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Bitcoin News Roundup for Jan. 13, 2021

With BTC looking at gloomy short-term price predictions and altcoins on the rise, CoinDesk’s Market’s Daily is back with the latest crypto news roundup.

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Author: Adam B. Levine

Digital Asset Manager Arca Raises $10M

Asset management firm Arca has announced Wednesday the closure of a $10 million Series A round of funding led by RRE Ventures. Read more: Arca Labs Launches Ethereum-Based SEC-Registered Fund

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Author: Tanzeel Akhtar

Ex-Ripple CTO Can’t Remember Password to Access $240M in Bitcoin

Just call it Schrödinger’s bitcoin.

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Author: Tanzeel Akhtar

DCG’s Foundry will colocate 14,000 bitcoin mining machines in U.S. with focus on institutional buyers

Foundry, the mining subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, has said it’s partnering with a U.S. mining farm to colocate 14,000 bitcoin ASIC miner — a move that will focus in part on institutional buyers. 

On Wednesday, Foundry said it will supply 14,000 WhatsMiner M30S units it procured from Shenzhen-based manufacturer MicroBT. As part of the deal, U.S. mining farm operator Compute North will allocate 47 megawatts of capacity to power up the machines beginning in the first quarter of 2021.

Foundry will retain an undisclosed portion of the hosted miners for its own use and plans to sell the remaining operating machines on Compute North’s shelves to institutional investors.

The goal, according to the firm, is to streamline the pre-stage process for institutions so that they don’t have to deal with issues such as negotiating bulk preorders from manufacturers, shipment logistics and sourcing facilities to host the machines. “This partnership will further strengthen our relationship as we make bitcoin mining more accessible to institutional investors and businesses in North America,” said Foundry CEO Mike Colyer.

The two companies said that once the machines come online, investors can buy the operating miners from Compute North’s shelves either with full payments or via loans issued by Foundry, with the machines serving as collateral. 

Once fully deployed, the 14,000 units would be able to generate around 1.2 million terahashes per second (TH/s) of computing power, accounting for about 0.8% of bitcoin network’s current total. At bitcoin’s current mining difficulty, that amount of hash rate could potentially produce roughly 7.5 bitcoin in 24 hours, though factors such as luck and variance may shift those figures in practice.

Foundry did not disclose the initial cost of their procurement of the 14,000 units. MicroBT launched the model in early 2020 at $2,000 per unit.

But bitcoin’s price rally in recent months has sent the prices of spot stocks for bitcoin mining equipment to new heights. For example, the spot inventory of MicroBT’s WhatsMiner M31S, a less advanced model than M30S, is being quoted by the manufacturer’s distributors at nearly $4,000 per unit.

The colocation deal follows MicroBT’s announcement last September that it has set up its first offshore factory to scale up the supply chain for the North American market. Part of the partnership was that Foundry would be the entity financing hardware and first in line to receive new batches of MicroBT’s M30S.

© 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

Compute North, Foundry Team Up to Target North American Bitcoin Miners

The partnership is designed to lower the high cost of entry for would-be bitcoin miners.

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Author: Zack Voell

Chinese Hospital Issues First Electronic Bill on Blockchain

The People’s Hospital of Chengmai County has issued the first electronic bill on its blockchain-based invoice management platform in South China’s Hainan province, which brands itself as the country’s blockchain hub.

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Author: David Pan

CrossTower hires Citadel and Deutsche Bank veteran to lead new capital markets unit

Digital assets trading business and exchange operator CrossTower is launching a new capital markets division focused on services for institutional investors.

Those services will include digital asset lending and trade financing, structured products and fund offerings, and best execution.

Greg Bunn, a former executive at Citadel and before that at Deutsche Bank, has joined CrossTower to oversee the new unit in the role of chief strategy officer.

“What an exciting time for the asset class, that was one attraction. I think another thing is it looks to me like a lot of the things that need to be solved in digital assets are things that traditional markets have grappled with and have solved, and which I’ve dealt with in the past,” he told The Block. “It appears to me that the industry is on this journey from inefficient to efficient, from disorganised to organised.”

CrossTower was founded in 2019 and caters both to retail and institutional investors. Asked how the firm differentiates itself from other exchanges, chief executive Kapil Rathi said: “Cost is just one factor, there are a couple of big factors. Liquidity is an important factor. So right out of the gate CrossTower has been competing with the top three exchanges in the US when it comes to tight spreads.”

The company currently employs 15 people and has 25 institutional customers, with another 20 being onboarded, Rathi said. In terms of volume, CrossTower is hitting roughly $100m on a monthly basis.

© 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

CrossTower Launches Capital Markets Desk to Bring Institutions to Its Spot Exchange

“Ultimately we end up with something that looks and feels a little bit like what you see in the prime brokerage space.”

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Author: Nathan DiCamillo

Ledger Adds Bitcoin Bounty and New Data Security After Hack

Ledger was also targeted by hackers in Shopify’s data breach.

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Author: Benjamin Powers

First Mover: Don’t Like $34K Bitcoin? Stellar, Litecoin Yet to Conquer Old Highs

Though bitcoin’s rally has lost some steam, many traders are still in a bullish mood – and shifting to alternative cryptocurrencies known as “altcoins” whose prices have yet to clear all-time highs from years past. 

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Author: Muyao Shen


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