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Crypto derivatives exchange Deribit launches index for implied bitcoin volatility

Options exchange Deribit has launched a new index product focused on bitcoin volatility.

Unveiled Wednesday, the Bitcoin Volatility Index, or DVOL, was debuted “with the purpose to launch futures on this index soon.” Put simply, such futures would allow traders to place bets on the volatility performance of the bitcoin market. 

“This index uses the implied volatility smile of the relevant expiries to output one number that gives a gauge of the 30 day annualised implied volatility,” Deribit explained in a blog post, which laid out the parameters for the index.

As the firm went on to note:

“Volatility Index Futures are not only a very effective and simple method to trade volatility but also opens up new trading strategies such as more possibilities of realised vs implied volatility strategies, hedging volatility exposure from options, volatility mean reversion and momentum strategies.”

As shown in the graph below, Deribit continues to dominate the market for bitcoin options, constituting nearly 90% of the share of open interest for such products. As previously reported, Deribit moved late last year to require its trader base to become verified. 

© 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

Goldman Sachs looks to offer bitcoin investment vehicles in the second quarter

Goldman Sachs reportedly aims to offer bitcoin and other crypto investment vehicles to private wealth management clients in the second quarter.

CNBC reported the news on Wednesday, citing Golman’s Mary Rich, who was recently named global head of digital assets for the bank’s private wealth management division.

“There’s a contingent of clients who are looking to this asset as a hedge against inflation, and the macro backdrop over the past year has certainly played into that,” said Rich. “There are also a large contingent of clients who feel like we’re sitting at the dawn of a new Internet in some ways and are looking for ways to participate in this space.”

This is a developing story and will be updated…

© 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

Crypto prime broker OVEX raises $4 million from Alameda Research

South African crypto prime broker OVEX has raised $4 million from Alameda Research in a strategic funding round.

Sharing the news exclusively with The Block on Wednesday, OVEX said it is looking to expand internationally with fresh capital at hand. OVEX has identified five markets for expansion: the U.K., the U.A.E, Canada, Kenya, and Nigeria.

OVEX CEO Jonathan Ovadia told The Block that these markets are “underserved” while still having “significant” cryptocurrency volumes.

Specifically, in Dubai, OVEX is setting up a proprietary trading desk, said Ovadia. “The rest of the markets will likely be operated from inside South Africa,” he said.

To that end, OVEX is looking to grow its current team of 15 people to more than 35 by July, said Ovadia. OVEX is specifically looking to add people to its engineering and customer success teams.

Founded in 2017, OVEX primarily serves high-net-worth individuals and institutional clients. It also has some retail-oriented products, such as crypto trading services and interest-bearing crypto accounts.

Ovadia said OVEX is already “exceptionally profitable,” with profits growing 30% month-to-month for the last 18 months. “We expect this growth to continue for the foreseeable future,” he said, adding that the fresh capital will allow OVEX to reach critical mass in new markets quickly.

This is the first external raise of OVEX, said Ovadia, adding that Alameda is more of a strategic investor. OVEX is looking for more such strategic investors to raise a further $14 million in the near future, Ovadia told The Block.

“We’re keeping the equity round very exclusive and want to make sure any investor we bring on will add value and help us achieve our goal,” he said. “Alameda has been an incredible investor in this regard and has been able to assist with infrastructure and guidance in this short period of time.”

OVEX is raising further funds at a valuation of $122 million, said Ovadia.

© 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

Governance roundup: discussions from crypto protocol communities

Quick Take

  • This research piece collects current proposals and discussions from various crypto projects and their communities
  • Crypto protocols are governed by a community of token holders. Tokens can be delegated or used to vote directly, and any governance structure can be implemented
  • The first layer of voting is typically informal to gauge interest, and then proposals are moved to token holder voting (or execution via multi-signature signers)

This research piece is available to
members of The Block Genesis.
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this Genesis research on The Block.

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Author: Mika Honkasalo

CoinShares doubled earnings in 2020 after fourth quarter bitcoin surge

CoinShares, Europe’s largest crypto asset manager, doubled its earnings in 2020 after surging crypto markets drove significant growth in its assets under management.

The company, which recently went public through a listing on Sweden’s Nasdaq First North Growth Market, has filed financial results for the year ended December 31, 2020.

The filings show that CoinShares’ adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) grew to £22.4 million ($30.8 million), doubling from £11.2 million ($15.4 million) the previous year. The group’s total comprehensive income for 2020 was £18.7 million ($25.7 million), a 109% increase on the £8.9 million ($12.25 million) reported in 2019.

The key driver of the increased earnings was a surge in assets under management across the company’s range of exchange-traded bitcoin products (ETPs). Group assets under management grew 336% to £1.74 billion ($2.4 billion) in 2020.

That growth has continued into 2021. CoinShares currently has more than $4.5 billion in assets under management. Bitcoin Tracker One and Bitcoin Tracker Euro, its flagship ETPs, hold $1.3 billion and $2 billion, respectively.

The 2020 results state that trading gains have “further strengthened” in 2021, which corresponds with the trajectory of the wider crypto rally. Bitcoin reached an all-time high of $60,000 in mid-March.

Jean Marie Mognetti, CoinShares’ CEO, said 2020 was “by any financial measure” the most successful year in the company’s history.

“Q4 2020 will be remembered as a tipping point in the journey of bitcoin and digital assets towards being recognized as a genuine asset class. This utterly transformative way to create, use and consume financial services has started to attract institutional capital at scale,” he added.

The Block recently revealed that British billionaire Alan Howard, co-founder of Brevan Howard, is a significant shareholder in CoinShares – after IPO filings showed he held a stake worth around $60 million.

© 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

Non-custodial crypto investing app Ember Fund raises $5.3 million in seed funding

Non-custodial crypto investing app provider Ember Fund has raised $5.3 million in a seed funding round.

Sharing the news exclusively with The Block on Wednesday, Ember said the round was led by Richard Jun of Bam Ventures, with participation from Anthos Capital, Uncorrelated Ventures, Calm Ventures, and others.

With fresh capital at hand, Ember plans to invest “heavily” into its infrastructure and “aggressively grow” its assets under management (AUM), co-founder and CEO Alex Wang told The Block.

“We’re aiming to hit $1 billion in AUM by the end of this year,” said Wang. The current AUM of Ember is around $100 million.

Launched in 2019, the Ember app allows users to invest “like a cryptocurrency hedge fund” via curated funds managed by professionals. That means users choose a fund, and Ember periodically rebalances the fund.

Ember serves both retail and institutional investors. “We are fast approaching a six-figure mark in the number of users,” said Wang, adding that the U.S., Canada, Australia, the U.K., and Europe are Ember’s top five markets. Ember hit profitability in November 2020, said Wang.

There are currently 14 people working for Ember, and the firm is looking to hire smart contract engineers, customer support staff, a research analyst, and a CIO/CFO, said Wang.

“We’re also launching a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)-registered token offering in a few months, through another Regulation Crowdfunding,” Wang told The Block. Last year, Ember raised $700,000 through an SEC-registered crowdfunding sale.

© 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

Crypto wallet startup imToken raises $30 million in Series B round

Crypto wallet startup imToken has raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Chinese venture capital firm Qiming.

The firm said in an announcement on Wednesday that it closed the round led by Qiming Venture Partners, which invested in notable Chinese tech firm like Xiaomi, Meitu and Megvii.

imToken said its $10 million Series A lead investor IDG Capital also participated in the round. Other new investors include Breyer Capital and Longling Capital, an investment firm chaired by Cai Wensheng, the founder and chairman of Meitu, which made headlines recently with its BTC and ETH purchases.

In addition, crypto-native funds Hashkey Capital, SNZ, Signum Capital as well as Liang Xinjun, co-founder of Chinese conglomerate Fosun International, also participated in the round.

Founded by Ben He in Hangzhou in 2016, imToken is known for its wallet services including non-custodial wallet imToken app and the imKey hardware wallet as well as the decentralized exchange Tokenlon.

With the new capital, the firm said it will hire additional staff in its bid to provide a suite of DeFi services to the development of imToken 3.0, the next upgrade for its wallet service. In addition, it plans to launch a research arm dubbed imToken Labs.

© 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

What comes next for the US Treasury Department’s plans to monitor crypto wallets?

Initially delayed by mass outcry and a change in the presidential administration, the U.S. Treasury has once again closed the window to send in comments on a now-notorious proposal focused on peer-to-peer crypto transactions. 

Yet because it’s tied up distributing billions of dollars in stimulus funds and assembling the contours of President Joe Biden’s domestic policy agenda, the new leadership at the Treasury Department appears less interested in rushing new rules forward for the crypto industry. 

The saga dates back to the tail end of the Trump administration. Then-Secretary of the Treasury Stephen Mnuchin advanced a rule proposal through the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) that would require crypto exchanges to apply Bank Secrecy Act scrutiny to transfers from their platforms to so-called self-hosted wallets. Every transaction valued at over $10,000 would require a report to U.S. authorities, while the exchange itself would need to maintain personal records of ownership to any off-exchange wallet that exceeded $3,000 in value.

The change would, in effect, deputize crypto exchanges in their bid to apply more oversight on crypto transactions. Regarding the approach, Congressman Warren Davidson told The Block: “Treasury — and the federal government in general — if they can’t be the intermediary… they can make an intermediary which effectively acts as a proxy for them.” 

The $3,000 requirement was especially controversial, as it is based on a FATF “travel rule” threshold that effectively assumes all crypto wallets to be foreign transfers until proven otherwise.

FinCEN first posted those rules right before the 2020 holiday season and gave the public just 15 days to respond — far shorter than the traditional 60, even when those days don’t coincide with traditional vacation times. Many saw the rushed timeframe as an effort to sneak past industry stakeholders and beat the clock on the incoming Biden administration. Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association, told The Block:

“Typically rulemaking can take years. The problem with the midnight ruling with Mnuchin is you had 15 days. Initially — before that — it was supposed to just go as an interim final rule which would have immediately gone into effect.”

Broad pushback from the crypto industry and the general chaos of Washington in January put the Mnuchin-era proposal on hold. Biden further stymied it by calling for a general freeze on new rulemaking in the interval before his appointees could take the reins.

Once the Senate confirmed former Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen as Mnuchin’s replacement, the proposal returned, much to the industry’s chagrin. The new Treasury approach was less rushed, leaving the proposal open for the full 60 days of public commentary. The 60-day window ended Monday night.

The Treasury Department has not had time to respond to commentary from either round of responses. So the question is, has anything really changed? 

FinCEN, notably, has not. A Mnuchin-era hire, Director Kenneth Blanco has stayed on during the transition and remains at the helm of the anti-money laundering watchdog. Just this past Friday, FinCEN published notes from its “Innovation Hours” program. The program focuses heavily on “convertible virtual currencies,” or CVCs, which in some ways reinforces the office’s defensive posture when it comes to crypto. The most recent IH notes promised that “FinCEN will host additional periodic workshops to facilitate targeted innovation focused on specific threats and vulnerabilities of the U.S. and global financial system, particularly in the area of CVC.”

FinCEN is, however, looking elsewhere, with the need to implement major changes to AML regimes embedded in the National Defense Authorization Act, which passed on New Year’s Day.

Still, the Treasury Department does not make new rules on the basis of FinCEN’s priorities alone. While Yellen is hardly a crypto fan, the Treasury’s agenda has changed. The Treasury’s flurry of activity in managing the American Rescue Act has kept it busy in recent days, and indications of an ambitious infrastructure program from the Biden White House all suggest that the months ahead will stay that way. But, more broadly, Yellen’s agenda appears more focused in domestic financial concerns rather than shoring up hypothetical leaks in the US’s capital controls.

Among the industry, some see promise in the simple fact that Yellen does not seem as dogmatically interested in the proposed rules in the same manner as Mnuchin. Sources instead point to alternatives that open ledgers present for any potential investigations into specific clients, which would be possible without exchanges trading volleys of personal client information with every blockchain transaction.

“When it’s cash, there’s no third party there,” Davidson told The Block. “That’s the permissionless nature of cash. You don’t have the audit trail that the federal government wants. With blockchain, you have an inherent audit trail, but you preserve some privacy.”

The Blockchain Association’s Graham Newhall told The Block:

“As you know, part of the reason that many flock to transparent blockchains is their open (but privacy-respectful) transaction logs. Much of what FinCEN is asking for could be satisfied by a simpler, record-keeping practice. We think that would protect consumer privacy, and still give law enforcement access to info that would help track illicit activities.”

On this point, FinCEN seems set to come around as well. The recent Innovation Hours notes also said: “The IH Program has confirmed there are various solutions already available for many of the AML/CFT challenges that financial institutions face — particularly supporting compliance with existing funds transfer and recordkeeping requirements for convertible virtual currency exchangers.”

© 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

Spot prices for new bitcoin mining hardware hits five-fold premium amid global chip shortage

Quick Take

  • The spot price premium of bitcoin mining hardware over their preorder prices has likely never been this steep
  • While bitcoin miners’ five-fold premium is in line with bitcoin’s price rally since November, a global chip shortage adds to the ongoing supply and demand imbalance

This feature story is available to
subscribers of The Block Daily.
You can continue reading
this Daily feature on The Block.

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Author: Wolfie Zhao

NFT marketplace SuperRare raises $9 million in Series A funding round

Non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace SuperRare has raised $9 million in a Series A funding round, the team behind the platform announced Tuesday. 

According to the March 30 announcement, the round was led by multi-stage venture capital firm Velvet Sea Ventures and crypto fund 1confirmation, with investments from Version1, Collaborative Fund, Shrug Capital, Mark Cuban, Sound Ventures, and more. 

SuperRare launched on the Ethereum mainnet in April 2018, and the platform’s community has grown significantly since then. To date, artists have earned over $30 million on SuperRare from primary sales as well as secondary market royalties (artists earn 10% of each subsequent sale of their work). Last fall, SuperRare played home to the NFT sale for CGI influencer Lilmiquela.

According to the SuperRare team, the influx of cash will enable the platform to further support artists and collectors. The team plans to add several new features to the marketplace, including more social elements like a chat service and personalized feeds, as well as making the process of auctioning work more seamless.

The team also plans to further implement layer-2 scaling solutions into the platform, following the lead of other Ethereum-based services in recent months.

“Art collecting has long been an opaque and exclusive market, inaccessible to most people,” the startup’s announcement read. “For the first time, we have the opportunity to digitize this ancient and inherently human activity, bringing it online for the first time at scale.”

© 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: Saniya More


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