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What Stablecoins Might Become

Identifying the ideal path to regulatory compliance for a stablecoin has been difficult. U.S. regulators have taken a much more active interest in the industry, though it is still not entirely clear what they will want stablecoins to be.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned about the risks stablecoins pose to the financial system and national security.

”Depending on its design and other factors, a stablecoin may constitute a security, commodity or derivative subject to the U.S. federal securities, commodity and/or derivatives laws,” she said in a statement that certainly leaves some ambiguity. But regulators, however, should make their intentions clear in the next couple of months.

Bennett Tomlin, in his personal time, is a blogger and podcaster with an interest in stablecoins. This op-ed is part of CoinDesk’s Policy Week, a forum for discussing how regulators are reckoning with crypto (and vice versa).

Opinions on the appropriate regulatory response to stablecoins vary from fitting these fiat-pegged digital assets into a money transmitter framework to treating issuers as banks. Some regulation enthusiasts believe there should be no space for stablecoins. Despite the disagreement and uncertainty around stablecoins, it’s clear that the $130 billion market has drawn the attention of powerful people.

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler has suggested that “stable-value coins” may be securities. It seems clear that he is trying to tie them to stable-value funds, a fund design that the SEC already claims jurisdiction over. If stablecoins, or at least stablecoins backed by noncash assets, are securities, then they will no longer be useful for the things that they are now. It seems unlikely that they would be able to continue to move and trade unimpeded across censorship-resistant global networks.

Some cryptocurrency companies have taken a proactive approach to finding existing regulations they believe more adequately cover what their stablecoin would do. Avanti – a special purpose depository institution, which is a bank with only a state charter, a classification that was created under new legislation in Wyoming – seems to believe that the Uniform Commercial Code, which (in part) dictates standards for banknotes, would allow for the issuance of a “digital banknote.” If its token is considered a banknote, then it will be exempted from regulation as a security. That also may in part explain why digital asset company Paxos has a bank charter and payments company Circle wants one.

The Office of the Comptroller of Currency has issued guidance that makes it clear that banks are allowed to use stablecoins as part of their normal business, including payments, and that they can hold reserves for stablecoins. That suggests that stablecoin issuers may look like banks.

However, it may be difficult for depository institutions like Avanti to gain access to Federal Reserve master accounts. The Narrow Bank, an earlier proposed bank that would have parked its funds at the Federal Reserve and then passed on higher interest rates to depositors, hasn’t been able to get such access so far. Both Avanti and crypto exchange Kraken have applied for Federal Reserve access and so far neither has been accepted. Lack of access to the Federal Reserve payment rails would make running a stablecoin more difficult, or require Avanti and Kraken to rely on other service providers that do have access to the Fed through federally chartered banks.

A new piece of legislation known as the the STABLE Act would create a framework for stablecoins and other money transmitters where they would be obligated to keep all of their reserves at the Federal Reserve. Under a framework like the STABLE Act, there is a much better path toward a more narrow stablecoin issued by a bank.

There may still be significant legislative, regulatory and political hurdles related to effectively creating a new type of bank. Furthermore, the STABLE Act is not just limited to what those in cryptocurrency circles consider stablecoins, but would likely involve a wide array of money transmitters and may even change things for companies such as PayPal.

But it’s not just issuers that are eyeing the banking system as a model. Federal Reserve officials, such as Fed attorney Jeffery Zhang in his article ”Taming Wildcat Stablecoins,” have proposed bringing stablecoin issuers into the broader bank regulatory framework. While the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) is reportedly studying how to extend deposit insurance to stablecoins to help protect users. Meanwhile, the Biden administration has stated it thinks stablecoin issuer are at least “bank-like.”

The Digital Asset Market Structure and Investor Protection Act outlines a process where every stablecoin issuer must apply to the Treasury, at which point the Treasury checks with the Federal Reserve, the SEC, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and banks and decides whether to approve the stablecoin.

If that legislation passes (it’s now in committee in Congress), any unapproved stablecoin – including any digital asset pegged or collateralized significantly by a fiat currency – would then be unlawful. The bill, however, provides a path for approved stablecoins to avoid being considered a security.

It is difficult to say exactly how all of this will play out. My intuition is that a new type of banking charter will be created that will allow stablecoin issuers to access Fed master accounts and there will be an expectation that stablecoins will hold their reserves there. It also seems reasonably likely that the Treasury gets its way and stablecoin issuers will need to register with the Treasury. I expect that securities regulations may be part of the cudgel that will be used to help ensure that the only stablecoins are the “approved” stablecoins.

See also: Biden Administration Plans Cryptocurrency Sanctions to Combat Ransomware

The end result of this will likely be that any stablecoin issuer that wants to continue operating would need to become a bank and is going to have significantly less flexibility with what they can do with their reserves. Those that choose not to register or are not approved are likely to have difficulty accessing the U.S. banking system. They may have trouble servicing redemptions, and may perhaps even find themselves aggressively pursued by regulators.

The effect on the average crypto user is likely a degradation of their experience using stablecoins. However, there will be significantly greater certitude surrounding the backing and safety of the token, and regulators will no longer have to worry about them being an existential financial risk. In effect the government may take the private money that is stablecoins, and integrate it into the banking regulation framework so that it can become publicly guaranteed.

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Author: Bennett Tomlin

Vitalik Buterin Sent Away Trillions of Unwanted Dog Coins, but More Keep Rolling In

Vitalik Buterin once again “dumped” several dog-themed memecoins that he never asked for.

While the market’s attention is centered around bitcoin hitting a new all-time high, the Ethereum founder grabbed some attention of Crypto Twitter after he sent trillions of canine-themed tokens away from his public wallet, according to blockchain data.

Notably, Buterin sent a majority of the tokens to decentralized exchange Uniswap, including 300 trillion jejudoge, more than 223 trillion kishu inu, 370 billion baby shiba and roughly 120 trillion huskytoken.

Despite the shockingly high numbers, none of the amounts was worth more than $800,000 at the time of the transactions, according to Etherscan.

In a permissionless system, all are welcome to send assets to publicly known addresses; what the recipient does with those assets, however, also doesn’t require the permission of the sender.

The transactions in question. (Etherscan)

At press time, most of these tokens were in deep red, according to CoinMarketCap. The loss for baby shiba was most significant: the token’s price was down nearly 70% in the past 24 hours.

Why is this happening?

It is no news in the crypto world that memecoin creators love to send large amounts of their tokens to Buterin. A pioneer in this marketing stunt is shiba inu (SHIB), a self-proclaimed “dogecoin killer.”

The Ethereum co-founder burned 90% of his SHIB holdings and donated most of the rest to charities after the project’s creator sent half of SHIB’s total supply to him without asking.

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

Although SHIB initially suffered a dramatic price plunge, the coin has thrived ever since: According to CoinGecko, SHIB ranks as the 13th-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization. That’s more value than UNI, the token of Uniswap, one of the most popular decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols on the Ethereum blockchain.

The motivation behind Buterin’s memetoken dump remains unknown but the move has not stopped others from sending him more dog-themed tokens.

As of press time, at least four other memecoins were sent to Buterin’s wallet including floki pup, saiba inu (not shiba inu) and misty inu.

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Author: Muyao Shen

Crypto News Roundup for Oct. 20, 2021

This episode is sponsored by Kava, Nexo.io and Market Intel by Chainalysis.

Today’s Stories:

Market Wrap: ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF Rises in Trading Debut, Sending BTC Higher

Bitcoin Options Open Interest tops $14B as ProShares ETF Goes Live

Ether Awaits Price Breakout After Bitcoin’s Record Daily Close

Stock Futures Waver Ahead of Big Tech Earnings

Stocks Mixed, Bonds Hold as Traders Mull Recovery: Markets Wrap

Diapers to yogurt, global firms face higher costs amid supply-chain woes

Push to Operate L.A. Port 24/7 is Off to Slow Start

Storage containers are scarce, so toymakers are focused on small, squishy toys for the holidays

Green Investing Looks to Clean Up the Maritime Industry

Argentina freezes goods prices after talks break down

Purpose Investments Files to List 3 More Crypto ETFs

Chinese E-commerce Giant JD.com Reveals NFTs

Grayscale Files With SEC to Convert Its Bitcoin Trust Into an ETF

Facebook’s Novi Taps Paxos, Coinbase Ahead of Diem Rollout

US Lawmakers Push Back on Facebook’s Novi Wallet Launch

Sequoia Games Brings Augmented Reality to Board Games Using Algorand Blockchain

Featured Story: $2T and Counting: Some Friday Perspective

This episode was edited & produced by Adrian Blust.

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Author: Adam B. Levine, Adrian Blust

Zaki Manian’s DeFi project Sommelier raises $23 million in Series A funding

Sommelier Finance, a crypto project that helps automate DeFi trading, has raised $23 million in a Series A funding round.

The round was led by Polychain Capital, with participation from existing investor Alameda Ventures and new investors Zola Ventures, Byzantine Ventures, Tendermint Ventures, Secure Ventures, D1 Ventures, and Ferngrove Ventures.

Sommelier was founded in 2020 by Zaki Manian, former lead developer of the Cosmos protocol and Tendermint. Sommelier is a blockchain protocol that helps automate liquidity providers’ (LPs’) capital allocation to maximize yields.

With fresh funds at hand, Sommelier plans to upgrade its protocol and launch “Cellars” to help manage liquidity across DeFi protocols. Sommelier Cellars are community-elected strategies that the Sommelier network of validators execute to manage the movement of capital across blockchains.

Sommelier currently supports Uniswap v3 liquidity pools. The project says it has helped liquidity providers place over $10 million in liquidity on Uniswap V3, which generated over $2 million in fees for portfolio owners in the first six months since the launch of its tool.

Sommelier says it plans to support more liquidity pools across Ethereum-compatible blockchains and Layer 2 networks.

The Series A funding round brings Sommelier’s total funding to date to at least $26.5 million. In March, the project raised $3.5 million in seed funding.

© 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: Yogita Khatri

Russian oil industry asks regulators to let them mine crypto using wasted flare gas

Russian regulators are considering a push from oil and gas firms, seeking authorization to mine cryptocurrencies using natural gas that is otherwise wasted in oil drilling.

Per an October 20 report from business outlet Kommersant, the Russian Central Bank, Ministry of Industry and Trade and Ministry of Digital Development are discussing authorization for oil industry players who want to use wasted natural gas to power data centers for crypto mining.

“Associated petroleum gas” is natural gas that lies on top of oil reserves. That gas is often not profitable to extract and ship, meaning that oil drilling often burns it off — a process known as gas flaring that results in the continuously burning flames that accompany oil rigs. Those flares produce greenhouse gases without any productive energy output. 

In its reporting, Kommersant refers to a September 7 letter from Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Vasily Shpak to colleagues at the other two agencies.

The problem is that cryptocurrency mining is unregulated in Russia, and not fully legal. Similarly, cryptocurrency by and large has been awaiting legislation. The recent expulsion of miners from China, however, has resulted in neighboring Kazakhstan and Russia occupying the second and third places, respectively, in global hashrate, behind the United States. That wave puts new pressure on authorities to come to terms with the mining industry.

The interest of the Russian oil industry compounds that political pressure. The bulk of Russia’s national budget comes from the export of fossil fuels. Oftentimes the barriers between the major oil firms and the government are porous. 

Jurica Bulovic, an executive at US-based miner Foundry Digital, told The Block: “Because bitcoin mining operations are mobile and can be deployed anywhere in the world where there is cheap energy and an internet connection, a growing trend is mining bitcoin on oil and gas wells using excess natural gas which cannot otherwise monetized and is typically flared or vented. In those situations, bitcoin mining can be viewed as flare mitigation technology.”

While the redirection of gas from flaring to crypto mining does not eliminate emissions, it at least finds a use for open flames that otherwise produce nothing. Indeed the mobility of miners and their willingness to relocate to sources of energy that cannot be transported is a commonly cited defense against frequent attacks on the Bitcoin network’s energy use

Nonetheless, cryptocurrency miners relocating to unused sources of electricity is a controversial practice, especially for environmentalists. In the U.S., upstate New York has seen old power plants restarted and crypto miners setting up shop in the shadow of nuclear facilities, provoking significant blowback from lawmakers at the state and federal levels

© 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

Budget airline Volaris to accept bitcoin payments in El Salvador

The El Salvador-based subsidiary of ultra-low cost airline Volaris will accept bitcoin payments, according to tweets from El Salvador’s presidential Twitter account that were confirmed by the airline. 

El Salvador’s new bitcoin law requires all businesses in the country to accept the cryptocurrency as a form of payment, as long as they have the appropriate technology to do so.

“The Volaris website is international and complies with the provisions of the jurisdictions where
we operate,” the airline said in an emailed statement shared with The Block. “We are working to give our clients the option to pay with Bitcoin services in the airport,” it said, referring to its El Salvador operations.

Though El Salvador’s presidential Twitter account quoted Nayib Bukele as saying that Volaris would be the “first airline in the world that will accept Bitcoin and of course Chivo Wallet,” multiple carriers have already announced they would accept the cryptocurrency, Reuters pointed out

One of the most recognizable names is Latvia’s Air Baltic, which announced back in 2014 that it would be the first airline to accept bitcoin and recently added additional cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin Cash, Ether and Dogecoin. In 2015, payment service provider Openpay said that Mexico-based regional carrier TAR Airlines would be the “first Latin American airline” to accept bitcoin. Los Angeles-based Surf Air, which provides charter flights through membership plans, also said it would start accepting Bitcoin in 2017.

The booking engine Alternative Airlines also allows travelers the opportunity to book airline tickets using bitcoin, even for those airlines are not directly offering the cryptocurrency as a form of payment.

Bukele was speaking at an event to mark the official inauguration of Volaris’ new airline based in El Salvador. Volaris is most well-known for its extensive operation in Mexico, but also has subsidiaries in Costa Rica and now El Salvador. 

© 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

DCG has purchased $388 million of GBTC shares — and is upping its limit

Crypto investment firm Digital Currency Group has bought $388 million worth of GBTC shares as of October 19, according to a release today. The company has also increased its authorization to buy more shares from $750 million to $1 billion.

This comes two days after the discount on the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust fell to nearly its lowest point, at -20.5%. This means that the price of shares in the fund are 20% lower than the value of the underlying bitcoin represented by each share. Part of the reason behind the discount is that shares cannot be redeemed for the underlying bitcoin.

After GBTC started trading at a discount, the amount of bitcoin flowing into the fund came to an abrupt halt. GBTC’s holdings have been essentially flat since February (declining gently due to fees).

Over the long term, Grayscale is planning to fix this by turning the fund into a bitcoin ETF. But to do so requires SEC approval. While the SEC has allowed the first U.S. bitcoin ETF to launch, it’s based on bitcoin futures rather than spot — and the SEC hasn’t yet expressed intent to let a spot-based ETF go live.

In the short term, DCG — which owns Grayscale — is helping to supply some demand, which may go some way to counteract the discount. By the end of April, the company had bought $193.5 million worth of GBTC and expanded its limit to $750 million. Today’s announcement confirms it has bought an additional $194.5 million worth of GBTC since then.

© 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

Facebook’s Novi, Strike’s Bitcoin App Spell Trouble for Western Union, Analyst Says

Western Union was downgraded to neutral from buy at investment bank BTIG, which says the company’s money transfer platform may face pressure from free alternatives including Facebook’s new digital remittance app, Novi.

BTIG analyst Mark Palmer also sees competition from Strike’s service, which leverages the Lightning Network on the Bitcoin blockchain for free remittances. Jack Mallers’ Strike is best known as an early partner of El Salvador’s bitcoin experiment.

“The upshot is that the money transfer space appears ripe for disruption, and the disrupters are arriving,” Palmer wrote in a note to clients.

Read more: US Lawmakers Push Back on Facebook’s Novi Wallet Launch

El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele estimated that money-services providers like Western Union and MoneyGram will lose $400 million a year in commissions for remittances, thanks to the country’s bitcoin adoption, according to a recent CNBC report.

Remittances have long been heralded by crypto diehards as a key venue for shaking up the existing financial system. Firms like Ripple and Stellar have built their reputations on offering cheap cross-border payments.

Traditional money-transfer giant MoneyGram is working with the Stellar Development Foundation to create instant money transfers using Circle’s USDC stablecoin, the companies said earlier this month.

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Author: Michael Bellusci

Shiba Inu (SHIB): A Complete Beginner’s Guide

Shiba inu (SHIB) is an Ethereum-based ERC-20 token that has risen in popularity this year, largely because of its dog-themed ecosystem, speculation on its price by retail investors and strong community engagement. The official Shib Twitter account, for example, has over 1.2 million followers – more than leading crypto companies such as Cardano, Kraken and Solana.

The digital asset was inspired by the Japanese breed of dog of the same name, which sparked a viral meme trend in 2013 and subsequently led to the creation of the infamous dogecoin cryptocurrency. Shiba inu, along with dogecoin and the hundreds of other pet-inspired digital assets, have become collectively known in the industry as “meme coins.”

Ordinarily, a meme coin offers owners little to no utility compared with more established cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether. In the case of shiba inu, however, there seems to be a legitimate attempt by the development team to provide more value to SHIB holders, including launching a decentralized exchange in July.

Notably, the desire to provide more utility to users has seen the self-proclaimed “doge killer” become the second-most popular meme coin in the market. And although the market capitalization of dogecoin is three times that of shiba inu at press time, the underdog project has managed to create and build up a large community in less than two years.

Key features of shiba inu

So other than being another doggy-themed cryptocurrency, what is the shib coin all about?

The first notable thing about Shiba Inu is its total supply. A total of 1 quadrillion SHIB tokens were minted during its official launch in 2020. A quadrillion is a number followed by 15 zeros. Some 50% of the supply of shiba inu was locked in Uniswap SHIB/ETH liquidity pool – a decentralized exchange where users deposit pairs of assets into liquidity pools that other investors can trade against. That is known as an automated market maker system.

Read more: What is an Automated Market Maker?

The other 50% of shib token’s supply was donated to Ethereum’s founder, Vitalik Buterin, who burned a vast majority of them by sending the tokens to a dead crypto wallet address. The remaining tokens (worth $1.2 billion at the time) were donated to an Indian COVID-19 relief cause and other charities.

The Shiba Inu universe also consists of a decentralized exchange, called Shibaswap, and two other tokens, “LEASH” and “BONE,” (see below.)

Finally, the community is also championing a rescue campaign for Shiba Inu dogs. All you need to do is make purchases on Amazon through smile.amazon.com and select Shiba Inu Rescue Association (a 501(c)3 as your preferred nongovernmental organization). This will allow a percentage of your purchase to be donated to a cause focusing on helping Shiba Inu dogs in need.

What is ShibaSwap?

Shibaswap is a decentralized exchange – a type of peer-to-peer trading platform similar to Uniswap that allows users to trade SHIB and other cryptocurrencies without an intermediary company. It also allows users to provide liquidity (deposit funds into pools that other traders can use to trade against) and stake tokens (deposit them into a wallet) to earn interest using shib token and two additional ERC-20 tokens that exist in the Shiba ecosystem:

  • Bone ShibaSwap (ticker: BONE): Bone is designed to function as the platform’s governance token, with a total supply of 250 million coins. That means holders of bone tokens are able to propose and vote on changes to the Shiba protocol via its “Doggy DAO.” It’s also minted and rewarded to users who provide liquidity on the platform.
  • Doge Killer (ticker: LEASH): This was originally launched as a rebase token (also known as an elastic token), a type of token similar to an algorithmic stablecoin where the supply automatically increases and decreases via a computer algorithm to keep its price pegged to another asset. In this case, leash’s supply is adjusted to track the price of doge at a rate of 1/1,000.
    • For example, if the price of dogecoin was $0.05, the supply of leash would change (mint new tokens or destroy coins in circulation) to adjust the price of leash to $50.

Leash tokens have since been “unleashed,” and now no longer track the price of doge. With a scarce supply of just 107,647 tokens, leash has become the main store of value coin for many shiba inu owners.

ShibaSwap functions

On the ShibaSwap homepage, there are six functions available that incorporate the ecosystem’s three native coins, shib, leash and bone:

  • Dig: Digging is the liquidity pool function on the ShibaSwap platform. Here, users can deposit crypto assets in pairs to existing liquidity pools on the platform, or create their own. As a reward, liquidity providers receive ShibaSwap liquidity pool tokens (SSLP). Those tokens represent their share of liquidity in the pool and entitle holders to receive free bone tokens upon redemption.
  • Woof: “Woofing” is the function for redeeming bone rewards by cashing out SSLP tokens.
  • Bury: This refers to where users can stake their shib, leash and bone in order to generate high interest yields paid in bone tokens. At press time, the rates were 171%, 266% and 814%, respectively. Once staked, users receive a token that represents their staked amount in xSHIB, xLEASH or xBONE.
    • 33% of bone rewards from staking are available immediately, while the remaining 66% are locked up for six months.
  • Swap: This is the exchange feature of the ShibaSwap platform where users can swap between multiple assets.
  • Bonefolio: This is an analytics dashboard where users can explore current interest rates and track their yield returns.
  • NFTs: Here, users can trade 10,000 unique non-fungible tokens called “Shiboshis” – pixelated Shiba Inu dog cartoons similar to CryptoPunks with different traits, some rarer than others.

Who created SHIB coin?

Shiba Inu was launched in August 2020 as a direct competitor to Dogecoin. But unlike Dogecoin, the mysterious creator(s) of Shiba Inu, known as Ryoshi, made some design decisions that have since set the token apart. According to Ryoshi, SHIB has “the ability to outpace the value of dogecoin, exponentially, without ever crossing the $0.01 mark.” To put that into perspective, shib was trading for $0.00002831 at press time, which is a long way from $0.01. And yet, its market cap has already reached a third of Dogecoin’s market cap.

Read more: How Dogecoin Became So Popular

As noted above, following the launch of Shiba Inu, Ryoshi transferred half of the token’s total supply to Buterin, while the other half was locked in Uniswap, a decentralized exchange. As written in the project’s white paper, which the shib community calls the woofpaper, the goal was to transfer ownership of 500 trillion SHIB to Buterin with the hope he would lock them away forever.

The Elon Musk effect

The launch of Shiba Inu failed to gain traction at the beginning, but it began to make a splash around the same time Tesla CEO Elon Musk and other prominent individuals started to take interest in Dogecoin. Tech billionaire Musk in particular has been one of the most vocal supporters of Dogecoin. Dubbed the “Dogefather,” Musk was even voted as the project’s new unofficial CEO.

In the run-up to his appearance on “Saturday Night Live” in May, Musk hinted that he would mention Dogecoin during the show. That fuelled an unprecedented dogecoin price rally, which boosted the value of shib.

In five days, the price of shib increased by over 2,000%. The coin subsequently experienced a price slump along with the market-wide crash sparked by Musk’s announcement that Tesla would no longer accept bitcoin as a form of payment. It would later recover some of the lost value in the first week of October when Musk shared the picture and name of his new Shiba Inu puppy. All in all, SHIB’s price gained over 27,000,000% from January to October.

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Author: Andrey Sergeenkov

Here’s how one of NYSE’s largest market makers is breaking into DeFi


On this episode of The Scoop, founder Ari Rubenstein and founder & CEO Ryan Sheftel joined host Frank Chaparro to discuss the launch of their new crypto firm, called Radkl.

Radkl, which was born out of trading firm and New York Stock Exchange market maker GTS, is a new digital asset trading business. GTS currently trades hundreds of thousands of financial instruments algorithmically, which according to GTS accounts for some “five percent of the entire US equity markets by volume.”

Radkl’s focus on crypto today means providing liquidity and eventually getting into decentralized finance protocols like staking, among other services it expects to offer for its clients. 

“Being involved in the liquidity provision, in the AMM protocols, and DeFi is an obvious first start” Said Sheftel. The CEO said that he expects traditional CeFi order books to merge with AMM liquidity, and to have Radkl serve that sector of the market.

Meanwhile, Rubenstein sees the beginnings of crypto firms as a similar kind of disruption and growth potential for traditional businesses to when capital markets went electronic and online.

Rubenstein believes they are early entrants into a growing market, “I think we’re going to see a world very soon, Frank, that we see an explosion in a secondary markets for things that formerly didn’t have secondary markets that now are made by this digitization of of industries that- I don’t mean just financial instruments or digital pictures like entities- I mean lots of other things that could ride the backbone of CeFi and decentralized finance.”

Hedge fund investor and owner of the Mets Steve Cohen also announced he will be backing Radkl. Though as of yet, the exact sum of that investment has not been disclosed.

© 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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