numbers would also bear this out.

Robinhood conference call

On Tuesday, Wall Street analysts peppered Robinhood executives on a conference call over whether they would consider listing additional cryptocurrencies on the platform, according to a transcript.

“We’re hearing from customers that they want more coins,” CFO Jason Warnick said on the call. “We’re being, you know, very mindful and diligent in this space. It’s evolving from a regulatory perspective. There’s been a number of questions raised about coins on other platforms being potentially unregistered securities.“

He added: “We think it’s the right thing, not just for shareholders and for the company but also for customers to make sure that we, you know, apply the same kind of diligence to any new coins. … We do hear our customers and they want more features, and so we’re going to be working, you know, as fast as we can with the right balance of safety and compliance to make sure that we don’t make missteps here.”

Twitter was replete this week with speculation that Robinhood might accede to the pressure.

Some analysts fret that the sudden interest in SHIB might be an indication of frothy speculation and that a crash in the token’s value might lead to a broader retreat from cryptocurrency markets.

The SHIB token’s value surpassed that of dogecoin earlier Wednesday, according to most data sources.

Earlier this year, a frenzy of speculation in DOGE preceded a price slump in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies that then lasted several months.

“SHIB, also known as a ‘dogecoin killer’ runs on Ethereum, but the use case argument isn’t quite there,” Oanda’s Moya wrote. “Shiba Inu headlines are not the news that is needed to help drive crypto growth to the rest of Wall Street that is still hesitant on cryptocurrencies.“

Read more: SHIB Flippened DOGE With $160M in ‘Smart Money’ Backing Latest Pump, Blockchain Data Shows

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Author: Bradley Keoun

SHIB overtakes DOGE as rival memecoin surpasses market capitalization

A steep climb in the price of the meme cryptocurrency Shiba Inu (SHIB) has pushed its market capitalization beyond that of dogecoin.

According to data collected by price aggregator CoinGecko, SHIB is now one of the top ten cryptocurrencies by market cap. SHIB’s market cap is roughly $39.3 billion compared to dogecoin’s $31.4 billion as of press time. 

SHIB’s current ranking places it above dogecoin as well as USDC, the stablecoin managed by the CENTRE consortium. 

As with dogecoin’s inception, the creation of SHIB was itself a joke, with a current supply in the hundreds of trillions of tokens — hence the relatively minuscule price of about $0.000078 per coin. And like dogecoin, SHIB had initially benefited from social media attention on platforms like TikTok earlier this year. The video creation site later banned promotional videos about cryptocurrencies. 

The cryptocurrency also gained notoriety this past spring after Ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin sold tranches of tokens donated to him by SHIB’s creators, giving the accrued funds away to charity. He also awarded some of the gifted SHIB tokens to a COVID-focused charity.

Yet the addition of SHIB to services such as U.S. crypto exchange Coinbase has drawn volume to the coin’s market, and in the past seven days, SHIB’s price has risen more than 180%. According to CoinGecko, roughly a quarter of all trading of SHIB occurs on Binance’s SHIB/USDT market.

 

© 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

Brazil’s Nubank submits filing for proposed IPO

The parent company of Brazil fintech unicorn Nubank announced on Wednesday that it has submitted filings to regulators in the U.S. and Brazil regarding a proposed initial public offering (IPO). 

Nu Holdings Ltd. said in a press release that it “confidentially submitted a draft registration statement” with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), via a Form-1. The company has also filed a reference form with Brazil’s SEC equivalent, the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM). 

According to a Bloomberg report quoting an unnamed source, the IPO would launch on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the transaction would happen in December. However, it noted that talks are still ongoing and those details could change. Nu said in its press release that the IPO would happen after both the SEC and CVM finish their own review processes, which is “subject to market and other conditions.” 

Nubank, which offers digital banking products such as bank accounts, personal loans and life insurance with little or no fees, now counts more than 40 million customers in Brazil, Mexico and Colombia. 

Industry watchers have expected the neobank company to file for an IPO at some point, especially after it scored a $500 million investment from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway in June. That deal pushed Nubank’s value to $30 billion, outlets including Reuters and Forbes have reported. The company also recently posted its first-ever semester profit in Brazil, according to Reuters.

Nubank’s parent company said in its press release that the proposed IPO involves registering and listing Class A ordinary shares in the U.S. The number and price range of those shares have yet to be determined, it said. 

In addition, the proposal includes “the registration and admission to negotiate a program of Brazilian Depositary Receipts (“BDRs”) in Brazil” as well as “the registration of initial public offering for distribution of BDRs in Brazil representing a fraction of Class A ordinary shares.”

© 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

Crypto trade associations saw lobbying boom amid Congressional infrastructure fight

Crypto trade associations reported an unprecedented third quarter for lobbying spending, disclosures filed with Congress in the past few days show.  

The boom in lobbying spending took place as the industry found itself at the center of high-profile fights in Congress over a trillion-dollar infrastructure package. 

Historically, the Blockchain Association and the Chamber of Digital Commerce have been the largest crypto trade groups liaising with the federal government, a trend that has accelerated notably since the start of 2021. 

That ramp-up is on display in the chart below, gleaned from the new lobbying spend figures: 

2021 Crypto Trade Association Reports

Source: Senate Lobbying Disclosures. The graphs divide lobbying spending between the Blockchain Association and the Chamber of Digital Commerce own activities and separately adds in contracts with third-party firms. The Crypto Council for Innovation reported no internal lobbying activity, only a third-party contract.

The Blockchain Association’s reports on internal lobbying spending were up over 60%, growing from $130,000 in Q1 to $210,000 in Q3. Over the same timeframe, the Chamber of Digital Commerce’s lobbying spending rose from $30,000 to $136,000 — an increase of more than 450%.

As The Block noted while tallying Coinbase’s recently re-upped lobbying activities, the Lobbying Disclosure Act is limited in terms of what activity merits reporting as lobbying. Consequently, these numbers should not be interpreted as the full scope for these trade associations.

Factoring in contracts with Steptoe & Johnson, Goldstein Policy Solutions and Lincoln Policy Group, the Blockchain Association’s total lobbying spending reached $320,000 in Q3.

The Chamber of Digital Commerce’s total including outside contracts was $191,000 in Q3. Founder Perianne Boring told The Block in a statement: “The increase in resources we’re allocating to advocacy work is a reflection of the critical time we are in for crypto policy, which coincides with growing adoption of digital assets.”

The Chamber also registered new contracts with Liquid Advisors and Looking Glass Labs. Looking Glass Labs is a small consultancy firm run by Teana Baker-Taylor, who joined the Chamber of Digital Commerce as chief policy officer in September.

The Crypto Council for Innovation, which saw a highly publicized rollout in the spring with the support of Square, Coinbase and Fidelity, had not reported any spending on lobbying until August, at which point it began a contract with the law firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck that included lobbying spending of $60,000 in the third quarter.

While the CCI is still looking to hire an executive director, a representative told The Block that it has recently onboarded Andreessen Horowitz and Ribbit Capital as members. 

Even the Chicago-based Global Digital Assets & Cryptocurrency Association, which describes itself as a self-regulatory organization rather than a trade association, began to undertake federal lobbying, registering its first contracts with DC-based Atlas Crossing in August. 

The bulk of this heightened spending corresponds to the appearance of controversial definitions of the term “broker” for the purposes of IRS reporting in crypto, which ended up attracting unprecedented legislative attention to the industry. 

As Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association, told The Block at the time:

“We went from zero to 60 overnight, and we have caught the attention of the entire policymaking class in Washington.”

© 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


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