Digital assets cooled off slightly after several weeks of explosive growth, but still neared the end of Q1 with a strong quarterly performance.
Bitcoin traded in a narrower range than the last fortnight, mainly ranging between $27,300 and $28,250, before concerns over the CFTC suing Binance caused a day-long dip including a weekly low of $26,780
Bitcoin recovered to hit a weekly high of $29,160 early on Thursday, breakingthe $29,000 mark for the first time since 11th June
Bitcoin’s current price of $28,700 equates to 3.6% weekly growth
Ether’s hit a weekly low of $1,691 and a high of $1,840
Ether’s current price of $1,807 is a 2.7% increase on last week
Total Ether supply continues to decline with annual net issuance currently at -0.2% yearly
Overall market capitalisation increased slightly to $1.18tn
According to industry monitoring site DeFi Llama, total value locked in DeFi this week across all blockchains and platforms increased to $49.7bn
US regulators continue to bring enforcement actions in what appears to be an outright adversarial attitude to digital assets; but ongoing failures and concerns in the global banking sector have helped illustrate several key benefits of crypto. Bitcoin’s technological security continues to grow as its hash rate hit a new high, Hong Kong continues to court crypto companies, Franklin Templeton identified Web3 and crypto as indicators of long-term social trends, Goldman Sachs alumni moved into DeFi, and Nasdaq announced an update to their plans for digital asset custody services.
What happened: Global banks continue to display issues
How is this significant?
The largest banking crisis since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis continued this week as more industry failures and misdeeds emerged—and the performance of digital assets once again suggested the current crisis is highlighting crypto’s advantages
The transparency of blockchain is a key benefit for digital assets as immutable public ledgers provide instant insight into movement of funds—much in contrast to banking, where more evidence of wilful manipulation and deceit emerged this week
French regulators (adding more global flavour to the crisis) raided major banks in a tax fraud and money laundering probe that could lead to $1bn in fines
SocGen, BNP Paribas, and HSBC are among the firms under investigation for dividend arbitrage fraud; revealed after an operation involving more than a year of research, 16 local magistrates, more than 150 investigators and 6 prosecutors from Germany
President at Queens' College Cambridge, Mohamed A. El-Erian commented on its downfall; “Banking is based fundamentally on trust. Any erosion in trust can, and does, lead to outcomes that were deemed highly unlikely or even unthinkable just a few days earlier”
Meanwhile, as banks have struggled, the digital asset market has performed strongly; blockchain is defined by lack of central points of failure and trustlessness, the lack of need to trust any third party
On the subject of SVB, a sale was finally agreed for the bankrupted bank; but the FDIC had to invest considerable resources to get the deal done, offering First Citizens bank a large discount “on top of a $70 billion credit line, an agreement to cover First Citizens’ losses in excess of $5 billion on commercial loans for the next five years, and $35 billion of borrowings to the bank in the form of a note”
Bloomberg reported that the FDIC currently faces $23bn of costs from recent bank failures, and wants to pass a significant portion of that burden onto the market’s biggest banks
Charles Schwab ($7tn of assets across all businesses) felt the strain this week, with shares down a quarter since March 8th—in the same period, Bitcoin has grown from $22,000 levels to over $28,000
As concerns grow over the security of the banking industry, Bitcoin is becoming fundamentally more secure on a technological level, as the network’s hash rate continued its long-term uptrend with a new record high
Hash rate effectively reflects how much computational power is required to mine Bitcoin; this rises when there is more competition for mining, thus reflecting greater decentralisation and therefore greater security, as singular entities hold less power
The network’s hash rate is adjusted on a (roughly) fortnightly basis, to ensure that block times remain consistent at approximately ten minutes
On a three-month rolling basis, Bitcoin’s hash rate has increased by 52%—the third-highest adjustment over the last 5 years
Industry media platform Cryptoslate hypothesises that this growth has been largely driven by Bitcoin’s Q1 price appreciation; as it becomes more profitable to mine Bitcoin, more miners bring their hardware back online, boosting competition and hash rate
Goldman Sachs’ former head of digital asset markets, Justin Schmidt, became president and CEO of decentralised investment platform Ondo Finance this week
The company was founded by other Goldman associates, Nathan Allman and Pinku Surana
Schmidt told Bloomberg “I will focus on growth, strategy, and execution as we continue to bring innovative institutional-grade financial products and services on-chain”
Ondo is a noted proponent of tokenisation; reflecting and trading real-world assets on blockchain, leveraging advantages like transparency, borderless trading, and instant settlement
In other news of decentralised trading, popular DEX (decentralised exchange) dYdX announced a move towards absolute decentralisation; removing centralised entities who currently maintain exchange operations
dYdX CEO Antonio Juliano commented “I think the end state for everything in DeFi has to be full decentralisation. The middle ground doesn’t really work indefinitely”
Some analysts view this move as a pre-emptive protection against expected increasing regulatory pressure
Whilst the failure of Silvergate and seizure of Signature have limited banking options for American digital asset firms, Hong Kong regulators are taking a stance much less hostile than the US; actively encouraging banks to engage with the sector
A roundtable between Hong Kong regulators and banks has been scheduled for next month, “to facilitate direct dialog” and “share practical experiences and perspectives in opening and maintaining bank accounts”
This conciliatory includes the backing of state-owned Chinese banks; despite a mainland ban on crypto trading, the institutions have taken advantage of the “one country, two systems” policy in order to reach out to businesses setting up in Hong Kong
Sources speaking to Bloomberg noted that Hong Kong branches of China’s Bank of Communications Co., Bank of China Ltd., and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank now offer banking services to local crypto firms
One local Web3 CEO told Bloomberg that this “means a lot to us because it’s something you’d never expect at this point, even around the globe… A cryptocurrency account at a tradfi bank is something groundbreaking”
Following on from several recent SEC enforcement actions, the Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) got in on the act this week, suing both Binance and its CEO, Changpeng “CZ” Zhao on Monday
The CFTC alleges several regulatory violations; including derivatives violations and a “calculated, phased approach to increase its United States presence” despite official geo-blocking, citing educational materials in their Binance Academy website that explained VPN usage
Charges are (at this point) all civil, rather than criminal
They also allege onboarding of US-based VIP customers, ineffective KYC practices, and insider-trading allegations against CZ
Allegations date back to 2017, with Binance representatives noting that they have spent large sums particularly over the last two years to ensure US customer exclusion
Zhao responded with a blog post refuting the allegations
Binance—whose global exchange isn’t based in the US—could face a permanent injunction against ever doing business in America, with some analysts believing they may surrender their Binance.US subsidiary to placate regulators
Georgetown Law professor Urska Velikonja said “The risks to US firms are far greater than the risk to Binance. The big risk to them is the ‘lights out’ risk that they lose their licence to operate as broker-dealers in the US”
Chicago-based trading firm Radix confirmed to the Wall Street Journal that it’s one of the firms cited in the suit, but said “We got legal vetting on anything we did in terms of crypto connectivity”
In a worst-case scenario however, the CFTC is requesting payments for all fees back to 2017 derived from US users, as well as making them whole; which could run into billions
This lawsuit spooked the market, briefly dropping Bitcoin’s price below $27,000—but as of writing those losses were erased
On Wednesday, the FT claimed that Binance maintained business links with China for several years after officially leaving the country in 2017
Sheila Warren, CEO of industry body Crypto Council for Innovation said she wasn’t surprised at the CFTC’s action, citing “systematic pushing-out across a variety of different actors” from regulators, calling the SEC’s recent Well’s Notice against Coinbase “overt hostility” against the industry
The CFTC claims Bitcoin, Ether, Litecoin, fiat-backed stablecoins, “as well as other virtual currencies as alleged herein, are commodities”, whereas SEC chair Gary Gensler has routinely refused to confirm anything except Bitcoin qualifies as a commodity
Speaking at a House Appropriations Committee meeting on Wednesday, Gensler claimed existing securities laws “cover most of the activity that's happening in the crypto markets”
Financial Services Committee chairman Patrick McHenry meanwhile confirmed that Gensler will testify before the committee on April 18th, in the first SEC oversight hearing with a focus on Gensler’s rule-making and digital assets
The Republican members are accusing him of overreach, declaring an intention to hold him “accountable for his flagrant disregard for the law, jurisdiction”
McHenry said that “in terms of policy” the committee would concentrate on “a regulatory sphere for digital assets”
Coinbase held an online forum where leadership discussed the recent SEC decision to enforce rules that don’t exist”, noting that “If the SEC wants to throw the rulebook at crypto, they should have a rulebook”
CEO Brian Armstrong acknowledged the recent regulatory hostility, and announced plans to start donating to pro-crypto candidates; “What we’re going to do is start putting out content where people can contact their congressman, donate to pro-crypto candidates, show up at town halls, make your voice heard… We are going to elect pro-crypto candidates in this country to make sure that our success is ensured”
Global investment giant Franklin Templeton published a new report this week on “tech-driven megatrends transforming modern society”, including a focus on Web3 and digital assets
Sandy Kaul, the firm’s head of digital assets, told industry publication Coindesk “The whole reason that we've laid out the megatrends… is that this set of technology innovations and the changes that they've been driving in society is what has brought us to this Web3 moment and the development of this critical crypto ecosystem”
The report notes democratisation of investment access enabled by DeFi and asset tokenisation, citing them as part of an ongoing evolution from tangible assets to intangible assets, previously evidenced in the shift from Web1 to Web2
Kaul added “For people from the traditional financial world who still are not convinced about the potential of what these new models represent, I think it's important to tie it to the history of innovation, and to the trajectory that this innovation has taken us throughout the last 60 years. This is not something that just popped up out of the blue”
The report’s authors state “Taking stock of where we are today is critical because a fourth tech-driven innovation cycle is beginning…. Digital currencies and cryptocurrency-backed payment networks, layer 1 blockchain development platforms, programmable tokens with self-executing smart contracts, oracle networks, ZK (zero-knowledge) scaling solutions… are running 24/7/365 (24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year) proofs-of-concept in an ecosystem already valued at more than US$1.0 trillion”
What happened: Contagion latest—Failed leadership faces more consequences
The new charge alleges bribery of Chinese officials, claiming he offered $40m to unfreeze $1bn of Alameda funds when the company was based in Hong Kong
Do Kwon, fugitive founder of the collapsed blockchain Terra Luna blockchain ecosystem was arrested in Montenegro, ending many months on the run
Kwon denies allegations that he and former CFO Han Chang-joon were arrested en route to Dubai travelling with false identities, but purportedly told Montenegro police they had enjoyed “VIP treatment” in other jurisdictions
One of the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin proponents, MicroStrategy, were able to pay off a $205m loan from failed bank Silvergate, according to new SEC filings
The payment of $161m was made last Friday, financed partly through the sale of shares
Paying off the loan enabled the recovery of their collateral; 34,619 Bitcoins
Additionally, they added to their Bitcoin holdings, spending around $150m over the last five weeks to acquire 6,455 Bitcoins at an average price of $23,238
Web3 firm Animoca Brands is pushing ahead with plans for a new metaverse investment fund; but has adjusted expectations for the second time due to ongoing crypto winter and market uncertainty
Initially announced in November with a goal of $2bn, this was cut to $1bn in January before the present funding aim
Animoca representatives told Reuters that the industry is experiencing challenging conditions, but remained optimistic on longer-term prospects; “There's no doubt that the FTX and banking crises have had a serious impact on available venture capital, but fundraising for the Animoca Capital fund is in progress. When the raise is concluded we will inform the market with the appropriate details, including the final size of this fund”
Exchange group Nasdaq expect to launch their crypto custody solution before the end of Q2 this year, having first announced their plans in September 2022
This will mark their first major direct exposure to the digital asset industry, and comes as several firms from traditional finance display have moved into the digital asset custody space
TradFi firms could benefit from bankruptcies of crypto-native firms who acted as one-stop shops offering the entire suite of trading related services; some analysts believe “Wall Street style middlemen” could help restore trust for institutional traders
Nasdaq will join BNY Mellon and Fidelity in offering such services
Ira Auerbach, senior vice president and head of Nasdaq Digital Assets, said that they’ve applied to New York regulators for a limited-purpose trust company charter to oversee the new business
Tether, the leading stablecoin issuer in the crypto industry could experience healthy profits in Q1 despite being known for digital assets designed not to increase in value
CTO Paolo Ardoino believes the company will post a profit of around $700m for the first three months of the year
Tether has benefited somewhat from the misfortune of rivals; Circle’s USDC was briefly knocked off-peg during uncertainty surrounding backing assets held at Silicon Valley Bank, and Paxos’ BUSD was censured by the SEC due to its connection with Binance
Ardoino added they expect to end the quarter with around $1.6bn in surplus compared to backing reserves, which are mainly invested in short-dated US Treasury bills