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Sen. Toomey says China’s latest crypto moves represent ‘a big opportunity for the US’

Pat Toomey, a Republican senator from Pennsylvania, commented on Twitter regarding China’s most recent crackdown on bitcoin. 

“China’s authoritarian crackdown on crypto, including #Bitcoin, is a big opportunity for the U.S. It’s also a reminder of our huge structural advantage over China,” the senator wrote. 

He added: “Beijing is so hostile to economic freedom they cannot even tolerate their people participating in what is arguably the most exciting innovation in finance in decades. Economic liberty leads to faster growth, and ultimately, a higher standard of living for all.”

Toomey’s comments follow the most recent decisions from the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) to treat fiat-crypto or crypto-crypto trading as illicit activities, as well as to deem crypto derivative trading — even for foreign exchanges offering services to Chinese residents — illegal. 

The PBoC’s move to effectively ban crypto trading follows a series of decisions to undermine its domestic crypto economy. China ramped up its efforts to diminish bitcoin mining earlier this year to allegedly lower the country’s carbon emissions. 

However, officials then pursued miners using sustainable hydroelectric power, suggesting environmental concerns were not the main motivator to undercut domestic mining prowess, writes The Block’s Asia editor Wolfie Zhao.

© 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: MK Manoylov

Why BTG Pactual is launching a crypto platform

Brazil-based BTG Pactual, Latin America’s biggest investment bank, is launching its own crypto asset platform that will initially support bitcoin and ether trading.

The platform will be called Mynt and allow customers to purchase bitcoin and ether, BTG Pactual’s Head of Digital Assets André Portilho tells The Block. Eventually, the platform will support other digital assets, he says. The story was first reported by several outlets this week, including Brazilian crypto news site Livecoins and The Rio Times

“Our purpose is to offer access to investments in crypto assets in a simple, direct and secure way,” Portilho told The Block. “In addition, we will have content for people to know how to invest in new financial market scenarios.”

According to Portilho, BTG Pactual customers will be able to access Mynt through the websites and apps of BTG Pactual digital, and the digital bank BTG+. Users should be able to buy and sell bitcoin before the end of the year, the digital asset chief said, noting that the bank has not yet defined a specific date for the Mynt launch. He confirmed that the new platform does not require approval from Brazil’s Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM for its name in Portuguese). 

BTG Pactual says its decision to offer the crypto platform is based on market demand, and also builds on its reputation as a “pioneer” in crypto assets.

“Crypto is strengthening as a new class of assets, and we have seen increasing demand from our clients to access this market in a secure manner,” Portilho said. “Mynt’s launch builds on that.”

However, this isn’t the first time the bank has incorporated crypto assets into its offerings, Portilho points out. He noted that in May 2019, BTG Pactual launched ReitBZ, which it calls the “first security token launched by a bank in the world.” The bank also launched two Bitcoin funds this year—BTG Pactual Bitcoin 20 FIC FIM IE and the 100% bitcoin BTG Pactual Bitcoin 100 FIC END IE.

BTG Pactual’s announcement fits in with the wider trend of traditional financial institutions around the world getting into crypto and digital assets, as well as an increased interest among Brazilians to use cryptocurrencies for investment purposes.

© 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

FTX will begin to move key operations to Bahamas as part of HQ shift

FTX is moving some key operations from its long-standing headquarters in Hong Kong to the Bahamas. 

FTX Ltd. CEO and founder Sam Bankman-Fried tweeted today that the firm is in the process of moving its headquarters to the Bahamas from Hong Kong. The exchange’s Bahamian subsidiary, FTX Digital Markets, registered as a digital assets business with the nation’s securities regulator, according to an announcement earlier this week. That announcement also revealed Ryan Salame, former Head of OTC at Alameda Research, will take the helm at the Bahamian arm as CEO. 

Friday’s announcement, however, means Bankman-Fried will likely spend a significant portion of his time at the Bahamian office and critical operations will move there over time, according to a source at the company. Still, the Hong Kong office remains active, and for the time being critical operations will remain there. The office will likely stay operational as the firm maintains a variety of offices worldwide.

The decision to move headquarters seems to be two-fold. The Chinese government continues to crack down on crypto and FTX could face regulatory uncertainty in the future despite Hong Kong’s previously favorable environment. The Bahamas, on the other hand, has a framework for crypto firms already in place. 

Additionally, Bankman-Fried has tweeted his mounting frustrations with the strict quarantine procedures in place in China. 

“Who would have thought two years ago that a significant consideration for where to live would be “it’s actually legal to enter and leave the country,” he tweeted today. 

Bankman-Fried also cited loosened covid restrictions in his announcement tweet: “The Bahamas has emerged from COVID lively, safe, and without quarantine.”

Launched in 2019, FTX is one of the largest venues for crypto derivatives trading. The firm announced a $900 million fundraise earlier this year that valued the company at $18 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 and Frank Chaparro

Digital artist Pplpleasr explains the meaning of Fortune’s DeFi cover and the future of NFTs

 

Digital artist Pplpleasr believes that the production and dissemination of art represent just the first phase of NFT technology adoption.

This week on The Scoop, PplPleasr joined host Frank Chaparro to break down how she created Fortune Magazine’s DeFi cover and the role of NFTs in Web3 and the broader art space.

Earlier this year, Pplpleasr was commissioned by Fortune to create its first NFT cover. That cover image is a tribute to the NFT community, featuring a number of different well-known avatars. The cover’s depiction represents a stark contrast to the often gloomy imagery one typically associates with Wall Street, juxtaposed instead with the colorful, dynamic universe of the online crypto community.

Pplpleasr remarked:

“The Fortune magazine was something that I think is a special moment for all of us because it sort of represents one of these pivotal moments of traditional media representing the entire community.”

Still, PplPleasr admits that it’s early days for NFT’s and platforms on which they can trade — they’re are often clunky and have complicated user interfaces. 

“The technology doesn’t even exist yet for us to trade, let’s say, assets between different games,” said Pplpleasr. “Like, if I wanted to trade an asset from a Riot game to a Blizzard game, that just is not possible. But I do obviously imagine a future with NFT’s where that is possible.”

Today, Pplpleasr sees an opportunity to unlock the power of NFT’s in her own way by making it easier for women and people outside the art world to launch their own careers.

She recently announced a partnership with the Grammy-nominated musician Steve Aoki to create NFT artworks to be offered at auction at Sotheby’s. A portion of the auction proceeds will go to support the careers of women NFT artists. 

This new interview with Pplpleasr also touches on:

  • How NFTs make it easier for women and others outside the art world to launch careers
  • How “art” and “NFT art” are actually different
  • Why Web3 and NFTs are not (yet) ready for widespread adoption
  • The role of traditional art in an NFT-empowered world.

© 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

Why El Salvador Is Botching Its Bitcoin Experiment

It’s rare that I agree with David Gerard, the British writer who has made a career out of cherry-picking the crypto industry’s problems to savage those of us who argue in good-faith for crypto’s long-term potential.

But I find myself agreeing with many of his recent assertions about a badly handled rollout in El Salvador of Bukele’s bitcoin project, with its bug-riddled Chivo wallet. I wouldn’t call the experiment a “farce,” per the headline for Gerard’s Foreign Policy piece, but it’s hard to disagree with his point that “if Bukele wanted Salvadorans to hate everything about bitcoin…Chivo has been a worked example of how to get there.”

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It’s an unfortunate coincidence that bitcoin has dropped almost 25% since the government first purchased 400 bitcoins on Sept. 6, when its controversial bitcoin legal tender law went into effect. More importantly, the combination of that price drop with Chivo’s continued glitches, with concerns about some of the law’s more draconian elements and with harsh treatment of one of its critics, has fueled a mini “bank run” on the bitcoin that was distributed to Salvadorans. (Each person who submitted their national ID to sign up for a wallet was to receive $30 worth of bitcoin, a value that has since significantly declined.) This will leave a bad taste in the mouth of many Salvadorans.

Unlike Gerard, who would undermine his brand if he ever delivered a positive message about cryptocurrency, I think an opportunity remains for the government and thoughtful crypto industry leaders to turn this around. El Salvador’s experiment can still evolve into a lasting source of empowerment for that country’s impoverished masses.

But it’s going to take a different mindset. We must proactively demonstrate to Salvadorans that bitcoin is part of a decentralizing strategy of local empowerment that allows them to participate in new business and energy development models

Over time, bitcoin can bolster the Central American country’s monetary independence from international lenders. More importantly, its promise of “self-sovereign money” can improve the interests of its poor viz-a-viz those of the political and economic elites from both the left and the right who’ve used and abused them for decades. The problem is bitcoiners’ dominant “marketing” message does a terrible job of conveying that.

Tone deaf messaging

Whether we like it or not, the value proposition that drives bitcoin adoption among middle-class Americans and their peers in other developed countries is that you can “HODL and get rich.” That’s a tone-deaf message to deliver to people who live hand to mouth, where every additional scrap of money they find is put to immediate use. If there ever were an environment in which the “have fun staying poor” slogan is out of place, it’s within the harsh realities of day-to-day life for people in one of the world’s poorest countries.

Here I can imagine Gerard, who repeatedly uses the ugly excesses of a small but vocal “crypto bro” subculture to tar the entire cryptocurrency movement with the same brush, smugly thinking “I told you so.” But he’s wrong to assume this means there is no use for bitcoin for the poor of El Salvador (or anywhere for that matter). That is most definitely not my belief. What matters is how bitcoin is adopted in the country, for what purpose. And that’s where the messaging and the design of the rollout has failed badly.

It has failed because it did not take into account the deep-seated mistrust that people in countries like El Salvador have in governments generally and the fraught relationship they have with money as a result.

There’s a reason El Salvador uses the dollar, and why Ecuador and Venezuela do, and why Argentina, where I lived for six years, had de facto dollarization throughout the 1990s. In all these cases, reverting to the world’s reserve currency as the national medium of exchange is a last resort move, a mark of profound institutional failure brought on by hyperinflation and a history of exchange rate instability. It’s an acknowledgement that the people of the country in question cannot trust the stewardship of their money with their leaders, whatever their political persuasion, and the bankers who work with them.

To American bitcoiners, the dollar is a symbol of entrapment by a profligate Federal Reserve. But to Salvadorans, it signifies security, an escape from the abuses of government and the reason why they’ve enjoyed relative price stability since 2001 after formal dollarization overcame decades of chronic inflation. And for the poorest Salvadorans – the 25% who earn less than the poverty line of $5.50 a day – those for whom a bank, with its exorbitant fees and constrictive identify requirements, is a non-starter for managing their meager savings, the clearest manifestation of that security is in banknotes.

Now, give these people a malfunctioning state-run Chivo wallet that could potentially give the government digital surveillance powers, tell them they are getting $30 worth of this strange new currency called bitcoin but then let the market take a full day’s wages off of that amount while they struggle to work out the kinks in the wallet.

Is it any wonder that Salvadorans started lining up at the new Chivo ATMs this week? (I’m not sure this called for a love heart emoji, Bitcoin Magazine.)

It’s hard to imagine many were lining up to buy bitcoin; it looked much more like doubters grabbing their $25 bird in the hand – a month’s worth of household food – before it shrinks any further. They wanted cold hard dollar notes. Not digital dollars. And not bitcoin – no matter how much you or I might believe that HODLing will serve them better in the long run.

Not everyone has withdrawn, of course. Many are likely betting on a bitcoin rebound. Others who’ve been lucky enough to get a working Chivo connection may have converted into digital dollars on the app, which they can use to make payments or cheaply send and receive remittances in bitcoin or dollars. It’s very early days in El Salvador’s experiment.

But the danger is that expectations formed around a “to the moon” narrative have been dashed by a combination of market declines and technical problems. Maybe the problem was the value proposition itself.

An alternative approach

The pitch to El Salvadorans should not have been “HODL,” but “BUIDL.” Rather than tokenistic handouts, show them how they can use bitcoin in their daily lives – regardless of its ups and downs in the market – to build independent wealth and sustainable prosperity.

The low-hanging fruit lies in better explaining the value of low-cost, near-instantaneous remittances in either bitcoin or dollars via Chivo. To make that work properly will require integrations with providers in the U.S. and other places where Salvadoran expatriates live. But there’s a real demonstration of the power of cheap money transfers here as Chivo uses the Lightning Network’s low-cost, near instantaneous settlement process to move either dollars or bitcoin into its users’ wallets.

A bigger deal would be to do as I’ve argued previously: Roll out bitcoin mining projects that underwrite the development of collectively owned renewable energy plants around the countryside – solar, wind or using “mini-geo” technology to tap El Salvador’s rich geothermal sources. In contrast to the government’s “volcano money” project, in which the state will capture bitcoin for its centralized coffers via a mining facility attached to a state-run geothermal plant, this aligns the bitcoin project with the principles of decentralization in energy and other infrastructure. It would not only provide a steady source of bitcoin for rural communities but also provide them with affordable, sustainable power upon which to develop their local economies.

Such a nationwide project would require coordination. It would require sorting out security issues with gangs that hold sway over money-earning activities in many areas. Non-governmental organizations would need to get involved, and perhaps even foreign governments. It’s complex policymaking based on system design and socio-economic modeling.

This is difficult, but doable. And if, as many of us believe, the bitcoin that Bukele’s government is required to buy back from its citizens rises in value in the near future, it will have plenty of resources with which to invest in such a future.

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Author: Michael J. Casey

At-home GPU crypto mining is surging in China — for now

Quick Take

  • The Block recently looked into the sales and retailer reviews for customized GPU mining cases sold by merchants on the e-commerce platform Taobao.
  • It appears a growing number of Chinese users are buying the idea of mining at home with GPUs in recent months after China’s crackdown over industrial facilities.
  • But they could face serious headwinds as Chinese government toughens up its measures.

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Author: Wolfie Zhao

[SPONSORED] TRON USDC now available

© 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: Sponsored

Lessons From the Canadian Model for a Crypto ETF

This episode is sponsored by Quantstamp and Insider Protocol.

Recent comments from U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler have reignited the discussion of the future of crypto ETFs in the U.S.

In this week’s episode of “Money Reimagined,” hosts Sheila Warren and Michael Casey dive into the world of crypto exchange-traded funds and their rocky history with U.S. regulatory bodies. Fred Pye, CEO of 3iQ Corp., joins Warren and Casey to walk through 3iQ’s journey to become the first Canadian investment fund manager to offer a public bitcoin investment fund.

An ETF is a vehicle through which an investor can access a diversified portfolio of crypto tokens and coins. Though there are many ETFs covering bonds, stocks, commodities and more available to American investors, the SEC has yet to approve a crypto ETF. The first bitcoin ETF up for consideration was filed in 2013. Since then, 18 applications have been rejected or delayed.

With the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission seemingly inching closer to approving a narrowly defined version of a bitcoin ETF, Pye’s insights offer some useful lessons learned from the launch of 3iQ’s Canadian dollar- and U.S. dollar-denominated bitcoin fund.

3iQ now manages over $2.5 billion in assets, offering an indication of the kind of money that might flow into the sector if the giant U.S. institutional market were given the opportunity to invest in bitcoin ETFs.

We discuss the work 3iQ did to get regulators comfortable with its price references and the way it structures and manages its funds. There’s something of a square peg-meets-round hole problem with digital assets that trade 24/7, often on unregulated exchanges and with highly volatile moves and social media-driven narratives. But as Pye points out, it’s not the regulators’ job to contain an asset’s volatility. It’s to ensure that what the asset manager is promising is delivered.

So, with that in mind, what will a U.S. ETF mean for bitcoin (and later or ether and other digital assets when these are added to the approved U.S. offerings) if and when it is approved?

Will people own crypto in their 401 (k)s? Will there be a surge of institutional money into bitcoin? Does it matter that the SEC is leaning toward first approving a bitcoin ETF backed not by the underlying bitcoin but by bitcoin futures? And what does that mean for all the spot bitcoin-backed ETF proposals that have been pending approval for what has, for some, been as long as eight years of waiting?

These questions and more, all discussed in this week’s episode of “Money Reimagined.”

This episode was produced by Michele Musso, edited by Jonas and announced by Adam B. Levine.

Our theme song is “Shepard.”

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Author: Michael J. Casey, Sheila Warren

The world’s largest Ethereum mining pool says it will no longer serve Chinese miners

The world’s largest Ethereum mining pool has said it will stop providing services to miners based in mainland China.

Hangzhou-based Sparkpool said in an announcement on Friday it will release more details about the suspension. At the same time, Sparkpool said the decision is in response to the latest regulatory policy pronouncements out of China.

The news comes just hours after the People’s Bank of China and the National Development and Reformation Commission (NDRC) dropped statements regarding further crackdowns on crypto trading and mining activities. 

Sparkpool is currently the largest Ethereum mining pool based on real-time hash rate, followed closely by Ethermine.

In a statement signed in early September but published on Friday, the NDRC, China’s central macroeconomic planning agency, has laid out detailed measures how it will enforce the crackdown on the mining space to provincial and municipal levels.

One of the several specific measures once again includes crypto mining as an industry that shall be eliminated in the NDRC’s latest Industrial Restructure Guidance.

The Guidance serves as a high-level legal basis for provincial and municipal governments to act on in terms of what industries should be encouraged, retained and eliminated.

In 2019, the NDRC initially added bitcoin mining into a draft Guidance, where it said bitcoin mining should be phased out but the agency removed the wordings later that year in the finalized version. 

The NDRC also said in a recent press conference that while it has so far been effective in clearing out large scale crypto mining facilities, there are remaining operations that have gone much under the radar, based on the transcript of the press conference published on Friday.

“While the rectification over centralized large scale mining operations has been effective, crypto mining activities now have new characteristics, such as becoming decentralized, small-scale and well hidden, which increases the difficulty on spotting them precisely,” the agency said in the Q&A, adding:

“Next, we will work on a long-term mechanism to optimize new techniques with different government agencies including the finance, energy, business, internet, market supervision and taxation bureaus.”

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Wolfie Zhao

Kentucky regulator orders Celsius to stop offering crypto accounts

Crypto lending company Celsius has been ordered to stop offering interest-bearing accounts in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

The state’s securities regulator issued an emergency cease and desist notice on September 24, becoming the fourth state regulator to take action against Celsius in recent days.

Regulators in New Jersey and Texas moved against the crypto firm on September 17, with New Jersey similarly filing a cease and desist. The Alabama Securities Commission had launched a day before.

The news comes against amid a campaign by U.S. state and federal regulators to closely scrutinize or clamp down on crypto lending platforms. Five state regulators have moved to take similar action against BlockFi, one of Celsius’s main rivals.

In its order concerning Celsius’s accounts, which promise high-interest rates but without the protections of regulated bank accounts, the Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions said that the product exposes consumers to “unprecedented risks.”

The regulator also stated that Celsius is, in its view, “offering securities in the form of investment contracts in exchange for the deposit of assets with the company.”

Leading crypto exchange Coinbase recently ditched its plan to roll out a lending product after a very public tussle with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC is said to have expressed the view that the product would fall under the definition of a security.

© 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: Ryan Weeks


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