Digital assets slumped this week after last week’s growth, continuing the last few months’ trend of market indecision
Bitcoin once again traded within a tight range, staying mainly between $32,500 and $34,000, with a brief dip below $32,000 on Wednesday. Bitcoin is currently valued at $32,450
Ether was unable to sustain last week’s gains, and declined below the $2,000 mark on Wednesday—currently trading at $1,953
The overall market capitalisation of digital assets declined to $1.33tn
The total value locked in the DeFi sector grew slightly to $65.6bn, helped by more Bitcoin being locked into DeFi protocols
Digital assets declined this week as they were unable to sustain last week’s bullish momentum. However, the long-term prospects of the sector remain positive. Bank of America and Fidelity are both on hiring sprees to bolster their digital asset expertise, a multi-trillion asset manager bought a significant share in the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder, and governments across the world continue to drive forward with legislation, regulation, and economic integration of digital assets.
This week, news emerged that America’s second-largest bank is dedicating numerous resources to growing their expertise in the digital asset field
In a memo cited by Bloomerg, Bank of America head of global research Candace Browning noted that crypto assets represent “one of the fastest-growing emerging technology ecosystems”, and that BoA will be “uniquely positioned to provide thought leadership due to our strong industry research analysis, market-leading global payments platform and our blockchain expertise”
In outlining the opportunity presented by the industry, Browning wrote “The sector is currently valued at about $2 trillion, inflows to new ETP/ETFs at $50 billion and growing and venture capital firms are making significant investments in crypto/blockchain companies”
Circle—the company that developed and issued the widely-used USDC stablecoin—went public this week, the second large American digital asset company to do so after Coinbase
Founded in 2013, the company is a veteran in the digital asset field, collaborating with Coinbase to develop the dollar-pegged USDC crypto asset in 2018
Previously, it had owned and operated digital asset exchanges and trading desks, and filings related to the SPAC revealed that a greater source of their income is currently derived from transaction and treasury services
The SPAC merger is between Circle and Concord Acquisition Corp, chaired by former Barclays chief Bob Diamond, and gives the company a valuation of $4.5bn
According to Diamond, “Circle is the true pioneer of trusted digital currencies, an increasingly critical part of the global financial system”
The new company is expected to trade under the ticker symbol CIRCL on the New York Stock Exchange
On Tuesday, S&P Dow Jones issued a press release revealed that the world’s leading provider of investment indices is releasing 5 new indices dedicated specifically to digital assets
Among these new indices will be the S&P Cryptocurrency Broad Digital Market (BDM) Index, tracking the values of 240 different digital assets
The indices greatly expand the market coverage of S&P’s existing products, which tracked only Bitcoin, Ethereum, or both
As well as the Broad Digital Market Index, other new products share a focus on altcoins, with various exclusion filters applied (such as focusing on the largest assets by market capitalisation, excluding the “MegaCap” assets of Bitcoin and Ether)
Like the first three indices, these new products will use index points rather than prices to track the value of assets, making it more digestible to existing Wall Street investors
In the press release, an S&P spokesperson said “The expansion of our Digital Market Indices family gives one of the broadest snapshots yet of this rapidly growing asset class with the ability to slice and dice by market cap. We're excited to bring this significant level of additional transparency to the cryptocurrency market”
BNY Mellon further deepened their involvement in the digital asset space this week, by confirming their position as transfer agent and ETF service provider for digital asset giant Grayscale’s forthcoming move into launching a Bitcoin ETF
The ETF is expected to launch as a conversion of Grayscale’s existing GBTC Trust product, although neither company committed to a specific date for the GBTC ETF launch in a press release announcing their partnership
BNY Mellon has already committed to providing similar services to Bitcoin ETF applicant Skybridge Capital, so this is the latest signal of interest in the asset class from the world’s largest custodian bank
Roman Regelman of BNY Mellon described the agreement as “another critical milestone in our rapidly growing digital asset capabilities and broader strategy of putting client choice at the center of everything we do”
In addition, Grayscale reported this week that its Digital Large Cap Fund has become a reporting company to the SEC, following the lead of its Bitcoin and Ethereum Trust products
Following the recent drop in Bitcoin’s network hash rate due to several mining bans in China, the blockchain’s electricity usage has fallen significantly
According to data from the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI), current power consumption levels have dropped to levels not seen since last November
Since the all-time high electricity consumption recorded in mid-May, the network’s energy usage has fallen by approximately 60%
After last week’s report on renewable energy usage by the Bitcoin Mining Council, this latest data may provide some momentary respite from concerns over Bitcoin’s sustainability; although ideally mining hardware from China would migrate to low-carbon electricity regions to prevent a second wave of media narrative on the issue when that lost hashpower comes back online and mining difficulty increases once more
According to a Bloomberg report, Fidelity are delving deeper into the digital asset space by making a significant amount of hires for their Fidelity Digital Assets division, increasing headcount by approximately 70%
This equates to around 100 new hires, split across multiple locations; including Boston, Dublin, and Salt Lake City
Fidelity president Tom Jessop said the hiring spree is driven by an anticipated increase in both institutional demand, and demand beyond Bitcoin
Jessop told Bloomberg “We’ve seen more interest in Ether, so we want to be ahead of that demand”, as well as clarifying their intent to provide trading services “full time for most of the week” due to the 24/7 nature of digital asset markets
Led by Bitcoin evangelist Michael Saylor, MicroStrategy is currently the largest single (publicly-identified) Bitcoin holder on the planet, with over 105,000 Bitcoin in total (not counting another 5,000 held by Saylor and associated enterprises)
SEC filings this week showed that Capital International Group recently purchased 12.2% of MicroStrategy’s stock, holding more than 950,000 MSTR stock currently valued at over $560m, coming close to BlackRock’s $700m holding from an earlier purchase
Capital International Group currently has more than $2tn in assets under management
This makes Capital International Group one of the world’s largest indirect investors in Bitcoin, giving exposure to a range of family offices, pension trustees, and other institutional investors that they manage
What happened: Brazilian SEC approves Ether ETF
How is this significant?
Whilst the US Securities & Exchange Committee has yet to make any final decisions on the numerous Bitcoin ETF applications submitted to them, other regions have been more proactive in providing digital asset exposure to traditional investors via ETFs and ETPs
In Brazil this week, the country’s regulators confirmed approval for the first Ether ETF in Latin America, according to an announcement by the fund’s issuer
The QETH11 fund will be traded on the B3 stock exchange, offering direct exposure to the world’s second-largest digital asset, custodied by the Winkelvoss brothers’ Gemini exchange
In a statement announcing the fund’s launch, the issuers QR Capital said that it will provide “a simple, safe and regulated option for any investor to gain direct exposure to Ethereum through their preferred brokerage, without worrying about registrations in exchanges, wallets or private keys”
The QETH11 fund is the third digital asset ETF approved in Brazil, following a Bitcoin ETF, and and one tracking 5 major digital assets (including Bitcoin and Ether)
Over the past few weeks, the world’s largest (retail-focused) digital asset exchange, Binance, has faced increasing regulatory scrutiny in light of the sector’s overall growth
Although the exchange hasn’t been banned outright, it has recently been ordered to halt regulated activity such as futures trading in the UK, as well as halting fiat on-and-off ramps in the UK
CNBC reported this week that restrictions on Binance haven’t dampened consumer appetite for digital asset trading—they’ve just driven those consumers elsewhere
Rival exchange Bitstamp for instance has registered a 138% increase in users since the FCA announced restrictions on Binance’s regulated activity three weeks ago
Similarly, more regulation-conscious exchanges like Kraken and Gemini have also noted increased adoption from British customers; Kraken said UK users approximately doubled recently
A Gemini spokesperson told CNBC “ We have seen tremendous user growth as consumers look towards approved firms when entering the market… We expect to see exchanges and custodians registered with the FCA continue to gain market share due to the value placed on the approval process”
As CNBC development continues across the world, one of the most significant financial bodies—the ECB—announced they were moving into the next phase of their digital currency initiative
On Wednesday, the ECB issued a press release outlining a future development roadmap for the Digital Euro
ECB chief Christine Lagarde sounded an optimistic tone, saying “It has been nine months since we published our report on a digital euro. In that time, we have carried out further analysis, sought input from citizens and professionals, and conducted some experiments, with encouraging results. All of this has led us to decide to move up a gear and start the digital euro project”
The next 24 months will be dedicated to an investigation phase, which “will focus on a possible functional design that is based on users’ needs”
What happened: Major corporations drive digital asset adoption in Korea
How is this significant?
South Korea is a key market for digital assets, although its share of overall trading activity has significantly decreased since the 2017 bull run, due to wider global enthusiasm for the asset class
This week, the Bank of Korea announced their shortlist of three potential technology providers for their planned Digital Won CBDC, after announcing a bidding process in May
The shortlisted providers are all titans of the Korean IT and telecoms industry; subsidiaries of SK Inc., Naver, and Kakao
Additionally, Korean banks have made inroads into the digital asset market, with the Korea Economic Dailyreporting that four major banks have now created companies or joint ventures dedicated to crypto trading and custody, including the country’s largest bank, KB Financial Group
What happened: More economies outlineCBDC plans
How is this significant?
As well as the ECB and Bank of Korea, other central banks across the world spoke on their plans for CBDCs this week
The Bank of Jamaica announced plans to roll out a pilot of services with financial institutions, beginning in August
The Bank of Ghana disclosed their intentions to pilot by September, identifying it as equivalent to fiat money, acting as “cash on its own”
The Banque du France publicised the latest in a series of CBDC experiments, this time a successful trial involving cross-border automated market makers with the Monetary Authority of Singapore
What happened: Argentina and Paraguay propose Bitcoin-based legislation
How is this significant?
Following El Salvador’s acceptance of Bitcoin as legal tender, several other nation-states have expressed an interest in deeper integration of digital assets into their economies, including others in the Latin America region
This week, Paraguay submitted a draft law seeking to give more formal legal recognition to digital assets. Industry publication Decrypt obtained a leaked version, which said the bill proposed “to establish legal certainty, financial and fiscal in the businesses derived from the production and commercialization of virtual assets”
The bill outlined further economic benefits of crypto asset recognition; “It is important that companies can register these products within their accounting so that they can have their real valuation, additionally [it] helps to optimize the tax collection of this industry, finally giving traceability of what is produced in the country facilitating its tracking by supervisory authorities”
In neighbouring Argentina, a bill was submitted to legalise workers and exporters of services being paid—fully or partially—in digital assets to “promote greater autonomy and governance of the salary” in light of Argentina’s current troubles with hyperinflation
21Shares, a leading European creator of digital asset ETPs, announced a partnership with online brokerage comdirect in Germany this week, providing integration of physically-backed crypto ETPs into savings accounts
This could potentially bring access to 3 million existing comdirect customers with Spar savings accounts, and onboard those who may be crypto-curious, but intimidated by the technological procedures associated with directly trading digital assets themselves
The partnership will provide access to 11 different physically-backed crypto ETPs, at zero commission
21Shares CEO Hany Rashwan said in a press release “We are very excited to offer German clients who wish to add Bitcoin and other crypto assets to their savings plan a compelling option to do so thanks to comdirect, an option that was not available for any crypto products until now”
This week, digital asset VC veteran Ash Egan (a former partner at Accomplice VC) launched a new venture capital fund for digital assets
Egan raised $55m from a variety of sources—including Digital Currency Group and his former employers—to launch the new fund, called Acrylic
In contrast to recent larger launches like a16z’s $2.2bn Crypto Venture Fund 3, Acrylic is focused on “inception capital”; being amongst the very first investors, rather than providing investment near the end of the development pipeline
Outlining the motivations for the fund, Egan stated that he believes the world is still very early on the digital asset adoption curve; “Broadly, my thesis is that smart contracts and crypto networks will permeate every industry. My belief is every kind of marketplace – every time you’re interacting with the internet – can be underpinned by crypto networks”
In a memo this week, Goldman Sachs identified Coinbase’s COIN stock as a “top 25 tactical trade”
Explaining their recommendation, Goldman noted that even if Bitcoin declines in value, COIN could appreciate as a result of trading volumes (and therefore more revenues for Coinbase from trading fees)
Goldman analyst Will Nance believes that Coinbase’s earnings per share could thus outperform consensus by 11%, and believes that investors could be “re-engaging in the coming quarters”