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What do the Fed’s draft standards for vetting ‘novel institutions’ mean for crypto banks?

Earlier this month, the U.S. Federal Reserve put out a set of proposed new standards for appraising “novel institutions” that want access to the Fed’s payments and accounts services.

For now, the guidance is just a proposal and has not yet taken effect. It will be available for public comment for 60 days, at which point it will undergo a process of revision that could stretch on for months or longer. The act of making the draft standards public does, however, signal real interest in expanding services for non-traditional players — especially those using emerging technologies — to offer financial services.

Benefits of the Fed

As the central bank of the U.S., the Fed is the hub through which financial institutions in the country transact with each other. For example, they need accounts with the Fed to use the Automated Clearing House (ACH). 

Some non-banks partner with federally chartered banks to access Fed services, but that adds another layer of delays and fees. This has been the dilemma that historically faces crypto firms. From an advocate’s perspective, it hamstrings the technology’s underlying efficiency through the involvement of third parties.

This state of affairs is a core reason why the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s push to expand its fintech charter and provide definition as a bank to firms like Anchorage, Protego and Paxos has prompted such excitement among the industry’s backers and stakeholders.

The guidance itself is certainly heavy on technological advances in general terms. “The payments landscape is evolving rapidly as technological progress and other factors are leading to both the introduction of new financial products and services and to different ways of providing traditional banking services,” it reads, noting:

“Relatedly, there has been a recent uptick in novel charter types being authorized or considered across the country and, as a result, the Reserve Banks are receiving an increasing number of inquiries and requests for access to accounts and services from novel institutions.”

None of which names crypto directly, and across the document the Fed specified neither firms nor specific technologies, nor did it use broader phrases like “financial technologies” or “fintech.” Regulators are fond of the buzzword “tech-neutral,” which may explain why the Fed’s guidance verges on ambiguity. When The Block reached the Fed for comment, a representative similarly declined to confirm or deny any particular charters or companies as part of this push. 

So what are these novel institutions?

But some confirmation for involvement has come from the crypto industry itself.

In a statement to The Block, Kraken Bank CEO David Kinitsky identified the firm’s Wyoming-based charter as “just the sort of forward-looking license that the Fed’s recent proposed guidelines are meant to address.” He further confirmed the firm’s intention to “move forward on our own master account application.” 

Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) was also quick to pull in Wyoming’s crypto-friendly special-purpose depository institution charter as a prompt for the Fed’s guidance. “Wyoming has developed the United States’ best regulatory framework for digital assets,” said Lummis a statement shared with The Block. “I’m proud of the Federal Reserve for thoughtfully considering Wyoming’s leadership.”

But as for federal charters from the OCC, the relationship is less clear. Anchorage, the first digital asset firm to get a national bank charter, declined to comment on the new guidelines. A rep for Paxos, which operates under both a New York Bank Trust and received a conditional OCC charter at the end of April, told The Block that the firm had no advanced notice of the Fed’s proposal. 

Different prospects for national and state charters

The OCC, for its part, is facing a change in management. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen named Michael Hsu as the new Acting Comptroller last week, with May 10 his first formal day on the job. 

Despite the fact that it was an Obama-era OCC that made the first push for a national fintech charter, the process accelerated dramatically under the leadership of Brian Brooks last year. Brooks’ legacy was entrenched in the crypto world. He joined the OCC from Coinbase’s legal team and upon his departure became CEO of Binance US.

Unfortunately for fintech licenses, Brooks became the target for an enormous wave of ire from Congressional Democrats on the House Financial Services Committee. As former U.S. president Donald Trump’s term came to an end, there was strong political pressure to roll back the actions of Brooks and his predecessor Joseph Otting.

On Tuesday night, the Senate passed a resolution to undo Brooks’ “True Lender” rule, which is expected to face minimal resistance in the House. The House Financial Services Committee has already signaled similar disapproval of the OCC’s recent charters. 

© 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

‘Nowhere near a top’: Framework’s Vance Spencer on institutional adoption and the memecoin mania

In Vance Spencer’s view, the market is completely undercounting the amount of capital that’s about to move into the crypto world from institutional investor circles. 

The co-founder of the $1 billion-plus investment firm Framework Ventures would have a good sense of that trajectory, considering how Framework wrapped up a $100 million fundraise for a new fund in the decentralized finance market.

Announced Friday, backers of the new fund include the $40 billion investment firm Hall Capital Partners and unnamed endowments, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal. 

Spencer joined The Scoop (prior to the raise being made public) to unpack the case for Ethereum, which powers much of the DeFi market, the impact of Dogecoin mania, and institutional adoption of crypto. 

“The resounding sense that I get is that people are underestimating the amount of capital that’s coming off the sidelines by probably 1 to 2 orders of magnitude,” Spencer said.

Spencer said that Ethereum and Bitcoin are the two cryptos that are “on the menu” for the large investors and are both “nowhere near a top.”

Still, he added that the story of Ethereum “has a lot more to be told in a world where there is not hyperinflation or there’s not all these crazy things happening than [bitcoin’s story].”

© 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

Microsoft is closing down its Azure Blockchain Service in September

Software giant Microsoft said this week that it will close down its long-running blockchain-as-a-service offering in September.

“On September 10, 2021, Azure Blockchain will be retired. Please migrate ledger data from Azure Blockchain Service to an alternative offering based on your development status in production or evaluation.,” reads a blog post published May 10. 

Yet Azure customers will have new options on the blockchain front in the form of ConsenSy’s Quorum offering. ConsenSys announced the same day that it was working with Microsoft to bring Quorum, which it acquired from JPMorgan last year, to the Azure customer base.

“Both companies are working together to offer a service based on ConsenSys Quorum, an open-source protocol layer for developing with Ethereum,” ConsenSys said in its announcement. 

Azure Blockchain dates back to 2015 when Microsoft first linked up with ConsenSys to offer Ethereum capabilities to the software giant’s cloud customers.

© 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

Crypto firm Delphi Digital launches ‘on-chain’ NFT fund

Crypto research and venture firm Delphi Digital has launched an “on-chain” fund to invest in non-fungible token (NFT) projects.

The fund, dubbed Delphi InfiNFT, is based on the decentralized investing protocol Syndicate. O-chain means it is built using smart contracts and would operate on the protocol.

“It will enable automation of deposits, cap table, distributions, fund management, reporting, etc.,” Anil Lulla, co-founder and COO of Delphi Digital, told The Block. “This will also make our investments transparent for others to see.”

Delphi Digital has collaborated with the pseudonym NFT investor Gmoney for the fund, who earlier this year bought a CryptoPunk NFT for $176,000, a record price at the time. Gmoney and Delphi Digital would co-manage the fund.

They look to make a total of around 20 investments through InfiNFT, 3-5 investments per month, investing $250,000 on average. They are targeting projects that are creating NFTs and are building new NFT technology to improve the ecosystem.

InfiNFT is backed by IDEO CoLab Ventures, Calvin Liu of Compound Finance and Divergence Ventures, Jeffrey Zirlin of Axie Infinity, an NFT-based game developer, “Andy” of NFT protocol Fractional, Gabby Dizon of Yield Guild Games, and others.

NFTs are here to stay, according to Lulla. They are “more than just a new revenue stream for creators,” he told The Block. “They can be used to move the relationship between creators and fans from one of consumption to one of collaboration.”

“It’s difficult to overstate just how impactful this can be on society long-term,” said Lulla.

© 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

FTX.US hires former Citadel Securities exec to ‘massively scale’ its crypto exchange

Cryptocurrency exchange operator FTX.US has hired former Citadel Securities executive Brett Harrison as its first president.

Harrison will be in charge of helping FTX.US “massively scale out,” FTX.US CEO Sam Bankman-Fried said in a statement Thursday. Harrison’s expertise is in developing trading technology. In his most recent role at Citadel Securities, Harrison was head of semi-systematic technology, where he oversaw a team of more than 100 engineers.

Bankman-Fried highlighted Harrison’s technical skills, along with his business acumen. The duo previously worked together at proprietary trading firm Jane Street for three years.

Growing FTX.US “into the most trusted digital currency trading platform and exchange in the US market” will be Harrison’s primary goal in the new role, said the exchange operator.

FTX.US was launched in May 2020, but its trading volumes have remained tepid compared to the main FTX exchange — which earlier this month hired a former forex sales executive from HSBC. In the last 24 hours, FTX.US handled only about $185 million worth of volume, according to CoinGecko, compared to the nearly $2 billion worth of trading volume facilitated by the main exchange.

Crypto exchanges Binance and Binance.US are in a similar situation. It’s likely one of the reasons why Binance.US recently hired Brian Brooks, the former head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and chief compliance officer of Coinbase, as its CEO.

Both Binance and FTX.US appear to have plans to take on leading U.S. crypto exchanges such as Coinbase and Kraken.

© 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

Ruler Protocol: a non-liquidatable lending market

Quick Take

  • Ruler Protocol offers over-collateralized loans that cannot be liquidated as long as borrowers pay back on time
  • Loans have fixed interest rates that are determined solely by demand and supply
  • Lending pairs are segregated such that a collapse in one collateral does not affect other lending pairs
  • An aggressive liquidity mining scheme was able to bootstrap tens of millions of liquidity at the expense of RULER token holders

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this Genesis research on The Block.

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Author: Eden Au

Coinbase says it will support more assets, including DOGE, after strong Q1 earnings

Coinbase published its Q1 2021 earnings today, which showed that the exchange hit the targets it set in its estimated results this March.

According to its investor letter, Coinbase saw strong results thanks to its public debut and the ongoing growth of the crypto industry: “The wind is in our sails right now, and it feels good.”

This is the firm’s first earnings report after its long-awaited direct listing on Nasdaq this April. In March, ahead of the debut, it reported an estimated $1.8 billion in total revenue. It hit the mark, according to today’s results.

It also hit $335 billion in total volume — a metric also projected in the estimated report. That’s a more than 275% jump from $89 billion last quarter. About $120 billion came from retail activity, with the remaining $215 billion coming from institutions. The growth can be partially credited to a mass of new participants in the crypto economy, according to Coinbase.

As many assets hit all-time highs and displayed high levels of volatility, venues saw an influx of participants. Coinbase saw a jump from 43 million verified users last quarter to 56 million verified users. Monthly transacting users more than doubled from 2.8 million to 6.1 million. This translated to $771.5 million in net income. 

Crypto market capitalization reached $2 trillion after sitting at $782 million last quarter, and 11.3% of that market cap, or $223 billion, is on Coinbase.

Though the growth of the industry helped Coinbase produce a strong quarter, it also acknowledged that more competition creates more challenges. 

“Our competitors are supporting certain crypto assets that are experiencing large trading volume and growth in market capitalization that we do not currently support, as well as offering new products and services that we do not offer. We welcome these challenges as they indicate that the market we serve is growing rapidly, but we also have to continue to move quickly to address them, and that inspires us towards action and growth.”

The exchange still doesn’t support DOGE, the dog meme-themed cryptocurrency whose price has risen dramatically recently thanks to a movement on social media. Coinbase has yet to onboard the token and competitors like Robinhood remain key access points during the rally. But on the earnings call, CEO Brian Armstrong said it plans to list DOGE in the next six to eight weeks. 

“We’re putting a lot of work and thought into how to accelerate our asset onboarding, including DOGE,” said Armstrong.

In the coming months, Coinbase will devote more resources to onboarding assets more quickly, accelerating the legal and cybersecurity checks as well as distributing onboarding resources to teams behind tokens. 

© 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

Crypto exchange Binance faces investigation by IRS, Department of Justice: report

Cryptocurrency exchange Binance is reportedly facing an investigation by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service as well as the Department of Justice, according to a report by Bloomberg.

According to the report, officials from the DOJ and the IRS have “sought information from individuals with insight into Binance’s business,” citing unnamed sources. Bloomberg’s report noted that “[t]he federal agencies haven’t accused Binance of wrongdoing.”

Bloomberg reported in mid-March that Binance was facing an inquiry from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) over whether the exchange allowed U.S. residents to trade on its platform. 

Minutes after Bloomberg’s report became public via headline newswires, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao tweeted: “So much FUD today. It’s a pain for some, an opportunity for others.” That message was similar to one he issued in the wake of Bloomberg’s CFTC report in March. 

“We take our legal obligations very seriously and engage with regulators and law enforcement in a collaborative fashion.,” a Binance spokesperson told The Block when reached. “We have worked hard to build a robust compliance program that incorporates anti-money laundering principles and tools used by financial institutions to detect and address suspicious activity. We have a strong track record of assisting law enforcement agencies around the world, including in the United States.  We don’t comment on specific matters or inquiries.”

In recent months, Binance has sought to beef up its regulatory advisory team. In March, Binance hired former U.S. senator Max Baucus as a regulatory advisor, and later that month the exchange added two former members of the Financial Action Task Force (FAFT) to its advisory team. 

As previously reported, Binance has faced regulatory scrutiny in Europe for its stock token trading service. The offering drew a public warning from regulators in Germany. 

© 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

Crypto miner Argo Blockchain announces purchase of two data centers in Quebec 

Argo Blockchain, a UK-based crypto mining firm, has made yet another move to expand its operations in North America.

The company announced Thursday that it bought two data centers in Quebec, Canada, according to a statement

Using the mining equipment already in Argo’s possession, the data centers’ combined power capacity will be 20 MW and will use mostly hydroelectric power — an extension of the “Terra Pool” green mining pool initiative launched in late March.

“Argo’s purchase of data centers in Canada represents another milestone for the company as we seek to take greater control over our mining production and mining cost base, while also laying solid foundations for long-term growth,” Argo CEO Peter Wall said in a statement.  

On February 10, Argo said it had already bought 320 acres of land in Texas, worth $17.5 million, to construct a 200 MW crypto mining facility as part of the company’s attempt to increase its mining capacity by 204% by the end of 2021’s first quarter.

© 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

Bank of England deputy governor says a CBDC is ‘probable’ if public money is to survive

Sir Jon Cunliffe, deputy governor of the Bank of England for stability, said Thursday that it “looks probable” that the United Kingdom’s central bank will issue a digital currency if public money is to survive the growing expansion of private alternatives.

“We may not be there yet. But it looks probable in the UK that if we want to retain public money capable of general use and available to citizens, the state will need to issue public digital money that can meet the needs of modern-day life,” said Cunliffe on May 13, in a speech to the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, a central bank think tank.

The Bank of England, like many of the world’s central banks, has yet to reach an official decision on whether to launch a central bank digital currency (CBDC).

In April, the Bank joined up with HM Treasury to form a joint task force to lead its research into the possibility of launching a digital pound. More recently, the Bank began advertising seven roles in a newly-formed CBDC team.

But Cunliffe stressed in his speech that there remain a multitude of risks and potential benefits to be weighed before any decision is taken.

“Introduction of a CBDC would be a very major public project which would have material implications for the financial sector, many parts of the economy and for society more broadly,” he said.

But Cunliffe also reminded listeners of the seeming inevitability of private stablecoins coming to market at scale.

“There is now the very real prospect of non-banks, including the large technology platforms or ‘big techs’, issuing new forms of digital money, such as ‘stablecoins’ for general payment purposes. These are likely to have greater functionality and lower transaction costs than the current commercial bank digital money offering and could quickly attract a large number of users,” he said.

Cunliffe said that the Bank of England would publish a discussion paper on the public policy implications of any shift away from commercial bank money to new forms of digital cash in the next few months.

© 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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