FreeCryptoCurrency.Me

Free stocks and money too!

Category Archive : Crypto News

Binance-backed Chinese news outlet Marsbit has sights on CoinDesk

Wang Feng, founder of Chinese crypto news outlet Marsbit, said Marsbit is willing to work with other companies to buy crypto news outlet CoinDesk.

“I believe in the future of the crypto industry, and I’m willing to do infrastructure services in a down-to-earth manner, no matter if it’s trading or media,” Wang said on Twitter. “Element Finance subsidiary Marsbit is willing to organize many well-known funds to cooperate to buy Coindesk, including its crypto media and all its Consensus conference business.”

He added that he would be interested to speak to any investment funds or companies interested in partnering on this.

Crypto conglomerate Digital Currency Group (DCG) is currently looking to sell CoinDesk as it faces troubles with its other subsidiary Genesis, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Jan. 20. The news site has retained investment bankers at Lazard to explore a potential sale, according to the Wall Street Journal. 

Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson, who has expressed interest in buying CoinDesk, said in a YouTube video that the current asking price for the news site is around $200 million. 

In 2019, Binance invested in Mars Finance, which evolved into Marsbit. It already had investors including crypto exchange Huobi and OK Capital, an investment entity related to the OKX crypto exchange.

Wang is also the founder of NFT marketplace Element Finance. CoinDesk is a competitor to The Block.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Tim Copeland

Fantom releases decentralized funding system called ecosystem vault

Layer 1 blockchain Fantom has launched a decentralized funding mechanism aimed at financing blockchain projects through a community-driven governance process.

Known as the “ecosystem vault,” the mechanism provides an opportunity for projects to secure funding in their efforts to build dApps on Fantom, an official blog post explained. It provides an effective way in which developers can obtain capital without relying on intermediaries or external sources of finance.

The ecosystem vault will get 10% of transaction fees paid on the blockchain in FTM — the blockchain’s native asset which is controlled exclusively by FTM stakers. The decision to fund this vault was passed in July 2022.

To apply for funding, projects will have to create both a forum post and governance proposal get approved via an on-chain vote. These proposals will then be voted on by members of the community, with at least 55% voting approval needed from voters for a successful grant. 

The payments will be distributed using Llamapay — an automated crypto payments service. Only the wallet addresses provided in the application will be paid. The maximum amount that can be requested will be equal to the total supply of Fantom tokens in the vault at the time of the application. This vault currently holds about 69,000 FTM tokens (currently valued at about $20,000).

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Vishal Chawla

Sequoia China and Dao5 back ZK startup Hyper Oracle

Zero-knowledge (ZK) middleware developer Hyper Oracle closed a $3 million round co-led by Sequoia China’s seed fund and Dao5.

Foresight Ventures and FutureMoney Group also participated in the round, according to a company release.

Founded in 2022, Hyper Oracle is a developer of a suite of “Meta Apps,” which include indexing and automation protocols for blockchains. A key component of these protocols is a ZK proving system that enables trustless transmission of blockdata, which is needed in indexing and automation tasks.

A ZK proof is a cryptographic technique that confirms whether a statement is true or false without revealing that statement’s contents. ZK technology is being used by Layer 2 scaling solutions called ZK-rollups to allow blockchains to validate transactions at a lower cost and in a faster timeframe.

Hyper Oracle is just one of a number of ZK startups that have raised funds this week including Ulvetanna, a startup that builds hardware to increase the efficiency of ZK proofs, and the Nil Foundation, a ZK data accessibility developer, which raised at a $220 million valuation.

Hyper Oracle’s funding will be put toward research as well as the development of ZK oracle and blockchain infrastructure, the company 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.

Go to Source
Author: Kari McMahon

Castle Island, a16z partners back Escape Velocity’s $25 million fund

Mahesh Ramakrishnan and Salvador Gala, two 27-year-old Goldman Sachs alumni, have raised $25 million for their crypto-focused venture firm’s first fund. 

Known as Escape Velocity, the Boston-based firm started fundraising in June last year, when many crypto VCs were licking their wounds from the collapse of the Terra ecosystem.

The pair already have $25 million in hard commitments but the total raised could go up to a $30 million cap before the fund officially closes in the coming weeks, Ramakrishnan said in an interview. Backing comes from founders from several top tier venture institutions such as Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), Castle Island Ventures and Framework Ventures — as well as senior partners from Apollo Global Management, where Ramakrishnan previously worked.

Monetizing digital commodities

The pair say they managed to capture the attention of industry titans despite crypto’s crisis of confidence by expounding an investment thesis centered on the decentralization of digital commodities such as bandwidth and computing power.

“The next 15 years is far more about being distributed,” Ramakrishnan said. “Because there’s so many computers out there right now, there’s so many pieces of hardware out there right now, with excess capacity that you can monetize.”

“I think we’re hitting the point at which monetizing that excess capacity is actually  far more valuable and cost efficient paradigm than continuing to double down on scale, so we’re really investing in that transition,” he added.

Fund structure

The new fund seeks to invest in early-stage projects that are either decentralizing networks such as wireless and energy or providing tools to enable this transition. Check sizes will be anywhere between $250,000 to $1 million, with the funds being deployed over the course of three years, Ramakrishnan said. About a third of the cash is reserved for follow-on investments. 

With crypto enduring such a tough year in 2022, culminating in FTX filing for bankruptcy in November, Escape Velocity’s founders were pleased not to lose any commitments following the exchange giant’s implosion. 

“A lot of people are looking for some degree of validation that crypto was still an interesting idea, that all of this wasn’t going to go to zero or fall apart,” Ramakrishnan said. “That’s really where we were able to add a bit of differentiation because I think we tend to be really, really deep at the core of the networks that we’re investing in.”

The fund has already made five investments, including Xnet and Andrena. Ramakrishnan listed Ribbit Capital and Framework as venture firms they aspire to copy.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Kari McMahon

NFT startup Candy Digital raised $38.5 million at the start of this year

NFT collectibles startup Candy Digital raised $38.5 million from investors with the first sale occurring on Jan. 3.  A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulatory filing shows that the startup had been seeking to raise a total of $68 million with $29.7 million still to be sold to investors.

A total of 14 investors have already participated in this offering, according to the filing.

At the start of the year, the startup closed a Series A1 funding round led by Galaxy Digital and ConsenSys. The raise enabled the company to buy sports merchandising platform Fanatics’ out of its majority stake. The financial terms of the Series A1 raise were not disclosed.

Candy Digital did not respond to request for comment on the raise. It’s unclear if the filing is linked to the Series A1 or is for a separate fundraising effort.

What is Candy Digital?

The startup is a crypto unicorn having raised a $100 million Series A round at $1.5 billion valuation in Oct. 2021. Insight Partners and Softbank Vision Fund co-led the Series A round. Other investors in the startup have included ConsenSys, 10T Holdings, Galaxy Digital and NFL star Peyton Manning.

Founded in the summer of 2021, Candy Digital is company that develops and designs digital collectibles. It has partnered with Major League Baseball, WWE and Getty Images among others for creating premium collectibles. It also runs a platform where collectors can buy and trade the collectibles.

Candy Digital was originally formed by Michael Rubin, CEO of Fanatics; Mike Novogratz, founder and CEO of Galaxy Digital and Gary Vaynerchuk, who is a serial crypto investor.

Late last year, Candy Digital cut a significant number of jobs citing challenging market conditions.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Kari McMahon

Gemini co-founder threatens to file lawsuit against DCG and Barry Silbert

Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder of crypto exchange Gemini, threatened to file a lawsuit against crypto conglomerate Digital Currency Group (DCG) and its CEO Barry Silbert after DCG’s lending unit Genesis filed for bankruptcy protection.

Winklevoss said in a tweet thread late Thursday that unless DCG and Silbert make a “fair offer” to Gemini’s Earn customers, legal action will be taken against them “imminently.” Gemini is Genesis’s biggest creditor, with a claim of $766 million.

“We have been preparing to take direct legal action against Barry, DCG, and others who share responsibility for the fraud that has caused harm to the 340,000+ Earn users and others duped by Genesis and its accomplices,” Winklevoss said in the tweets. “Crucially, the decision to put Genesis into bankruptcy does not insulate Barry, DCG, and any other wrongdoers from accountability.”

Winklevoss has been involved in a weeks-long public spat with DCG and Silbert over the loan repayment. Winklevoss called for Silbert’s ousting from DCG, alleging Silbert had mixed funds between the numerous companies he manages within DCG and engaged in “bad faith stall tactics” as Gemini attempted to recall the funds.

Genesis said a release that its restructuring process through bankruptcy protection has a “holistic solution,” which, if achieved, “would provide an optimal outcome for Genesis clients and Gemini Earn users.”

Genesis Global Holdco LLC, the parent company of troubled cryptocurrency lender Genesis Global Capital, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late Thursday after taking huge hits from the collapses of crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital and crypto exchange FTX.

Genesis Global Holdco and its subsidiaries Genesis Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd and Genesis Global Capital LLC filed a trio of voluntary petitions in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. 

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Yogita Khatri

Genesis owes more than $3.6 billion to top 50 creditors

Genesis Global, which filed for bankruptcy protection in New York late Thursday, owes more than $3.6 billion to its top creditors.

After filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York late on Jan. 19, Genesis published a list of its top 50 unsecured claims. The total value of the claims amount to over $3.6 billion. 

Some of the biggest claims — including one of nearly half a billion dollars — are attached to entities whose identities have been redacted. They mostly belong to individual creditors, according to one person familiar with the matter.

The list includes numerous claims involving well-known crypto firms. Gemini Trust Company, which has for weeks been involved in a public spat with Genesis’s parent company Digital Currency Group, tops the list with a claim of $766 million.

Other noteworthy claims include $151 million owed to crypto fund Mirana Corp.; $150 million owed to troubled crypto lender Babel Finance (through an entity called Moonalpha Financial Services Limited); a $53 million claim lodged by VanEck New Finance Income Fund; a $30 million claim belonging to Plutus Lending, a division of the crypto platform Abra; and a $19 million claim from Cumberland DRW, the trading firm.

Heliva International Corp appears on the list with a $55 million claim. Santiago Esponda, group CFO of Decentraland, is listed as the contact for Heliva — but Decentaland’s COO Ryan de Tabaoda told CoinDesk the claim wasn’t an official Decentraland investment.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Ryan Weeks

Digital Currency Group’s Genesis Global files for bankruptcy protection

Genesis Global Holdco filed for bankruptcy protection late Thursday in New York federal district court. The news comes after the firm failed in a bid to raise cash for its troubled lending unit and cut 30% of staff in a fresh round of layoffs in early January.

The firm took a financial hit following the collapses of the crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital and the FTX exchange last year. Creditors had been pursuing options to prevent such a move. 

The firm halted withdrawals and new loan originations from its lending affiliate on Nov. 16. Before that, Genesis Global Trading said its derivatives business had $175 million stuck in FTX following the failure of the crypto exchange.

Genesis told clients on Jan. 4 that was continuing to work toward finding a solution for the troubled borrowing and lending unit but that it needed more time to do so. The company at the time said that its derivatives and spot trading businesses were fully operational.

Facing heat

DCG has been facing heat involving other subsidiaries including Gemini, whose Earn program had been frozen since mid-November and has since been shuttered. Gemini co-founder Cameron Winklevoss this month accused DCG head Barry Silbert of “bad faith stall tactics” and comingling funds in an open letter he posted on Twitter. Silbert hit back with his own open letter.

In November, Genesis Global Capital sought as much as $1 billion in emergency funding and was reported to have sought potential buy-in from Binance. That target fell to $500 million, sources familiar with the matter later told The Block. The troubled crypto lending firm owes its creditors at least $1.8 billion, according to reports.

On Jan. 12, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged both Gemini and Genesis with the unregistered offering and sale of securities through the Gemini Earn lending program. The agency said that program was offered to retail investors, some of whom were in the U.S. 

An SEC official said Genesis and Gemini were partners engaged in activity that constituted the offer and sale of securities without registering. Apart from the fact that Genesis was the issuer, both are liable, the official said.  

SEC Chair Gary Gensler said those charges built on previous actions “to make clear to the marketplace and the investing public that crypto lending platforms and other intermediaries need to comply with our time-tested securities laws.” 

“Doing so best protects investors,” Gensler said. “It promotes trust in markets. It’s not optional. It’s the law.” 

DCG also owns asset manager Grayscale and media company CoinDesk, which competes with The Block.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Michael McSweeney, Adam Morgan McCarthy and Sarah Wynn

Genesis creditors back Winklevoss promissory note claim as possible bankruptcy looms

Genesis Global Capital labeled a $1.1 billion promissory note from parent Digital Currency Group as a current asset in conversations with creditors, bolstering the appearance of a stronger balance sheet, five sources told The Block.

That’s according to several sources and creditors who spoke to The Block and provided documents to back up their claims. The creditors and documents confirm a claim made last week by Gemini’s Cameron Winklevoss in his most recent salvo against DCG and its founder and CEO Barry Silbert. Winklevoss and the other creditors all insist they were misled about the financial health of Genesis. 

Genesis did not respond to requests for comment.

Promissory notes are generally considered liabilities on balance sheets. Listing the note under assets, as is claimed by the creditors, provides the appearance of a stronger balance sheet. 

The creditors’ comments come as Genesis is currently in talks with an ad hoc creditors committee for a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, The Block previously reported.

Documents seen by The Block from October and November show that Genesis’s accounts listed over $1.7 billion under the Current Assets column in “other assets.” This figure is slightly below the $2 billion from July, seen in Gemini’s recent filing, but in line with the firm’s claims.

Winklevoss demanded the removal of DCG CEO Barry Silbert on Jan. 10, alleging accounting fraud had taken place, saying a document titled “Gemini Risk Metric Request” contained two “critical misrepresentations.”

The representations noted the DCG promissory note was characterized as a “current asset.” Winklevoss’ assertion is that under Generally Accepted Accounting Principals (GAAP), current assets refer to cash, cash equivalents, or other assets that can be exchanged into cash within one year. 

The letter also argued that no market would value an unsecured long-dated promissory note at face value. “The net present value of this note would be heavily discounted (approximately 70%) to reflect its value as of today (perhaps $300 million),” it noted.

Silbert responded with a letter stating that “The $1.1B promissory note, which matures in 2032, represents DCG’s assumption of liabilities owing to Genesis from Three Arrows Capital in connection with their default in June 2022 … DCG did not receive any cash, cryptocurrency, or other form of payment for the promissory note … Importantly, the $1.1B promissory note is not callable and does not contain any other similar features of a callable bond. Additionally, Genesis assigned to DCG its claims against Three Arrows Capital and as part of the transaction agreed that any recovery received by DCG in respect of the Three Arrows Capital liquidation will go directly to paying down the $1.1B promissory note.”

He did not directly address the consideration of the note as an asset or a liability to Genesis.

 

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Adam Morgan McCarthy, RT Watson and Frank Chaparro

Ether Capital CEO: The ‘age of tokenization’ of real-world assets is coming

There are a lot of reasons to be bullish on what’s happening with Ethereum even if you can’t unstake your ETH just yet, Ether Capital CEO Brian Mossoff said in an interview with The Block.

Mossoff says he is “bullish on Ethereum staking in 2023,” arguing that upgrades to the protocol — like the long-awaited switch to proof-of-stake and a soon-to-be-release update that will allow unstaking on the network — will potentially drive additional capital into ETH.

Ether Capital recently upped its staked ETH balance by 7,488 ETH ($11.8 million). This brings the total amount staked by the company to 28,000 ETH ($44.2 million), or about 62% of its total ETH holdings.

Despite setbacks that may have given some the impression that “upgrades are never going to ship,” Mossoff takes the position the successful Ethereum Merge should have “put those ideas to bed.”

“It’s not important if they happen on time or get delayed,” said Mossoff, adding, ”The reality is developers are in the business of shipping things when they’re going to work,” as opposed to timelines imposed by the profit-driven expectations of investors.

For its long-term goals, Ether Capital aims to stake as much as 100% of its ETH when possible, although there is “no rush to get there,” said Mossoff.

Still, the company’s capacity to provide accounting, reporting, and back office monitoring leaves Ether Capital well positioned to go “full steam ahead on ETH staking,” according to Mossoff.

Capital unleashed by The Merge and un-staking

As “one of the most important and technically complex upgrades in crypto history or in any Internet protocol,” the Ethereum Merge served as a catalyst that potentially unlocked sidelined institutional capital, Mossoff noted.

Indeed, The Merge introduced the capacity to stake ETH in lieu of proof-of-work mining as a means of consensus. However as of now, any staked ETH cannot be unstaked until a much-anticipated Shanghai goes live, scheduled for March.

Once it is possible to stake and unstake ETH, creating liquidity outside of current liquid staked ETH token offerings, Mossoff reckons that institutional perspectives of the ecosystem will begin to change. “I think that people will, from an institutional standpoint, be excited about ETH once it has liquidity,” he said.

But for some organizations, that enthusiasm has been quashed as institutions that were avidly watching for entry points into crypto may be more likely to be sidelined at present following the bust of multiple trustworthy platforms at the end of 2022, said Mossoff. This could stay the case until comfort levels return.

Diversification and self custody

For those that manage to allocate assets into crypto, Mossoff said he doesn’t expect every Exchange-Traded Fund or family office to custody their own assets and run a multi-signature contract like Ether Capital. However, at minimum, “they should be thinking about diversification.”

“There isn’t meaningful insurance in this space. I know that some custodians say that there’s insurance on the hot wallet, insurance on the Cold Wallet, but when you really start reading the terms, you realize that some of these custodians may be holding tens, you know, $30, $40, $50 billion-plus of crypto assets, but there’s only a few hundred million [dollars] of cover,” said Mossoff. This sometimes may be covered by the company’s own balance sheet.

In the case an insurer without sufficient coverage goes under, with losses in the billions, “I’m not sure that a few hundred million dollars is going to go a long way,” said Mossoff. The best form of insurance, he said, comes either via self-custody following best industry practices and procedures, or integrating multiple custodians and staking providers with a means to holistically monitor them.

What lies ahead for crypto

In the future, “there’s more likely a scenario where the businesses fail and the tokens do well over the next five or 10 years,” said Mossoff, estimating Bitcoin may trade around $100,000 with ETH trading between $5,000–$10,000.

What does the next cycle hold? “The age of tokenization of actual real world assets,” said Mossoff, meaning where those assets begin to manifest in markets like Uniswap or others like it. Amid a full spectrum of crypto-native activities, he said that banks and governments will build stablecoins and central bank digital currencies.

Mossoff doesn’t foresee Ether Capital diversifying beyond ETH in terms of crypto allocation. “I don’t see us wavering from that in terms of Treasury exposure,” said Mossoff. “I just don’t think that that’s part of our DNA.”

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Jeremy Nation


Follow by Email
Facebook20
Pinterest20
fb-share-icon
LinkedIn20
Share