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Quick Take

  • Digital asset banking and payments platform offering settlement, exchange, payment and yield solutions
  • Helping crypto native and traditional businesses incorporate cryptocurrencies into corporate treasury and operations 
  • Focus on the middle market firms sitting between retail and multi-billion dollar institutions

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Author: Greg Lim

Everyday Bitcoin usage in El Salvador remains low despite government push, US academic study finds

After all the hype about El Salvador making bitcoin legal tender, how many people are using the cryptocurrency to make everyday purchases through the country’s Chivo bitcoin wallet? A new research study based on interviews with 1,800 Salvadoran households suggests that the number is not very high. 

“Leveraging this data, we document how, despite the government’s ‘big push’ and a large fraction of people downloading Chivo Wallet, usage of bitcoin for everyday transactions is low and is concentrated among the banked, educated, young, and male population,” says a US National Bureau of Economic Research working paper released in April. 

In September, El Salvador launched Chivo, offering a giveaway of $30 in bitcoin for each person who signed up. The wallet supports both bitcoin and the country’s existing legal currency, U.S. dollars. “The main driver of adoption is reported to be the $30 bonus offered by the government,” the authors of the new report found. 

But the study also found that many Salvadorans stopped using Chivo after they had used the free bonus. Only about 20% of the survey respondents had kept using Chivo after spending their bonus.

Survey respondents said that 40% of their app downloads took place when Chivo launched last September, and “virtually no downloads” have taken place this year, the authors wrote. 

The new study also found that bitcoin has seen slow adoption by merchants. Companies in El Salvador are required by law to accept the cryptocurrency as a form of payment — as long as they have the technical ability to do so. However, the study’s findings suggest this rule has not been very strictly enforced. According to a subset of the respondents who owned businesses or could answer questions about their employers’ payment methods, only 20% reported accepting bitcoin. The majority of firms — 88% — said they convert it into dollars instead of keeping a bitcoin balance in the app. 

Chivo has had a litany of technical issues since its launch. However, technical problems were only number six on a list of reasons why people who knew about Chivo didn’t download it (over 21% of survey respondents). The main reason was a preference for using cash. Some respondents said they didn’t trust the Chivo system and bitcoin, and others said they did not have a phone capable of using the app.

Out of the respondents in the survey, 64.6% had access to a smartphone. More than half used solely cash to pay for things before Chivo, 70% did not have a bank account and 90% were not using mobile banking services. 

“The Salvadorean experience allows us to document that requiring all businesses to accept bitcoin, providing large incentives to increase its adoption, and accepting it as a means to pay for taxes might not be enough to move to an equilibrium where bitcoin is used as medium of exchange,” the study found. 

© 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: Kristin Majcher

Virginia county looks to crypto yield farming for pension system investments

Fairfax County, Virginia, has already allocated portions of its pension funds to crypto and blockchain investments, but it’s considering wading further into the space with a larger investment in yield farming.

In a panel at the Milken Institute Global Conference today, the chief investment officer of the Fairfax County Police Officers Retirement System Katherine Molnar said the system is hoping to fund two new crypto-focused hedge fund managers in the next three weeks. Bloomberg first reported the news.

Already, Fairfax has made seven allocations to crypto over two pension funds, including venture capital funds and one structure that holds early-stage illiquid tokens and later-stage liquid tokens, according to Molnar.

Among those seven allocations is a different strategy to harness volatility. It includes a hedge fund that deploys a variety of strategies in crypto, including yield farming, basis trading, and cross-exchange arbitrage, among other activities.

“We like the hedge fund, we like the fact that there’s volatility in the space,” she said. “Instead of being scared away by the volatility in the asset class we’re trying to find a context in which to harness that volatility if you will, and of course, volatility is good for relative value type strategies.”

The two new hedge funds the system is working with utilize standalone yield farming strategies. Yield farming provides liquidity to decentralized exchanges by staking or lending assets to generate returns, which Molnar says she’s been advised can reach between four and 1000%.

In some cases, the system has negotiated revenue shares with these managers. Molnar said she views yield farming as a fixed income replacement, or an opportunity to make higher returns than rate-sensitive assets.

“We’re using it as a high-yield substitute…the yields we’re expecting are, let’s say, closer to nine to 11 % in one case and the other manager probably slightly higher than that, so attractive as a fixed income replacement,” she said.

© 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

MicroStrategy says it may explore more ‘yield generation opportunities’ following bitcoin-backed loan deal

MicroStrategy announced its first-quarter financial results for 2022 on Tuesday, reporting $119.3 million in revenues for the period.

The firm, which holds more than 129,000 BTC on its balance sheet, said that non-GAAP expenses came in at $275 million for Q1, compared to $298 million in the first quarter of 2021. In Q1 2022, $170 million worth of those expenses were in the form of bitcoin impairment charges. 

“Loss from operations for the first quarter of 2022 was $170.0 million, compared to $183.2 million for the first quarter of 2021. Net loss for the first quarter of 2022 was $130.8 million, or $11.58 per share on a diluted basis, as compared to $110.0 million, or $11.40 per share on a diluted basis, for the first quarter of 2021,” MicroStrategy said. “Digital asset impairment charges of $170.1 million and $194.1 million for the first quarter of 2022 and 2021, respectively, were reflected in these amounts.”

On the financial state of its bitcoin holdings, MicroStrategy said:

“As of March 31, 2022, the carrying value of MicroStrategy’s digital assets (comprised of approximately 129,218 bitcoins) was $2.896 billion, which reflects cumulative impairment losses of $1.071 billion since acquisition and an average carrying amount per bitcoin of approximately $22,409. As of March 31, 2022, the original cost basis and market value of MicroStrategy’s bitcoin were $3.967 billion and $5.893 billion, respectively, which reflects an average cost per bitcoin of approximately $30,700 and a market price per bitcoin of $45,602.79, respectively.”

In its earnings release, MicroStrategy made note of a bitcoin-backed loan deal with Silvergate via its MacroStrategy subsidiary and suggested it may pursue future deals of this kind. The loan deal was announced in late March.

“May conservatively explore future yield generation opportunities on unencumbered MacroStrategy bitcoins,” the firm said in its presentation document.

© 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

Crypto stakeholders dropped more than $4 million on DC lobbying in Q1. Here are the biggest spenders

The crypto lobby keeps growing, and so have its expenses.

Industry stakeholders and associated companies spent approximately $4.4 million on federal lobbying in the US in the first quarter of this year.

That figure just barely edges out the $4,324,663 from the last quarter of 2021, which capped a year of massive growth in crypto’s work in Washington, DC.

The Block collected and analyzed data from Senate lobbying disclosures for crypto firms and associations. The above figures take into account entities focused on crypto, as well as firms in adjacent areas with disclosures that highlight crypto or digital assets as central focus issues.

Coinbase

Among those included in The Block’s survey, the largest single lobbying operation was Coinbase, the largest US-based crypto exchange.

At the center of many heated debates — and some regulatory crosshairs — Coinbase reported $760,000 in lobbying spending last quarter.

That amount includes the work of three internal lobbyists: Kara Calvert, Kyle Williams and Ashley Gunn. All three joined Coinbase during the latter half of 2022.

The figure also includes four active and two dormant contracts with external firms, including Franklin Square, where Calvert worked before joining Coinbase in November.

At a panel before the American Enterprise Institute on May 2, Calvert noted that “I really started my journey with Coinbase back in 2015, 2016 and was one of the first and really only people up here talking about the need for regulation and how crypto as a whole was going to change the policy landscape.”

Blockchain Association

After Coinbase, the largest lobbying spender was the Blockchain Association, a trade association representing the crypto industry in DC. The Blockchain Association spent $460,000 on its lobbying in Q1.

“I’m feeling way better than I was a year ago about the state of lobbying,” says Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association. Of the expansion in DC-based operations, Smith said:

“For the most part everybody realizes that this isn’t a zero-sum game. Unlike more mature industries where it’s like ‘I win you lose’ to your competitors, in crypto we all win if the environment is clear.”

Blockchain Association Membership was 28 firms at the beginning of 2021. With a new cohort, that number is now 91, says Smith. Four, including Smith, of its staff of 17 are registered lobbyists.

Block/Square

The third-largest crypto lobbying operation was Block’s, formerly known as Square, which reported spending $400,000 last quarter. For comparison, Q4 of 2021 saw the firm report lobbying spending of $260,000.

The firm has held contracts with outside lobbyists since 2017 but only started reporting in-house activity in the middle of 2020. In December 2021, Block hired Tom Manatos from Spotify’s government relations team.

Manatos and the firm’s PR team both declined to comment on Block’s lobbying work.

Though Block is not strictly an industry company, its pivot to bitcoin under CEO Jack Dorsey has been notable and public — including in its rebrand from Square in December. The most recent disclosures specify “issues related to cryptocurrency and digital assets” as lobbying areas.

Additionally, it highlights Rep. Patrick McHenry’s “Keep Innovation in America Act” and Senator Cynthia Lummis’ much-anticipated but yet-to-be introduced omnibus bill on crypto.

Miscellaneous

Other notable spenders in crypto lobbying include the DeFi Education Fund, which just began reporting in-house lobbying this quarter. Aggregate spending between in-house and contracts with four outside firms hit $260,000.

“Our main motivation is that we’re doing DeFi 101s with every Hill office,” explained Miller Whitehouse-Levine, the DeFi Education Fund’s Policy Director. “The core issues in Q1 were certainly the Warren bill and sanctions issues. But my eye is always on self-custody in general.”

Amid a high-profile courtroom battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Ripple Labs reported three contracts with lobbying firms totaling $270,000. The non-profit Coin Center reported three contracts adding up to $230,000.

It is important to note that the Lobbying Disclosure Act mandates reporting only for a limited set of activities. The government work of the teams above is, consequently, more extensive and expensive than the reports suggest. Firms like the Celo Foundation and Ledger, which have also started staffing DC-based government affairs teams in recent months, didn’t report any lobbying activity at all.

“As the Foundation continues its engagement with policymakers in these relevant jurisdictions, we intend to comply with all relevant laws in those jurisdictions regarding lobbying activity, including lobbying registration if required,” said Chris Hayes, who the Celo Foundation hired as head of government relations in March.

Seth Hertlein, who joined Ledger as global head of policy in January, also predicted more lobbying: “Ledger anticipates becoming more engaged in formal lobbying in Washington. We plan to grow our US policy team and will add outside representation as needed.”

© 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: Kollen Post

Riot sells half of bitcoin mined in April after 150% month-over-month production increase

Bitcoin miner Riot announced Tuesday that it sold about half of the bitcoin it mined in April, generating a total of $10 million in net proceeds. 

The company has recently shared an ambitious expansion plan which includes two new facilities in Texas.

Riot produced a total of 508 bitcoin in April, which is a 150% increase compared to the previous month.

Typically, Riot tends to hold on to its bitcoin, as it “believes it is in the best interest of shareholders to have strong Bitcoin holdings on its balance sheet,” per a statement from March.

Last week, Riot announced plans to expand its mining capacity by up to 1 gigawatt (GW) in a new facility located in Navarro County, Texas. In addition to its growing Whinstone center, the company expects to reach 1.7 GW.

Ultimately, Riot wants to expand its self-mining hashrate to 12.8 EH/s by January 2023, per the statement.

© 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

CoinShares reports drop in earnings amid crypto market slump

European digital asset manager CoinShares reported declining first-quarter profit as trading revenue sank.

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (Ebitda) fell to £18.7 million ($23 million), down from £34.2 million a year earlier, according to a statement on Tuesday.

Income from capital markets tumbled 55% as revenue from so-called delta neutral options trading strategies almost evaporated. The decline was offset by more than £6 million in income from decentralized finance (DeFi). 

“While the market conditions of Q1 2021 were such that significant opportunities existed for the group’s delta neutral trading strategies, the main driver of the business unit’s performance in Q1 2022 was DeFi related staking and lending activities,” CoinShares said in the statement. 

CoinShares said it had $313m deployed across a range of DeFi protocols at the end of the first quarter, including Anchor Protocol, TrueFi and Maple Finance. DeFi had brought in zero income in the year-before quarter. 

On a call following the results, CEO Jean-Marie Mognetti spoke about the war in Ukraine and how it provided a valuable use case for cryptocurrencies. He went on to note the continued prevalence of crypto in public discourse, namely US President Joe Biden’s Executive Order on the sector and the UK’s move to become a leading crypto hub.

CoinShares CFO, Richard Nash, highlighted increased costs and the exploration of new business areas as reasons for the firm’s volatile profit from quarter to quarter. 

CoinShares has been headquartered in Jersey, the Channel Islands, since 2016. The company’s stock is publicly traded on Sweden’s Nasdaq First North Growth Market, where the shares closed unchanged on Tuesday.

© 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

Very stable geniuses: The race to build regulation-proof stablecoins

Quick Take

  • The success of Terra’s UST has led to the emergence of new native stablecoins on NEAR and TRON. 

  • Terra’s Do Kwon and TRON’s Justin Sun spoke to The Block about why crypto needs a decentralized stablecoin that regulators can’t interfere with. 

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Author: Ryan Weeks

Crypto media firm Decrypt raises $10 million after ConsenSys Mesh spin-out

Crypto media publication Decrypt has raised $10 million in a Series A round at a $50 million valuation.

The new funding came from 22 organizations, with no leading investor, in a bid to become a “truly independent news organization,” the company announced Tuesday.

Decrypt was previously owned by blockchain incubator ConsenSys Mesh, which was created in 2015 by Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin. The publication was spun out from ConsenSys Mesh prior to the funding round. 

The list of new investors includes venture capital firms Canvas Ventures, Hack.vc, Hashkey Capital, IOSG Group Limited, SKH Group and XBTO Humla Ventures, as well as a group of angel investors, strategic partners and DAOs like Global Coin Research DAO and Honey DAO. ConsenSys Inc will stay on board as a minority investor.

“It’s an extremely tribal world of crypto (…) Being actually independent is very different than knowing we are 100% paid for by ConsenSys (Mesh),” Decrypt CEO and co-founder Josh Quittner told Axios, which first broke the story.

The company plans to use the funds to grow its news team and expand its web3-related project pubDAO. In 2021, Decrypt brought in $1 million in revenue, and this year it expects to grow that number to $5 million, per Axios.

Decrypt Studios currently has 25 full-time employees and draws in around 5 million readers every month, according to the company.

© 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

Payments startup Kevin rakes in $65 million Series A

Lithuanian fintech startup Kevin said Tuesday that it has raised $65 million in a Series A round led by Accel. 

Kevin provides an advanced account-to-account payment infrastructure to replace costly card transactions. It aims to offer payment solutions that remove unnecessary intermediaries in the payment process. Kevin’s in-store offering has attracted interest because it does not require any changes on the merchant’s technical side: it uses existing POS terminal infrastructure and widely used NFC contactless payment technology.

CEO and co-founder Tadas Tamosiunas said the firm will use the money to continue expanding its international team as well as for developing new products.

The round also included Eurazeo and Kevin’s existing investors; OTB Ventures, Speedinvest, OpenOcean and Global Paytech Ventures. Additional investors were Harry Stebbings, founder of 20VC; Ilkka Paananen, CEO & co-founder of Supercell; Amitabh Jhawar, ex-CEO of Venmo, among other angels.

The fresh funding signals rapid growth for the startup, which raised a $10 million seed round just six months earlier. Kevin did not respond to requests for comment on its valuation. 

Kevin joins its payment peers who have also raked in hefty funding rounds. In December, Ramp, the payments infrastructure crypto startup, closed a $52.7 million raise led by Balderton Capital. Fiat onramp company MoonPay also closed a $400 million round at an eye-popping $3.4 billion valuation in October. 

© 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: Lucy Harley-McKeown


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