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Author: Brady Dale
Quick Take
- It has been almost a month since OKEx suspended on-chain crypto withdrawals.
- Users with locked crypto assets have been trying different ways to get their funds out — generally at a discount of at least 20%.
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Author: Wolfie Zhao
Crypto lending startup BlockFi is planning to roll out its retail products in Europe early next year.
The initiative will debut in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Italy in the first quarter of 2021, according to David Olsson, the firm’s vice president for Europe and Asia. Olsson was hired in May to lead the company’s expansion in the region.
“They’re large enough markets that it’s worth our while to go in and put the resources to work to get traction there, and there is also the regulatory certainty that they’re more pro-crypto and it’s a stable regulatory environment,” he said.
BlockFi has already begun testing its retail products in Italy.
It does not have any plans to launch products in the UK, however, despite the fact that Olsson and his team of ten are based in London. That may have to do with recent actions by the Financial Conduct Authority, the UK’s finance watchdog.
In October, the UK banned the sale of crypto derivatives products to retail investors. The regulator said its decision was in part due to the “inherent nature of the underlying assets, which have no reliable basis for valuation.” Various businesses subsequently expressed concern that the ban might deter pioneering crypto businesses from setting up shop in the country and cause the UK to lose its status as a hub for financial innovation.
Though the derivatives ban doesn’t affect BlockFi, Olsson said the whole picture for retail crypto products in the UK remains “complicated.” The ban “looks like it’s putting crypto on a different footing to equities,” he said.
The company has not completely abandoned its ambitions for the UK. But for the time being those plans center on courting institutional investors.
“It’s the epicenter of the European hedge fund community; we need to be close to that,” said Olsson, adding that BlockFi has fielded more enquiries from traditional asset managers, hedge funds and family offices in the past few weeks than in the whole of the rest of his time with the company.
Some of those family offices are owners of large gold mines and are exploring potentially divesting those assets in favor of buying bitcoin, according to Olsson.
BlockFi has raised $80 million this year across two fundraises in February and August, which were led by Valar Venture and Morgan Creek Digital respectively.
© 2020 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
Crypto lending startup BlockFi is planning to roll out its retail products in Europe early next year.
The initiative will debut in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Italy in the first quarter of 2021, according to David Olsson, the firm’s vice president for Europe and Asia. Olsson was hired in May to lead the company’s expansion in the region.
“They’re large enough markets that it’s worth our while to go in and put the resources to work to get traction there, and there is also the regulatory certainty that they’re more pro-crypto and it’s a stable regulatory environment,” he said.
BlockFi has already begun testing its retail products in Italy.
It does not have any plans to launch products in the UK, however, despite the fact that Olsson and his team of ten are based in London. That may have to do with recent actions by the Financial Conduct Authority, the UK’s finance watchdog.
In October, the UK banned the sale of crypto derivatives products to retail investors. The regulator said its decision was in part due to the “inherent nature of the underlying assets, which have no reliable basis for valuation.” Various businesses subsequently expressed concern that the ban might deter pioneering crypto businesses from setting up shop in the country and cause the UK to lose its status as a hub for financial innovation.
Though the derivatives ban doesn’t affect BlockFi, Olsson said the whole picture for retail crypto products in the UK remains “complicated.” The ban “looks like it’s putting crypto on a different footing to equities,” he said.
The company has not completely abandoned its ambitions for the UK. But for the time being those plans center on courting institutional investors.
“It’s the epicenter of the European hedge fund community; we need to be close to that,” said Olsson, adding that BlockFi has fielded more enquiries from traditional asset managers, hedge funds and family offices in the past few weeks than in the whole of the rest of his time with the company.
Some of those family offices are owners of large gold mines and are exploring potentially divesting those assets in favor of buying bitcoin, according to Olsson.
BlockFi has raised $80 million this year across two fundraises in February and August, which were led by Valar Venture and Morgan Creek Digital respectively.
© 2020 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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Author: Adelyn Zhou
Bridgewater Associates founder and CIO Ray Dalio is expecting the growth of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), but says he still sees problems with bitcoin as a currency.
Dalio broke down his thoughts on bitcoin on Yahoo! Finance earlier this week. He said that, theoretically, bitcoin could be used as currency, but because it is too volatile to be a stable store of wealth and there are too few use cases for it to be used as a medium of exchange, it fails in practice. Additionally, Dalio said bitcoin’s lack of government control could stand in the way of its use as currency.
“I don’t think digital currencies will succeed in the way people hope they would for those reasons,” he said.
Dalio also compared bitcoin to gold in that gold was once scrutinized by governments for its use as a store of wealth, but he doesn’t see bitcoin replacing gold.
“I wouldn’t prefer bitcoin to gold,” he said. “Gold will be the vehicle that central banks and countries use as an alternative to cash.”
This contrasts recent comments from billionaire hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller who said he believes bitcoin will continue to attract millennials and “new West Coast money” as a store of value. Druckenmiller said he views investing in gold similar to investing in bitcoin, with bitcoin perhaps the better bet over time due to its illiquid nature.
© 2020 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
Quick Take
- CMT Digital, a division of the CMT Group, is a Chicago-based firm focused on crypto asset trading, blockchain investments, and legal/policy engagement within the digital asset/blockchain sector
- In 2019, CMT Digital was one of the most active funds in the blockchain/crypto vertical with a total of 11 investments. (Seed, Early Stage, Late)
- In total, the firm has deployed capital into at least 34 startups and protocols across 9 verticals, which The Block has mapped out.
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Author: John Dantoni