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How to stop swimming naked and reboot crypto lending

The perception that crypto credit markets were in any way transparent was blown out of the water last year, along with many of the sector’s biggest lenders and borrowers. Nobody knew who was swimming naked until the tide went out. Then the realisation hit: they all were.  

The list of crypto credit casualties — now in various states of disrepair — includes Three Arrows Capital, Genesis Global, Celsius, Voyager Digital, BlockFi, Hodlnaut and Vauld. The list goes on, and they owe creditors billions of dollars. 

“The reputation of crypto lending has gotten so bad,” said Yichen Wu, CEO and co-founder of Tesseract, a Helsinki-based, institution-facing crypto yield business. “People need to understand that there are different ways of doing things.” 

Most people in the industry agree that crypto credit is in dire need of an overhaul. But what exactly needs to change? How will those left standing avoid the continuous contagion-crazed catastrophes that so hobbled the sector in 2022?  

Transparency and risk 

Crypto is an industry fond of trumpeting the benefits of open ledgers, but last year proved crypto lending, at least, has to date been dominated by black-box operators. Lenders like BlockFi and Celsius were winning deposits from retail customers by promising attractive yields, but nobody on the outside knew how those yields were generated. There was a lot of talk of lending to institutions — but customers weren’t told much beyond that.  

The unknowns were many. 

Who were these mysterious institutional borrowers? What rates were they borrowing at, and what was the lender’s margin? What were the institutions doing with their borrowed funds? What was the probability they would default? Were they putting up collateral, and at what ratio? What financial disclosures were they making to lenders?  

Retail customers may not have cared to know the answers to all these questions, but they surely would have been interested to learn that Genesis — which had lent out money on behalf of Gemini Earn’s customers — gave $2.4 billion in under-collateralized loans to 3AC. If nothing else, this represented a major concentration risk. When it filed for bankruptcy protection in January, Genesis revealed that it owed $3.4 billion to its top 50 creditors. Perhaps retail customers couldn’t have been given quite this level of explicit detail, given confidentiality constraints. But the information they were given clearly fell way short of fairly reflecting the risks they were taking.  

‘Just a hedge fund’ 

What many retail lenders were unwittingly doing — in handing over their money to the big centralized lending desks — was giving money to crypto hedge funds, according to White Star Capital general partner Sep Alavi. “What they are behind closed doors is just a hedge fund. They take on client assets and take risk with it,” he said.  

The high rates offered by crypto lenders were often propped up by in-house trading arms and subsidized with income from other products, agreed Alexander Höptner, the recently ousted CEO of crypto exchange Bitmex. “How much risk is embedded there?” he said. “How much process risk is in there and how much counterparty risk is in there?”  

Customers didn’t know. In the future, they may insist on knowing.  

“There needs to be more transparency in the lending and credit space,” said Alavi. “At any given time, you should be able to know where your assets are.”  

Tesseract’s Wu echoed Alavi’s stance, claiming customers are “sick and tired” of black boxes. “If you’re transparent, you can’t do crazy shit. If you do crazy shit, what are you going to tell people?”  

But how? 

There appears to be a broad consensus that an infusion of radical transparency is needed for crypto lending to bounce back. What is less clear is exactly how to deliver it.  

Some believe structural change is in order. The sheer number of crypto lenders that have been forced to freeze withdrawals and subsequently file for bankruptcy protection last year suggests a rethink is needed if operators are to survive future market shocks.  

David Olsson, who spent over two years as a senior vice president at BlockFi before joining Kraken as global head of prime financing and OTC, has put together something of a manifesto. “In order to ensure we don’t experience a repeat, crypto lenders need to adopt a range of policies to ensure risk is properly managed and doesn’t grow to proportions that lead to industry-wide contagion,” he said in an emailed statement.  

“Policies include: extensive due diligence on prospective borrowers to ensure credit risk is identified and aggregated into the lender’s overall lending activities; segregation of funds to prevent bad loans causing contagion with the company’s broader operations; and finally loan collateralization so lenders’ risk profile is controlled and doesn’t lead to mass liquidations,” Olsson continued. Ticking all these boxes will mean slower growth, he conceded, but from a more “solid foundation.”  

‘Yield supermarket’ 

Mauricio di Bartolomeo, co-founder and CSO at Ledn, thinks a fund structure is the way forward. 

He hopes to see lending companies offering a series of segregated funds with clearly delineated risk and return profiles. If these funds were to falter, the client would be on the hook for losses, but the management company wouldn’t go down with them. In other words, returns might well take a hit in future crises, but lenders themselves would be better able to weather the storm.  

“I think you’re going to see an evolution into that kind of model, because it’s a much more scalable model, and it’s a lot more transparent, and it just contains risk a lot better for companies and for end users,” di Bartolomeo said.  

Tesseract already sees itself as a “yield supermarket,” according to Wu. It offers a range of options for partners looking to generate yield for their users that includes lending, staking and DeFi-focused products — with different accounts for those with higher and lower risk appetites. “The worst thing you can do,” said Wu, “is batching a lot a different activities in one account.”  

Prove it 

So-called proof of reserves reporting has tried to address the clarion call for more transparency in the wake of a disastrous 2022 for crypto. In theory, these reports offer a way of verifying that a crypto company has one-to-one backing for any assets it holds on behalf of customers — meaning it is less likely, if not unable, to suffer a shortfall in the event of a surge in withdrawals.  

Yet though sound in theory, proof of reserves reports have been a mixed bag. Mazars produced a report for Binance late last year but subsequently paused proof of reserves work in December and erased past reports from its website, citing “concerns regarding the way these reports are understood by the public.” Armanino, a firm offering proof of reserves reports that audited FTX’s U.S. arm, also announced that it would stop working with crypto clients after facing a backlash in December.  

Di Bartolomeo said that despite the “explosion of demand” for proof of reserves work, “it’s not something that you can do on the turn of a dime,” as it requires buy-in from all parts of an organization. Another challenge, it would appear, is finding reputable audit firms to do the job. Binance, among others, has found the sign-off of a big four accountancy firm difficult to come by. An executive at the exchange operator recently told Bloomberg that a full audit is still some way off.  

On-chain underwriting 

Another potential cure for what ails crypto credit is on-chain underwriting, a kind of due diligence that would properly harness the benefits of blockchain-based businesses. Victor van Eijk, a director at Maven 11, thinks on-chain monitoring has become increasingly important — all the more so as firms dig deeper into DeFi.  

“To ensure proper risk management of the borrowers and the intended use of funds lent, credit underwriters must be able to track the exact flow of funds after the loan is issued,” he said in an emailed statement. Such disclosure is a “balancing act” between transparency and proprietary information, he said, adding that borrowers are increasingly willing to be tracked by the likes of Credora, Arkham and Nansen, in light of the events of last year.  

Of course, some see DeFi itself as the answer to crypto’s credit woes. It is telling, they point out, that most of the lenders caught up in the crypto credit contagion were centralized operators. DeFi, for the most part, fared better, with only a few outfits — such as lending protocol Maple Finance — suffering defaults. 

Di Bartolomeo said that DeFi loans are, in general, more likely to be repaid in part because they’re usually over-collateralized, meaning borrowers are more afraid of defaulting. He still thinks that centralized crypto lenders will be able to distribute more traditional products like mortgages and credit cards better than DeFi, but concedes that protocols “will do programmatic lending better than CeFi going forward.”  

Do better 

All these ideas, however, will have little effect if lenders don’t set higher standards for themselves and for the industry. 

“The blowups over the past few months have largely been the result of corporate malpractice or poor risk management, rather than anything endemic to the underlying technology,” said Kraken’s Olsson. “Businesses were overleveraged and relied on a steady stream of new depositors to fund aggressive expansion. When market sentiment soured last year, the deposit stream went into reverse and lenders faced a full-blown liquidity crisis.” 

Take the example of 3AC. The hedge fund came to Ledn a number of times in search of loans, but refused to produce financial information, according to di Bartolomeo. He was surprised quite how much money the now bankrupt fund was able to borrow with so cavalier an approach. Ledn ultimately chose not to lend to the 3AC; few others resisted. 

“What they tried to tell us was that we were the only group that didn’t lend to them — and how could that be?” Ledn’s Di Bartolomeo said. 

© 2023 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

Mining difficulty up 9.95% with more machines coming online amid recent rally

Bitcoin’s mining difficulty has increased by 9.95% after the latest adjustment, according to an update posted Friday on BTC.com.

More machines have been coming online, likely due in part to the recent rally in bitcoin prices, combined with declining power costs, which have provided some much-needed relief for struggling miners.

Mining difficulty refers to the complexity of the computational process used in mining, and it adjusts about every two weeks (or every 2,016 blocks) in sync with the network’s hashrate.

The network’s global hashrate temporarily jumped over 320 EH/s this week, according to data compiled by The Block Research.

“Network hashrate continues to march upwards, as more efficient machines come to market, electricity rates fall, infrastructure gets built out and mining economics improve with Bitcoin price and ordinal transaction fees,” Luxor COO Ethan Vera said.

More competition

Even as miners benefit from improved economics, they will likely be offset by increased difficulty, which has jumped for the third time this year.

“We expect hashprice to trade in a tight band of $70 to 90/PH/Day as increases in bitcoin price are offset by gains in network difficulty and the network settles at new equilibrium prices,” Vera said.

Hashprice is a metric coined by Luxor that refers to revenue miners earn from a unit of hashrate over a specific timeframe.

Investment firm D.A. Davidson said in a note recently that it would remain “cautious” in light of the increased competition in the industry.

“We continue to lean on miners with low-cost power, funded growth plans, and ample liquidity to capitalize on the impending shakeout,” it said.

© 2023 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: Catarina Moura

Bitcoin mining report: Feb. 24

Bitcoin mining stocks tracked by The Block were mostly lower on Friday, with a total of 18 companies seeing their share prices decline.

Bitcoin fell 3.1% to $23,213 by market close.

© 2023 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: Catarina Moura

Bankman-Fried asks court for more time to negotiate bail

Sam Bankman-Fried wants more time to negotiate his bail terms.

The former FTX executive’s lawyers filed a letter on Friday requesting that a federal judge give him until March 3 to hash out the details of his ongoing bail dispute. Bankman-Fried also requested more time to find a technology expert to educate the court.

“We respectfully request that the court grant the defense an extension of time to file our proposal for the court’s technical consultant and additional bail conditions,” Bankman-Fried’s lawyers said.

Prosecutors have urged Judge Lewis Kaplan to tighten Bankman-Fried’s bail terms — and seriously curtail his internet access — after he used an encrypted app to message a former employee and a VPN to watch the Super Bowl. 

Bankman-Fried is facing a litany of criminal charges. He is temporarily barred from using a VPN or any encrypted or ephemeral apps like Signal, and banned from contacting current or former FTX employees. He is under house arrest in California on a $250 million bond. 

Kaplan asked Bankman-Fried to bring a tech expert before the court to discuss his VPN use. Bankman-Fried has agreed to pay for the expert, and his lawyers say they are still searching for a candidate. The judge also asked prosecutors and Bankman-Fried’s lawyers to propose new bail orders to the court. 

Bankman-Fried is awaiting an October trial in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. He was hit with four new charges this week, including bank fraud, when the court unsealed a superseding indictment in the case. 

The former CEO and majority shareholder of The Block has disclosed a series of loans from former FTX and Alameda founder Sam Bankman-Fried

© 2023 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: Stephanie Murray

Central African Republic’s Sango coin experiences deposit downtime

Sango, the coin by the Central African Republic launched in 2022, may be experiencing issues with deposits, representatives for the project said on Telegram.

“We have some fantastic news!” they wrote, saying the tech team was working to resolve the problem. “We are incredibly sorry for the inconvenience.”

Users who contact the organization by email may convert deposits at the price of the deposit time cycle if they provide a request with the specific price and the transaction ID, according to Sango.

A committee set up by the country has been exploring ways to integrate Sango with the wider economy since convening this January.

© 2023 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: Jeremy Nation

We can have a lot of NFTs and not dilute value, says ArtBlocks founder

We can have a lot of NFTs and they can still be worth a lot of money. At least, that’s what the founder of ArtBlocks hopes.

The creator of the popular NFT collection Chromie Squiggles, Erick Calderon, is looking to a future where NFTs are valuable without scarcity, and products can be tailor-made for consumers.

“We as humans have a tendency to lean towards individuality,” he said speaking at the NFT Paris conference on Friday. Despite this, he posed the question: What will it take for NFTs to be valuable without the promise of scarcity?

The crypto winter caused NFT trading volumes, by U.S. dollar value, to plummet by more than 90% last year. Even marquee collections like Bored Ape Yacht Club and Azuki suffered from the downturn. At the same time, however, the number of transactions has steadily risen as cheaper NFTs billed as “digital collectibles” and offered by traditional companies like Reddit or Hollywood studio Warner Bros. Discovery are gobbled up by consumers.

Calderon wants to move beyond “fomo-based” mechanics in the market where companies have the ability to serve individuals with products that are unique to them.

For example, he said tourist attractions such as the Eiffel Tower could use blockchain tech to take a snapshot of a specific sparkling light sequence, and sell that as an NFT memento, with revenue from the sale going back to maintaining the building and to the artist.

ArtBlocks is “dedicated to bringing compelling works of contemporary generative art to life,” uniting artists, collectors and blockchain technology “in service of groundbreaking artwork and remarkable experiences.” It has carved out a space as a marketplace that creates and sells unique works.

Calderon created Chromie Squiggles in 2020. The current price floor of the collection is 12.5 ETH (about $20,000), according to NFT Price Floor. 

© 2023 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: Lucy Harley-McKeown and RT Watson

EA founder Trip Hawkins joins web3 studio Games For A Living

Trip Hawkins, founder of gaming behemoth Electronic Arts (EA), is switching gears from protagonist roles at gaming giants to a Barcelona-based web3 game studio startup, Games For A Living (GFAL).

Hawkins will join the startup as chief strategy officer and a member of the board. He’s seen startups through every stage from working alongside Steve Jobs at Apple to helping lead EA toward its initial public offering, according to a company release.

“Trip is the father of modern video game publishing and one of the best visionaries in the games industry, to the extent that he was already talking about NFTs back in 2007 when I first met him,” said Manel Sort, CEO of GFAL. “We’re honored to have him on board to guide our strategy going forward, which I am sure will be a huge boost to our business and the future of blockchain gaming.”

Sort and Hawkins worked together at Digital Chocolate. Sort is the former FVP and head of studio at King Barcelona, which was the second-biggest studio for the global gaming company.

GFAL closed a pre-seed round in early 2020 led by Inveready and Bonsai Partners with the aim of developing games to fuel mass adoption of blockchain technologies. The startup’s first game is Elemental Raiders, a free-to-play roleplaying strategy game.

“Regardless of the recent birthing pains, blockchain as a technology holds a lot of potential, enabling enhanced experiences, verifiable proof of ownership and asset trading, as well as creating new opportunities for social interaction and innovative business models,” Hawkins said in the release. “We want to capitalize on that, not necessarily by forcing conventional gamers to hop on to the web3 express, but by adding value to the gaming models that already exist.”

© 2023 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: Kari McMahon

Ether, bitcoin track Nasdaq, S&P declines as new data keeps inflation fears in focus

Crypto and traditional assets sank after U.S. data showed inflation persisting. 

Bitcoin traded down about 1.5% to $23,785 at 8:45 a.m. EST, while ether fell about 1% to around $1,639.

The price index for personal consumer expenditures rose 0.6% last month, and data for December was also revised higher. The estimate had been for a rise of 0.4% in the core index, according to Investing.com.

 

BTCUSD chart by TradingView

S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures were pointing to drops of more than 1% each, while crypt0-related stocks including Coinbase and Silvergate were trading lower pre-market.

Block, which reported better-than-expected revenue and profit for the fourth quarter despite getting hit by bitcoin, was up 5% before the open. 

© 2023 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: Christiana Loureiro

Ethereum core developers plan new testnet called Holli

The Ethereum core developers are planning a new testnet called Holli in response to difficulties in acquiring ETH on the blockchain’s primary test networks, Tim Beiko of the Ethereum Foundation said.

The release of Holli, expected later this year, may improve the testing environment for client and application developers as well as node operators. It aims to address challenges associated with acquiring ETH supply on Ethereum test networks, particularly on Goerli.

The new test network will be specifically customized to meet the needs of client and application developers, as well as validators, Beiko said.

Test networks (or testnets) are clone blockchains for experimental purposes, allowing developers to deploy applications and check for bugs before deploying them on the mainnet. Currently, Ethereum’s ecosystem features two primary testnets: Goerli and Sepolia. 

Goerli is a critical network, serving as the first native multi-client testnet widely used by validators. Still, Goerli’s distribution method for native ETH (GoETH) has been deemed “less reliable,” Beiko said. The distribution of GoETH is primarily in the hands of a few validator entities. They distribute a small amount of GoETH via “faucets” to users who pass a Twitter verification check, which has raised concerns over privacy and time consumption. 

Recently, the developers of the interoperability protocol Layer Zero launched a cross-chain liquidity pool that allows users to buy GoETH. While this market attempts to quell developer complaints about acquiring GoETH, many think it may jeopardize the free nature of the testnet.

Sepolia, the other testnet, attempted to address the supply issue with a design that let test validators freely mint Sepolia-ETH (SepETH). Still, Sepolia is not open to permissionless validators, meaning that its supply may be hoarded by a few entities. Hence, Beiko and other core developers have proposed introducing Holli as a new testnet to address supply issues and provide a better environment for developers and validators.

To make Holli-ETH more accessible to application developers, Beiko has suggested automatic allocations to all developers’ addresses that have ever deployed smart contracts on the testnets or the Ethereum mainnet.

© 2023 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: Vishal Chawla

Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest adds $3.9 million worth of COIN

Ark Innovation ETF added 53,783 Coinbase shares, while fellow fund, Ark Next Generation Internet ETF, added 9,802 shares, the company’s latest filing shows.

Coinbase shares closed up just over 2% Thursday, at $62.33, according to TradingView, meaning Ark’s latest investment in Coinbase amounts to roughly $3.9 million.

The latest COIN investment is just one of many in a series of Coinbase buys from Wood this month. Ark has spent nearly $37 million investing in the exchange so far this month.

© 2023 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: Jeremy Nation


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