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NFT marketplace Zora raises $50 million in round led by Haun Ventures

Zora, an Ethereum-based marketplace for buying, selling and curating NFTs has raised $50 million in new funding, valuing the company at $600 million.

The round was led by Haun Ventures, founded by Katie Haun, who formerly helped run Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto fund. It also includes investments from Coinbase Ventures, Kindred Ventures and others.

This is the first round led by Haun’s new firm, which launched in March. Before becoming the first female general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, Haun started in crypto as a prosecutor for the Department of Justice focusing on cybersecurity.

Zora, which lets creators make NFTs, has also held many NFT auctions, including for the first TikTok-inspired NFT, and auctions for the Warhol Foundation.

“We have only seen the tip of the iceberg of NFTs in web3 and believe Zora will become one of the most important protocols (and DAOs) as the NFT ecosystem and associated use cases meaningfully expand in the years to come,” wrote Sam Rosenblum of Haun Ventures, in a blog post.

Research collected by The Block shows that weekly trade volume of NFTs peaked in August of last year at over $1 billion. Recently, it has cooled to just over $150 million.

Ethereum continues to dominate as the most popular chain by trade volume.

© 2022 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: Anushree Dave

Court orders BitMEX co-founders pay a total of $30 million in CFTC civil case

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has hit the founders of crypto exchange BitMEX with a total of $30 million in civil monetary penalties.

US regulators lodged suits against BitMEX and its executive team in October 2020. An August 2021 settlement found that BitMEX facilitated the trading and processing of swaps without the necessary CFTC licensure. In addition to failing to register with the CFTC, that order also found the firm failed to implement sufficient anti-money laundering and know-your-customer checks. 

That outcome required the firm to pay a $100 million penalty and barred it from offering derivatives products in the US.

Now, a consent order from the futures regulator requires co-founders Arthur Hayes, Benjamin Delo and Samuel Reed to each pay $10 million for violations of federal commodities laws. It also bars them from further violations of the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations.

In addition to those civil charges, there is a parallel criminal action against the co-founders. The US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York indicted Hayes, Delo and Reed on charges of willfully violating the Bank Secrecy Act. All three have entered guilty pleas, and Hayes has requested probation with the ability to travel abroad ahead of his sentencing hearing.

© 2022 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

Key crypto hires, exits and moves: April 2022

Quick Take

  • There was a big focus on regulatory hires last month, with many big steals from regulatory agencies.
  • There was also a lot of marketing activity, as crypto firms splurge on sports advertising.

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Author: Tim Copeland

Block reports $1.73 billion in bitcoin sales via Cash App during Q1 2022

Block, formerly known as Square, said Thursday that it generated $1.73 billion worth of bitcoin sales via Cash App during 2022’s first quarter.

During that period, these sales generated $43 million in bitcoin gross profit, per the shareholder letter released after the close of market.

“Cash App generated $1.73 billion of bitcoin revenue and $43 million of bitcoin gross profit during the first quarter of 2022, down 51% and 42% year over year, respectively. On a two-year CAGR basis, bitcoin revenue and gross profit grew 138% and 155%, respectively,” Block said in its shareholder letter, adding:

“The year-over-year decrease in bitcoin revenue and gross profit was driven primarily by relative stability in the price of bitcoin during the quarter, which affected consumer demand and trading activity compared to the prior year period. Bitcoin revenue and gross profit were relatively consistent compared to the fourth quarter of 2021. In future quarters, bitcoin revenue and gross profit may fluctuate as a result of changes in customer demand or the market price of bitcoin.”

Overall, Block saw total net revenue of $4.08 billion, representing a 29% year-over-year increase.

 

During the fourth quarter of 2021, Cash App brought in $1.96 billion worth of bitcoin sales, producing $46 million in gross profits from bitcoin. Broken out annually, the firm’s 2021 haul came in at just over $10 billion in bitcoin sales, representing $218 million in gross profit in that category. 

Block will hold an investor call at 5 p.m. ET to discuss the results.

This story will be updated with additional information. 

© 2022 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

Gaming startup Untamed Planet raises $24 million in Series A funding from Animoca Brands

Untamed Planet, a blockchain-based gaming startup, raised $24.3 million in a Series A funding round led by Animoca Brands. 

Untamed Planet uses the game creation platform Roblox to recreate natural environments, incorporating non-fungible tokens (NFTs) built on the Solana blockchain.

Further, the startup donates between 50% and 100% of NFT sales to conservation organizations. For instance, micropayments in the game allowed users to donate $10,000 to sponsor a black rhino calf in Kenya’s Borana Conservancy in June of 2021. 

With the new funding, Untamed Planet plans to partner with nWay, a mobile gaming firm that’s a subsidiary of Animoca Brands, to create a game that benefits conservation efforts called Untamed Metaverse. 

While NFTs have been used to augment charity donations, it appears that social-good use cases are expanding in the blockchain-gaming world too. 

Animoca Brands is a Hong Kong-based software firm that funds blockchain-based games as well as traditional game companies. The firm acquired nWay in December of 2019; the firm went on to partner with the International Olympic Committee to create a blockchain-based game in 2022.

© 2022 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: MK Manoylov

A Look at Arweave’s Ecosystem Developments

Quick Take

  • Development in the Arweave ecosystem builds on the native decentralized data storage capabilities of the network to unlock new use cases.
  • Arweave is used as a storage layer for archiving on-chain data of several public blockchain networks as well as a data persistence solution for dapps, oracles and NFT metadata.
  • Scalability solutions like bundling technology help increase network throughput and provide a better user experience.
  • Profit-sharing communities and tokens provide a sustainable and more equitable approach to rewarding dapp developers and their community contributors.

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Author: Alex Ho

Former BitMEX CEO asks for probation over jail time ahead of court sentencing

Former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes is seeking probation with the ability to travel and reside abroad rather than serving jail time.

Hayes pleaded guilty to violating the US Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) in February after a two-year legal battle with the US government. Hayes and his co-founders were accused of “evading US anti-money laundering requirements” in October 2020. The penalty carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

But Hayes is looking to avoid any prison time. In a letter from his counsel to Judge John G. Koeltl ahead of his May 18 sentencing hearing, Hayes is asking for probation and the ability to travel and live abroad, rather than serving time in a state facility or under home detention. 

The letter indicates that Hayes agrees with the view that crypto firms should be subject to BSA regulations:

“Mr. Hayes stands before this Court having accepted responsibility for his criminal conduct, which he deeply regrets. In this first-of-its-kind prosecution, the government has achieved a notable success by establishing the principle that cryptocurrency derivatives trading platforms must comply with the Bank Secrecy Act if they provide services to US customers. Mr. Hayes understands and endorses the principle that compliance with the BSA is not only legally required, but also that it serves important societal and law enforcement objectives, especially as cryptocurrency continues to mature as an asset class and as a medium of exchange.”

Hayes is seeking the ability to travel abroad so that he can return to his home in Asia, in addition to another reason that was redacted from the court filing. 

The letter argues that Hayes’ criminal activity was consistent with industry practice at the time and committed without clear guidance from regulators. It also did not actively or knowingly facilitate other criminal activity as the Silk Road marketplace did.

The letter also points out that Hayes has no prior offenses and is already paying a financial penalty well over the usual scope for this type of offense. 

As a character argument, the letter claims Hayes seeks to contribute positively to the cryptocurrency community and acts as a thought leader in the space. Indeed, Hayes has continued to update his blog, most recently with his prediction of a “coming crypto carnage.”

Hayes Sentencing Letter by MichaelPatrickMcSweeney on Scribd

© 2022 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

LootRush raises $12 million to make blockchain games easier to play

LootRush, a platform that aims to improve user access to blockchain games, has raised $12 million in seed funding.

The round was led by crypto VC firm Paradigm, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz. Other backers include Y Combinator, Brex founders, and angel investors like the founders of Axie Infinity, Plaid, Wildlife Studios, Dapper Labs, The Chainsmokers, and Vivi Nevo.

LootRush is trying to address three problems that game developers face when trying to get games to reach mass adoption, according to its founders: they’re expensive, time-consuming to start playing, and hard to set up.

“My team’s mission was to eliminate all of the tiresome barriers of entry that can take hours for players just to play great games,” said LootRush CEO Anderson Ferminiano in a blog post announcing the funding round. “What if playing a game with Web 3 technology was as easy as playing a game on Steam or Mobile Game?”

LootRush focuses on making blockchain games “as easy as a couple of clicks” to start playing. A player chooses a game, selects NFTs, and starts the game. It also focuses on cutting down the time to start playing from “a few hours to a few minutes” and aims to make NFTs available at a lower cost.

© 2022 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: Anushree Dave

Bitcoin’s price tumbles as much as 7% during financial markets tumult

Cryptocurrency prices fell across the board on Thursday, with bitcoin dropping as much as 7% — a move that came in tandem with a broader decline in financial markets.

Bitcoin’s price dropped down from about $39,500 at 9 a.m. ET to as low as $36,863.93 as of 1 p.m. ET, according to Coinbase data. At the time of writing, BTC is changing hands at roughly $36,845, per Coinbase data via TradingView.

The move is generally in line with a broader trend across financial markets on Thursday as most major US stock indexes were down. At the time of writing, the Nasdaq 100 is down just over 700 points, or a roughly 5.1% loss, since the open. 

Bitcoin’s price rose Wednesday after starting May — which has historically been a good month for the crypto — in the red after trending downwards throughout April. 

Elsewhere, Coinbase’s stock price crashed as much as 11%, down from $124.69 at open to as low as $112.63. Coinbase has since recovered marginally to trade at $115.64 at the time of writing.

© 2022 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

A look at the trends driving down GPU prices — and what this means for Ethereum miners

It was not uncommon to see GPUs sell for hundreds of dollars above the suggested retail price during most of last year. The shortage of units even led some Ethereum miners to use their laptops to mine. But that trend seems to now be reversing as demand for Ethereum miners has dwindled.

Prices for GPUs or graphics cards have been on a slow and steady decline since at least the beginning of 2022.

Mark D’Aria, CEO of Bitpro Consulting, a retailer of used GPUs, said that he’s seen prices decrease 3% to 4% every week since the beginning of the year.

The company tracks the selling prices of over 40 GPU models, spanning everything from the low to very high-end. Data shared with The Block shows that the average of that index was $760 on December 5 and $453 on April 17.

“What we’re basically seeing here is a shift in demand away from miners,” D’Aria told The Block. High Ethereum mining revenues help explain why the industry “completely” controlled the price of these GPUs in 2021, while in years prior there was “barely any demand” from miners, he explained.

Ethereum mining revenues hit a record high in May 2021, totaling $2.4 billion, according to data compiled by The Block Research.

But that number has been falling since November of last year, recovering slightly in March and April 2022. And in the meantime, the network has edged closer to switching to a proof of stake consensus mechanism that would not require GPUs.

Ethan Vera, COO of Luxor, which runs an Ethereum mining pool, said that Ethereum hash rate growth has stalled significantly in 2022 compared to last year, as a result of miners scaling down their investments, as well as “some sell pressure.” Pools enable miners to collectively contribute their hashing power and raise the chance of discovering a block together. 

According to data from The Block Research, Ethereum’s hash rate grew by around 604.72 terahash/second (TH/s) between January 1, 2021 and January 1, 2022. It has continued rising in the past few months but at a slower rate. Between January 1 and May 2, the hash rate grew 106.94 TH/s.

According to Vera, it has also become harder to raise money, given the uncertainty of Ethereum’s future.

“It’s not like Bitcoin where the capital markets have an appetite for these machines. I definitely think capital flowing into the space has cooled down here in Q1 2022,” he said.

A push towards selling

Ethereum’s transition to proof of work from proof of work has been in the works since 2016 and, while it has been delayed multiple times, developers successfully tested proof-of-stake on mainnet last month. Ethereum core developer Tim Beiko recently said that “the merge” would likely happen a few months after June.

“No firm date yet, but we’re definitely in the final chapter of PoW on Ethereum,” he wrote on Twitter earlier this month.

With the shift, GPUs will no longer be needed. While proof-of-work requires miners to solve complicated mathematical problems, with proof-of-work so-called validators stake ETH in order to participate in the system and are chosen at random to create new blocks.

Vera said that at least in the short term, most of the hardware used in Ethereum mining would become useless with proof-of-stake, but eventually, miners will find ways to repurpose GPUs.

“It would be hard for an Ethereum miner to liquidate their GPUs at a reasonable price if the change happened right away because the markets can be flooded,” Vera said. “Over the kind of mid-to-long-term, I think those GPUs can get repurposed.”

Several things seem to be been driving prices down.

“There are definitely a lot of factors that are kind of combining here,” said D’Aria. “The supply chain does seem to be clearing up a bit, at least in (the sense) that you can get new GPUs easier. I think a lot of that is just less miners buying everything off the shelves as soon as it hits the shelves.”

The amount of money each GPU is able to generate has also been consistently declining, according to data compiled by D’Aria.

“Since the beginning of the year, on average, people are losing more money net, even after what they mine. A lot of people are really surprised to hear that and don’t believe me until I show them the numbers,” he said. “Anyone who’s been holding on to GPU has made a mistake. They should have sold January 1.”

D’Aria said that different miners are taking varying approaches. Some are trying to get out ahead and sell their GPUs before the market gets flooded, while others are waiting to see what happens or have even kept building up their mining rigs.

The weather also likely plays a role in driving these trends. The closer we get to warmer months the more challenging it’s going to get to run GPUs with the heat outside.

One thing seems clear: “There’s a lot of factors kind of pushing people towards selling and there’s really not a lot of factors pushing people towards buying right now,” said D’Aria.

On the other side, Vera believes that GPU prices are being driven down largely because of the supply chain or lack of demand in other categories.

It’s the higher-end part of the GPU market that has mostly been affected by Ethereum miners, according to D’Aria. For that reason, the prices for more expensive machines are declining slightly faster than the more affordable ones, he said.

“There was a much bigger demand for these super high-end GPUs that gamers never really were willing to pay on average that much for,” he said. “Because miners were willing to pay whatever it cost, Nvidia sold far more 3090s than they would have sold to just gamers (…) there was this massive amount of volume of the really high-end cards.”

As an example, RTX 3080 sold for around $,1,942 on December 5 and $1,082 on April 17, according to D’Aria’s data. On the same dates, an RX480 went from $240 to $144. D’Aria said that prices of new GPUs on the retail market were tracking closely to the ones on the secondary market.

Shift to new coins?

D’Aria also argued that some miners who have kept building have the misguided idea that they’ll simply be able to move on to mining other coins after Ethereum shifts to proof-of-stake. In reality, he explained, profitability would drop sharply as hashrate went over to those other coins.

“Even if you have free electricity it’s questionable whether this is even worth your time,” he said. “​​What these of these new amateur miners don’t understand is that Ethereum is 97% of all GPU mining income right now.”

Similarly, Vera said that “profitability per unit of computers is gonna drastically decline” as hundreds of thousands of GPUs shift to mining other coins, such as Ravencoin.

Vera estimated that, based on the available pool of hashing power, there is a combined value of around $11.4 billion in machines currently securing the Ethereum network. That number breaks down to $3 billion in old-generation GPUs, $7.3 billion in new-generation GPUs and $1 billion in ASICs

© 2022 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


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