Blockchain Bites: OCC's Stablecoin Guidance, EU's Digital Euro Plans, Chamath's Bitcoin
The OCC published guidance allowing U.S. banks to work with stablecoin issuers. Meanwhile, the ECB thinks the term stablecoin can be "misleading."
The OCC published guidance clarifying that federally regulated banks can work with stablecoin issuers, the ECB thinks stablecoin is a "misleading" term and a group of banking veterans has spun up a new crypto fund.
Top shelf
Bitcoin funds
Banking veterans who have steered divisions at HSBC, Barclays, Citigroup and Merrill Lynch in the Asia-Pacific region are ditching traditional finance to invest in cryptocurrencies. Their new crypto fund, Liquibit Capital, will manage assets worth $50 million and will arbitrage a portfolio of bitcoin, bitcoin cash, ether, litecoin and eos, custodied with Fireblocks, with an eye to expand into derivatives trading. Elsewhere, tech legend and part-owner of the Golden State Warriors, Chamath Palihapitiya’s Social Capital invested in bitcoin (BTC) in 2013, when it was trading around $10. Palihapitiya disclosed the holdings in an investment call as he mulls taking the fund public. The exact amount of bitcoin Social Capital has bought and sold is unknown.
National security?
The United States Space Force (USSF), the newest branch of the U.S. military, is looking to blockchain to render its computer systems, on earth and in space, unhackable. Xage Security, which is currently working with the U.S. Air Force, won a contract for a data-encryption system. Meanwhile, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) launched a new R&D laboratory on Monday to study blockchain technology, along with wireless telecommunications, quantum computing and artificial intelligence.
MicroStrategy effect
Coming on the heels of publicly-traded MicroStrategy’s multi-million dollar investment into BTC, financial services firm Unchained Capital has released an “advanced business account” for firms that want to hold bitcoin and handle their own private keys. “We have companies that you wouldn’t expect, like your local bakery or your local liquor store that hold bitcoin in treasury,” Parker Lewis, Unchained’s head of business development, told CoinDesk. “They are not Bitcoin-centric businesses, but they hold bitcoin and they hold their own keys; both small and large, like the MicroStrategies of this world.”
UNI unity
A group of anonymous Uniswap users is trying to unite the many small holders of the UNI governance token to deal with potential problems in the automated market maker’s (AMM) governance, CoinDesk’s Muyao Shen reports. The group, seemingly backed by unii.finance, is aiming to issue a community token called UNI Innamorare (or UNII). The idea is to create a faction of UNII token holders to counter the power from the founding team and investors, who still hold an outsized amount of control over the decentralized protocol despite a governance token distribution, the group alleges. “We are all minions in terms of voting power,” according to a pre-launched page by the anonymous group. It is unclear whether the proposal will catch on.
Wright's move?
The District Court for the Southern District of Florida has denied Craig Wright’s request for summary judgment in a case that involves claims over ownership of about 1.1 million bitcoin (worth over $11 billion). In an order signed on Monday, Judge Beth Bloom at the Florida court denied the self proclaimed inventor of Bitcoin's motion seeking summary judgment that would have prevented the matter from proceeding to a full trial. According to an order issued by the Florida court on Sept. 4, the trial involving Wright’s bitcoin fortune has now been moved to Jan. 4, 2021.
Quick bites
- The Fast-Growing NFT Market Is Problematic Yet Promising (Leigh Cuen/CoinDesk)
- Here in Venezuela, Doctors Struggle to Access Aid From Crypto Platform (José Rafael Peña Gholam/CoinDesk)
- ‘We Blew It.’ Douglas Rushkoff’s Take on the Future of the Web (Daniel Kuhn/CoinDesk)
- A Top Crypto Exchange CEO Explains Why the 2020 Boom Is Different (Joe Weisenthal/Bloomberg)
- Bitcoin-Backed Ethereum Token tBTC Launches—for the Second Time (Adriana Hamacher/Decrypt)
At stake
Stablecoin junction
European and U.S. financial regulators independently have issued positive statements regarding the viability of fiat-backed digital currencies.
The U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) yesterday published official guidance clarifying national banks can provide services to stablecoin issuers in the U.S.
This is the first instance of federal clarity around stablecoins, referring specifically to tokens backed on a one-to-one basis by fiat currencies rather than their algorithmically derived counterparts, CoinDesk regulatory reporter Nikhilesh De said.
Acting OCC Comptroller Brian Brookes said that stablecoin services are responsible for “billions of dollars each day” flowing through the financial plumbing.
The statements are also the first indication that certain stablecoins might not be securities under federal law.
Meanwhile, European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde said the supranational bank is looking into the benefits and risks of a bloc-wide digital currency.
Rather than as a replacement for cash, a digital euro would "complement" traditional money and provide an alternative to "private digital currencies" for EU citizens. This, she told the EU Parliament on Monday, would "ensure that sovereign money remains at the core of European payment systems."
The comments come a month after Lagarde said Europe is losing ground in payments innovation and signals a continued skeptical line over private “stablecoins” like Libra.
Elsewhere, ECB officials wrote the term stablecoin is “misleading,” adding the term “should be replaced by a choice of terminology to shift the emphasis away from the issuer’s promise of stability.”
Market intel
Follow the leader
Bitcoin (BTC) is once again taking cues from the stock markets and prices may fall below $10,000 if equities see further sell-off, according to analysts. The top cryptocurrency fell by 4.5% on Monday to register its biggest single-day decline since Sept. 4. That came as global stock markets nursed sharp losses and the safe-haven U.S. dollar gained ground on renewed coronavirus fears and uncertainty over the 2020 U.S. election. "Sustained risk-off in broader equity markets will lead to heavy offers across major cryptocurrencies," Matthew Dibb, Stack Funds' co-founder and COO, told CoinDesk. "Bitcoin may revisit September lows [around $9,870]."
Op-ed
Activism
Jeff Dorman, a CoinDesk columnist and chief investment officer at Arca, argues that activist investors can help the digital assets industry mature. “The digital assets ecosystem needs to adopt the best practices of traditional finance. A strong governance system is one element that will help keep companies in this space on track and will hold them accountable,” he writes.
Podcast corner
Banks care?
The FinCEN Files, a leaked cache of more than 2,000 suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed by banks with the U.S .Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, show that banks are happy to file their reports and then keep on banking likely money launderers, NLW argues.
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