Money Reimagined: This Isn’t Good for Bitcoin – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

No, blockchain does not fix this.

By this I dont mean centrally controlled databases that are vulnerable to attack, the problem highlighted by this weeks massive Twitter hack.

I mean the meta problem of yet more bad publicity, with the word bitcoin again associated with fraud and unsavory behavior, a picture that cryptocurrency advocates will again struggle to avoid. That problem will indirectly but greatly contribute to ongoing public pressure for regulatory constraint on the cryptocurrency industry, which will impede innovation in the sector and its prospects to bring positive change to a broken financial system.

A related problem is that Crypto Twitter is an echo chamber. It is too smart for its own good. Within that nerdy hive mind, form doesnt matter. Its all about substance.

Youre readingMoney Reimagined, a weekly look at the technological, economic and social events and trends that are redefining our relationship with money and transforming the global financial system. You can subscribe to this and all of CoinDesksnewsletters here.

Bitcoin isnt a crime, its just code.

The hack will open eyes to the failings of a centralized system.

Decentralization is now inevitable.

Oh, how I wish those sentiments, expressed repeatedly over Twitter this week, were absorbed by normies. Sadly, it wont be the case.

In two consecutive tweets, Blockstack CEO Muneeb Ali laid out the challenge between what should be and what, sadly, will be.

Might the spectacular breach of Twitters defenses eventually convince people to abandon the centralized internet platforms that control their data? Maybe. But many in the mainstream will share the views of New York Magazines Josh Barro, who argued, poorly, that the hack wouldnt have happened if we banned cryptocurrencies.

Barro is a smart, influential columnist, respected on both sides of the political divide. Its counterproductive to call him a would-be Communist moron, as this Crypto Twitter member did, alongside many others derogatory comments. It signals more about the critic than the criticism, helping perpetuate negative stereotypes of the crypto community.

A far better response came from Ideo CoLabs Ian Lee, who highlighted Barros error in conflating technology with a crime.

But in the age of social media, constructive nuance like that gets lost in the noise of ad hominem attacks and invective.

Thats a problem because Twitter is a powerful factor in public debate. The performance of the conversation the form, as much as the substance matters for how public opinion develops.

And that matters because public opinion feeds into regulation, which in turn can impede innovation.

DeFi in the crosshairs?

This comes amid signs U.S. regulators are focusing on some of the more innovative crypto financial engineering projects.

On Monday, news broke that the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity and Futures Trading Commission had forced two separate settlements, worth $150,000 each, out of Abra Global, the crypto-based provider of synthetic digital asset products.

Abra, which counts American Express and Indian billionaire Ratan Tata among its investors, has long been seen as one of the most innovative companies in the crypto industry. It launched in 2014 with what was then a radical idea for a crypto-collateralized synthetic stablecoin enabling peer-to-peer remittances from the U.S. to the Philippines. (Abra wasnt providing an actual token to users, but a contract giving them rights to a fixed-dollar value worth of underlying bitcoin, a deal it achieved via some sophisticated hedging techniques and by using the intermediary-free Bitcoin blockchain as the settlement layer.)

More recently, Abra took the same synthetic assets model to offer non-custodial derivative-like investment exposure to a range of assets, including both crypto tokens and traditional financial instruments. In effect, it allowed anyone in the world to place bets of any size on the direction of U.S. stocks and bonds.

Thats what got Abra into trouble. The SEC determined it was offering security-based swaps, which precluded it from selling to U.S. customers not classified as accredited investors. Although Abra took steps to geofence the American market from its product, the regulators found it hadnt done enough.

The fines wont derail Abra, which has a growing global base of customers. But the action underscores the challenges for crypto companies doing innovative things in the U.S. against what continues to be a somewhat hostile posture from the SEC. (The CFTC has generally taken a more accommodating stance toward cryptocurrency innovation. Its former chairman, Christopher Giancarlo, is now driving the charge for the U.S. government to embrace a tokenized version of a digital dollar.)

In particular, there are risks for the Decentralized Finance, or DeFi, movement. Abra is not formally a DeFi provider, but its model using underlying cryptocurrencies as collateral to assure stability and blockchains for an intermediary-free, low-friction settlement rail shares similarities with this burgeoning industry.

Theres no reason to suggest DeFi leaders like MakerDAO and Compound are in breach of securities, derivatives or money transmission laws. But you can bet that Washington regulators now have their eyes on an industry thats bringing services such as collateralized lending and interest rate benchmarking traditionally the domain of highly regulated financial institutions into a decentralized setting.

The DeFi industry was perhaps too small to matter to regulators before this. But, although the $2.6 billion in value now locked in DeFi contracts is still just a fraction of the trillions in traditional lending markets, its now big enough to get on regulators radars.

'Collateral' damage

This is why the Twitter fallout matters. If cryptocurrency continues to be a dirty word in Washington, political pressure will come to bear on the agencies seeking to regulate the industry.

DeFi is not immune from all that.

To be sure, the industry could benefit from more smart regulation. Legal clarity and reliable protection from scammers could help expand DeFi adoption and drive progress from a speculative ecosystem to one that generates valuable credit products and risk management tools.

But if the regulatory backlash is too blunt, it could do great harm to innovation. DeFi development can and will continue offshore. But as Abras experience shows, the global digital economys borderless nature makes it hard for companies to comply with regulations everywhere even when they want to. So the regulatory risk will continue to dangle over the heads of innovators.

Thats a pity, because while participants face real risks in the freewheeling, unregulated world of DeFi, the ideas generated there offer an exciting reimagining of the financial system. Whether it ends up looking anything like the current Ethereum-based DeFi ecosystem or something else, the prospect of reducing gatekeeper friction in finance is appealing in a world where exclusion from credit often defines the difference between rich and poor.

DeFi leaders have lawyered up in a bid to stay compliant. Some of the issues they face were discussed in a DeFi regulation workshop CoinDesk hosted during our virtual Consensus: Distributed event in May. There, Ropes & Grey attorney Marta Belcher eloquently argued that regulators may even be in breach of developers First Amendment constitutional rights if they constrain efforts to writing open-source code for decentralized communities.

But do not underestimate the power of Washington or the extent to which social media-infused hysteria can energize those who wield that power.

This is why the messaging around events like this Twitter attack matters. At times like this, crypto thought leaders should all try to take the high road.

CoinDesk Research covers quarterly data in crypto markets including volatility, correlation, volume and returns of the CoinDesk 20 list of crypto assets. In this report, we also cover derivatives markets, synthetic bitcoins, BTC versus ETH, central bank digital currencies and the return of aging bitcoin mining equipment; and look at the relationship (or lack thereof) between online sports betting and crypto markets. Sign up to download the free report.

A history lesson

A common theme here at Money Reimagined is the current financial system tends to serve those with access to financial assets while creating barriers for those on the lower rungs of society. This is a particularly important issue for assessing the impact of the Federal Reserves massive quantitative easing program in response to the COVID-19 crisis. I continue to believe the real risks from that program, at least for now, lie far more with asset price inflation, and its accompanying impact on income inequality, than with inflation. Global demand for dollars is just too big and the economic fallout from the pandemic too great for any monetary oversupply to unleash an accelerated increase in consumer prices.

So, it was quite impactful for me this week to discover the annotated historical charts on equality presented in a colorfully named site Id never encountered before: WTFHappenedin1971. The reference to 1971 is, of course, the so-called Nixon Shock, the moment when the U.S. took the dollar off its peg to gold, abandoning the core anchor of the Bretton Woods global financial system established in 1944. It was also when the worlds central banks suddenly gained fiat monetary powers, an unimpeded capacity to create money, the very powers the Fed is now drawing on to fight the COVID-19 recession.

The classic hard money, anti-1971 argument is that central banks degrade peoples wealth by inflating the monetary base, though strong arguments are made on the other side that fiat monetary creation power enables them to better manage economic cycles, and that a contained amount of inflation is necessary to achieve that. That debate hasnt been resolved for centuries and may never be. Perhaps its less controversial to talk about the unequal distribution of that monetary policys impact. This chart from WTFHappenedin1971 shows the effect on income equality since those monetary powers were given to central banks half a century ago.

Notably, the chart is from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a think tank typically described as progressive and that earns a Left rating on the spectrum provided by AllSides.com. Its not the only one from a left-leaning organization thats included in The WTFHappenedin1971 site. Another from the Economic Policy Institute shows a striking divergence between productivity expansion and the relative stagnation of real wages since 1971.

In other words, a site thats implicitly making the typically conservative argument for a return to the gold standard or to bitcoin-like hard money principles is cleverly drawing on the observations of the left to make its point. The American left typically favors government activism via money and fiscal policy to attack poverty, not strict constraints on monetary issuance.

Libertarians argue, with some validity, the left simply doesnt see how fiat money inflation hurts the poor by eating into their buying power. But the left says thats offset by the benefits of higher income from jobs created via monetary stimulus and easier credit.

Where might these positions align around this clear inequality divide? Around something that I see as a bigger reason to embrace decentralized, peer-to-peer cryptocurrencies than the strict scarcity function of bitcoins monetary policy: the excessive power of financial intermediaries. Inequality has gone hand in hand with the financialization of the American economy, where finance and financial groups have held increasing sway over the economy.That trend accelerated dramatically in the post-1971 era because of the political and economic clout that Wall Street earned for itself as the de facto agents of monetary and financial regulatory policy. Disintermediating that is where the real opportunities lie for crypto.

Global town hall

CHIMERICA. Before there were reserve-backed stablecoins like tether and USDC, there were currency boards. Under that rigid currency peg model, a countrys monetary authority commits to hold in reserve the full value of its currency in some other countrys currency and promises holders of the local currency to honor any redemption requests at a fixed exchange rate. Some currency boards have failed spectacularly Argentinas is the case par excellence but some have been a force for stability and growth. Hong Kongs Linked Exchange Rate System, which has pegged the Hong Kong dollar to the U.S. dollar since 1983, is mostly an example of success. Thats probably because, unlike Argentinas agricultural export-driven economy, Hong Kongs revolves around finance, which thrives on stability. Ending the peg would be extremely harmful to that economy, which is why hawks within the Trump Administration were reportedly keen to undermine it in retaliation for Chinas increasing control over HKs citizens. This week less trigger-happy souls apparently won the day as Trump ruled out taking such action.

Presumably, someone demonstrated to Trump the enormous harm such actions would have on American financial interests. The peg creates strong synchronicity between U.S. banks and the many foreign-owned banks (including U.S. subsidiaries) based in Hong Kong. Hurting them would diminish the United States global financial clout. It might also incentivize China to retaliate by dumping its giant holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds to accelerate the end of the dollars reserve currency status. However, as withU.S. interests in the Hong Kong peg, such actions by Beijing would be counter to Chinas interests in financial stability. Whether they like it or not, both countries are joined at the hip by intertwined policy structures, forming what the financial historian Niall Ferguson and the economist Moritz Schularick described as Chimerica.

HOME SWEET BANK. If theres a number from this past week that matters for the prospects of U.S. economic recovery, its 2.98 percent. Thats the record-low level to which U.S. mortgage rates dropped as the continued economic crisis and the Feds relentless monetary expansion efforts pushed benchmark bond yields ever lower. This powerful market shift has the potential to work as a countervailing force for economic recovery. Some 65 percent American households own their home, and theres now an incentive for them to refinance their mortgages or take out a home equity loan, creating financial liquidity thats much needed in these difficult times. Americans might not have direct access to the Fed stimulus dollars slushing around financial markets, but in this way they can turn the equity in their home into something of a bank.

MODELING VALUE. Valuing crypto assets has been a challenge for some time. How does one put a value on a token without an explicit return built into it, such as a promise of interest payments or dividends, or a real-world utility function such as oil or some other commodity? Well, analysts are still trying to figure that out, with multiple methodologies being applied. In this report, the first of two on crypto valuation by Coin Metrics, partners in our new Research Hub, Kevin Lu and other members of the team lay out a series of quite different approaches. All have some merit. But of course the lack of consistency makes it hard to settle on a commonly held market view. Should we be worried about that? How can something be considered valuable if theres no consensus on how to measure that value? Never fear, says Coin Metrics, this is a process that takes time. And to back that up, they conclude with this statement: The Dutch East India Company, founded in 1602, was the first corporate entity to issue bonds and shares to the public, and in doing so became the worlds first formally listed public company. It then took a period of over 300 years for the necessary foundational concepts to be developed until the formal discipline of equity valuation was established in the 1930s.

Relevant reads

Everything We Know About the Bitcoin Scam Rocking Twitters Most Prominent Accounts. Among Crypto Twitter dwellers, for whom the meme flow of the cryptocurrency community is like a lifeblood, Wednesdays massive hack against the social media platform felt profoundly disorientating. CoinDesk reporter Danny Nelsons tick-tock breakdown makes for compelling reading on how the crisis rapidly mushroomed.

Hong Kong Citizens Turn to Stablecoins to Resist National Security Law. Hong Kongers may not yet need to fear the end of their currencys dollar peg, but many are now fearing surveillance of their HK dollar transactions after the introduction of a new security law that aims to quell opposition to the Chinese Communist Party. Our reporter David Pan discovered that a number of them appear to have found a payment solution to avoid Beijings prying eyes: stablecoins.

Bank of England Considering a Central Bank Digital Currency, Governor Says. The Bank of England was one of the first major central banks to explore the prospect of a digital currency after bitcoins invention sparked interest in such ideas. The project then went into a kind of hiatus while former Governor Mark Carney started floating even bigger ideas with his proposal for a new digital international hegemonic currency to replace the dollars reserve role. Now, under new Governor Andrew Bailey, a British CBDC is back on the table, as CoinDesks Sebastian Sinclair reports.

Five Years On, Ethereum Really Is the Minecraft of Crypto-Finance. In the 2010s, the online world-building game Minecraft enjoyed surging popularity among pre-teens and teenagers a generation that included a young Russian-Canadian called Vitalik Buterin. This opinion piece from Camila Russo, author of the new book The Infinite Machine, offers a reminder of just how young Buterin was (19 years old) when he invented Ethereum.

Russian Activists Use Bitcoin, and the Kremlin Doesnt Like It. In Russia, it often seems President Vladimir Putin controls everything most importantly, national elections, in which he routinely earns overwhelming majorities in the popular vote. But as CoinDesks Anna Baydakova reports, he cant control Bitcoin, which gives Putins opponents a type of freedom they otherwise struggle to obtain.

How a Digital Dollar Can Make the Financial System More Equitable. If we want digital dollars to foster a more equitable financial system, design is everything, say Patrick Murck and Linda Jeng, both lawyers at Transparent Systems. They offer a radical proposal for achieving such results: a cooperative model that puts community ownership and governance, rather than centralized or corporate control, at the core of the digital currency network.

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

Excerpt from:
Money Reimagined: This Isn't Good for Bitcoin - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Is High-Frequency Trading the Reason Bitcoin Has Become Boring? – Cointelegraph

The Bitcoin (BTC) market has been quiet lately. A little too quiet.

As of Tuesday Bitcoins volatility levels had dropped to levels unseen since 2017. In recent weeks, Bitcoin has fallen behind as investors piled into altcoins such as Chainlink (LINK) and Cardano (ADA) .

One possible explanation for Bitcoins consolidation may be an increased presence of high-frequency trading (HFT) firms in crypto in recent months. Speaking to Cointelegraph, Paolo Ardoino, CTO of Bitfinex explained that he believes HFT is a major reason behind Bitcoins low volatility.

In crypto, we are back to the old days of HFT before it became the zero-sum game that it has become today. In crypto HFT firms can make a lot of money deploying relatively straightforward plays, such as cross-exchange arbitrage and exploiting the spread between one exchange and another.

HFT is a trading method that uses algorithms to transact a large number of orders in fractions of a second. It has existed in the cryptocurrency space for a long time. But just as billionaire Paul Tudor Jones revealed his Bitcoin holdings recently, other institutional investors are increasingly joining the market. This may explain the greater use of HFT.

Bitfinex, which claims to be huge for HFT in crypto, recently revealed that between 80 percent and 90 percent of volume on Bitfinex was now generated by HFT firms. Bitfinex partnered with Market Synergy and has been offering institutional standard cryptocurrency connectivity.

Bitfinex concludes the growing use of HFT represents increasing maturity in the digital asset space. But why would Bitcoin volatility go down with increased use of HFT? Ardoino explains the increased liquidity due to the surge of HFT tradings leads to low volatility:

As Bitcoin becomes an established asset class, we anticipate the high levels of volatility associated with cryptocurrency to recede, he explained. There is generally an inverse correlation between liquidity and volatility; i.e., higher liquidity tends to lead to lower price volatility.

The increasing presence of HFT firms in crypto seems to have added more liquidity to crypto exchanges. This provides sufficient orders for both sides of the order book and increases market efficiency, contributing to prolonged low volatility price consolidation in Bitcoin

Bitcoin is famous for moving aggressively for a short period of time. Last year, Tom Lee of Fundstrat reminded investors that the majority of Bitcoin (BTC) gains come in the ten best trading days of the year. However, the growing presence of HFT may be changing the rule of 10 best days as well.

Read more here:
Is High-Frequency Trading the Reason Bitcoin Has Become Boring? - Cointelegraph

Report Shows Bitcoin’s Covid-19 Recovery Stronger Than Other Markets With Zero Intervention – Bitcoin News

The response to the Covid-19 pandemic has been ruthless on the global economy and during the last six months, traditional stocks and commodities have felt extreme market volatility. Coinshares published a comprehensive report this week in regard to how bitcoin performed during the coronavirus outbreak. The seven-page study highlights how bitcoins rebound to pre-Covid price levels has unsurprisingly garnered attention amongst the investment community.

Coinshares head of research Chris Bendiksen recently published a report that discusses how bitcoin (BTC) reacted to the coronavirus outbreak and the mid-March market volatility. Despite what critics like Peter Schiff say, BTC has outperformed a great number of global assets including gold since the March 12, 2020 (Black Thursday) market rout.

Golds price per ounce was $1,589, and the price has risen 13.90% to a high of $1,810 on July 17. Bitcoin (BTC) on the other hand slid to a low of $3,870 on Black Thursday sliding -49.39% that day. However, since then the price of BTC has increased 135% where it stands today at just above the $9,100 per coin region.

The report called Understanding Bitcoin During the Covid Crisis written by Bendiksen highlights how resilient bitcoin can be. Coinshares believes that the initial tumble on March 12 was ignited by fear spreading from other markets.

It then became particularly severe due to bitcoins unique market structure, Bendiksens report notes. The overall usage of leverage in bitcoin spot and derivatives markets is generally large, but in the time leading into March 12 & 13, leverage levels were abnormally high, making them extra vulnerable to shocks.

The report continues by adding:

Interestingly, even after sustaining a drop of that magnitude, Bitcoin not only found a natural bottom, it vigorously rebounded over the succeeding weeks and liquidity levels have normalised. Not only does that demonstrate that what we observed was a market dislocation caused by exogenous shocks, not a broad revaluation, but it also shows that Bitcoin markets are highly resilient and self-correcting, even in the complete absence of external intervention.

Despite the swift rebound, the Coinshares researcher explained that due to bitcoins market structure not really changing, theres little reason to doubt the March 12 volatility could happen again. Bendiksen says there were a number of things that happened prior to Black Thursday, which can be examined again for future volatility events.

The report details that traditional financial markets were on shaky ground in early March, and a stampede for cash took place after Europe and North America implemented the initial lockdowns.

But was really noticeable was the leverage levels in bitcoin markets prior to the Black Thursday fallout.

In bitcoin markets, leverage had been building in various forms, the report reveals. USD lending rates on margin platforms were elevated, and Long/Short (L/S) ratios at spot exchanges such as Bitfinex were hovering at abnormally high levels. Having come down from twin peaks of almost 12x in late December and early January, L/S ratios spiked back above 9x in the weeks leading up to March 11. By March 17, the ratio had dropped to less than 2x.

Bendiksen also stressed that the situation on derivatives exchanges did not help and the number of outstanding BTC-collateralized loans spiked to an all-time high before the March 12 event. Despite the -49.39% drop that day, Bendiksen said that BTC eventually found a bottom between $3,500 and $4,000 per coin.

Going forward, the Coinshares report said that monitoring leverage metrics will help gauge future volatility risk. Unlike traditional markets, BTC also didnt get help from external intervention from organizations like the Fed, and [bitcoins] recovery has been stronger and faster than almost all other markets, the research paper highlights.

Bendiksens report concludes by saying:

The continued and common usage of leverage in bitcoin markets means that the bitcoin price remains vulnerable to volatility spikes. If outside events of similar magnitude were to recur, it is not unlikely that bitcoin prices would behave in a similar way. Keeping an eye on these metrics should help in gauging ongoing volatility risk.

What do you think about Coinshares recent report concerning bitcoin and Covid-19? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons, Coinshares, Datamish.com, Genesis Capital,

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

Link:
Report Shows Bitcoin's Covid-19 Recovery Stronger Than Other Markets With Zero Intervention - Bitcoin News

‘Ferocious Rally’: Weiss Ratings Bullish on Bitcoin, Price to Hit $70K Next Year | Markets and Prices – Bitcoin News

Weiss Ratings has outlined key reasons why investors should be bullish about bitcoin, seeing a ferocious rally with the price of the cryptocurrency expected to hit $70,000 next year. In addition, the Federal Reserves massive money-printing and institutional investments into cryptocurrencies add to the bullishness.

Weiss Ratings analysts Bruce Ng and Juan Villaverde explained last week why investors should be bullish about bitcoin despite some sideways consolidations. Weiss Ratings currently ranks bitcoin first among all cryptocurrencies overall.

One of the three key reasons why the analysts are bullish about bitcoin stems from a price prediction based on the stock-to-flow analysis (S2F). The popular forecasting model now points to a ferocious rally over the next 12 months or so, they wrote.

Ng and Villaverde described that S2F is based on the common-sense notion that the scarcer a commodity is, the more valuable it becomes, adding that scarcity is measured by circulating supply. For example, Gold has an S2F of 62, which is the number of years of current production required to match global above-ground holdings, they clarified.

After the May Bitcoin halving, 6.25 new bitcoins are being created every 10 minutes, meaning it would take an estimated 56 years for new mintage to match Bitcoins circulating supply, they continued. Notice how close that is to the S2F number for gold, which makes sense because bitcoin is fast becoming a major rival to gold as a safe-haven investment.

The analysts added that previous S2F predictions line up quite well with bitcoins actual price performance, as seen in the chart above, elaborating:

Now, based on the history of the halving, current S2F analysis says bitcoin should reach $70,000 by sometime around mid-2021 Even if it turns out to be only half right, you could still triple your money.

The other two reasons Weiss Ratings analysts highlighted were QE infinity and institutional money flowing into cryptocurrencies. The covid-19 pandemic environment has pushed the Federal Reserve to print $2.9 trillion in new paper money in just 13 weeks, or about $22 million a minute, the analysts detailed. By any measure, this is corruption of money on an industrial scale, they exclaimed, predicting that investors will pour money into bitcoin and gold as a safe haven when they lose confidence in paper money.

Billionaire investor Mike Novogratz has also been saying that central banks printing record amount of money is the best environment for bitcoin.

The last major factor Ng and Villaverde focused on was the increasing interest in cryptocurrency among institutional investors, such as by Paul Tudor Jones who invested about $210 million of his own money into bitcoin. Grayscale Investments has been adding bitcoin to its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust faster than the rate of new coins being mined and recently, venture capitalist Andreessen Horowitz raised half a billion dollars to invest in crypto startups. The analysts opined:

The sheer weight of institutional-sized money flows into a small market like bitcoin can have truly explosive effects.

Are you bullish on bitcoin? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons, Weiss Ratings

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

Read more:
'Ferocious Rally': Weiss Ratings Bullish on Bitcoin, Price to Hit $70K Next Year | Markets and Prices - Bitcoin News

DeFi Tokens Outperformed Bitcoin in Q2 but Will the Rally Continue? – Cointelegraph

Compound, the Decentralized Finance protocol, reached the $1 billion dollar mark in funds borrowed from its protocol on June 13, with its top three markets being the DAI and USDC stablecoins followed by Ether (ETH).

Currently, MakerDAOs DAI takes the lead with 79.88% of value borrowed from its protocol. Stablecoins seem to be popular in Compound due to its COMP reward mechanism which gives users COMP tokens according to the dollar value borrowed.

Compound allows users to deposit certain cryptocurrencies to earn interest and to borrow different tokens or stablecoins (useful for short-selling for example), while providing users with COMP token rewards for engaging in both activities.

Over the past few weeks this system has made Compound protocol extremely popular and it currently has $1.6 billion in assets locked to their liquidity pools. At the moment, a number of DeFi protocols are also showing considerable increases in the amount of borrowed and locked funds. For example, Aave currently holds over $250 million in its liquidity pools, according to data from Aavewatch.

DeFi has been making huge progress in terms of visibility, especially following the disproportional buzz created by the Coinbase-backed Compound project. At least 10 DeFi-related tokens have seen more than 100% gains and this in part due to the COMP reward mechanism and yield farming which allows users to act both as lenders and borrowers in order to earn COMP tokens for this dual role.

In its first week of trading, COMP rose by 233% and has since been listed on Coinbase and Kraken. Aaves LEND token has rallied more than 1000% in the last 3 months, from around $0.02 to $0.24.

Not only are the price of DeFi-related tokens rising along with the value locked and borrowed from these protocols, the tokens that are available in these protocols have also been generally performing well.

Coupled with the high interest rates and yield farming possibilities, its safe to say that DeFi has been a gift that keeps on giving for early adopters of the platforms and of their respective tokens.

Examples of this include Chainlink (LINK) which is the biggest cryptocurrency on the Aave protocol following the LEND token itself.

The impact of the defi protocols on other tokens was most visible through Basic Attention Token (BAT) which became the most used ERC-20 token in all of DeFi, surpassing even ETH and DAI, for two weeks, before the COMP reward mechanism was updated.

While it is easy to understand that DeFi is growing, the price surge in the associated tokens like LEND and COMP is somewhat unrelated. Although tokens like NEXO give users a share in the revenue, LEND and COMP do not.

These tokens, however, give their holders voting rights over the protocol. In other words, they are governance tokens and do not pay any dividends.

While there is no immediate monetary benefit, having a stake in the future of these platforms may hold some unmeasurable value depending on how they scale over time. Moreover, hype and right-out speculation around the DeFi space has surely helped some of these governance-associated tokens.

As the DeFi sector continues to break record numbers in activity and the amount of funds locked and lent increases, it seems possible that DeF tokens will continue to outperform Bitcoin, especially as the digital assets volume and volatility continues to dwindle.

Read the original post:
DeFi Tokens Outperformed Bitcoin in Q2 but Will the Rally Continue? - Cointelegraph

Why bitcoin fraud is nearly impossible to recover – Fox Business

FOX Business' Kristina Partsinevelos reports on the 4,000 bitcoin -- about $39 million worth -- being auctioned off that were seized from people who were convicted of a crime.

Funds lost to bitcoinfraud are nearly impossible to recover because of the decentralized, untraceable nature of cryptocurrency exchange.

Cryptocurrency scams are verycommon, and users should be aware that fraudsters will pose as trustworthy investors, charities and other useful resources online totrick people into giving away their crypto funds.

HOW MUCH MONEY WAS STOLEN IN TWITTER HACKS?

The more-than $110,000 that hackers collected on Wednesday after posing as prominent politicians and tech company CEOs, for example, will be "next-to-impossible to recover,"MuneebAli, founder of decentralized computing platform Blockstack, told FOX Business.

Row of physical bitcoin / iStock

"While the movement of bitcoin funds can be traced on the public ledger, it will be next to impossible to recover the funds," Ali said. "The bitcoin blockchain is permissionless, meaning that money can be sent to anyone in a way that cannot be clawed back. It's the digital version of physically reaching into your pocket, taking out cash, and handing it to another person."

TWITTER BITCOIN HACKS: LIST OF AFFECTED ACCOUNTS INCLUDES ELON MUSK, BILL GATES

He added, however, that hackers have limited options when it comes to cashing out because exchanges that trade crypto forcurrencies like dollars or euros are monitoring the situation and will likely freeze the funds if they are moved to the top exchanges.

Additionally, victims of bitcoin fraud can hire support from companies or law firmsthat help people retrieve crypto funds lost to scams, but the sum should be worth the funds needed to hire such experts.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HEREAli said Wednesday's hacking incident highlights how 'centralized websites and apps are incredibly risky."

"A low-level bitcoin scam is nothing compared to the damage that could have been done by leaking private messages or even tweeting out information to manipulate the stock market or an election etc. This issue highlights a dire need to start transitioning towards a more decentralized version of the web," he said.

READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS BY CLICKING HERE

Go here to see the original:
Why bitcoin fraud is nearly impossible to recover - Fox Business

This Exchange Crashed Bitcoin Price to $9K: Heres Why Thats Bullish – Cointelegraph

According to data from CoinMetrics, a sell-off on Bitstamp led the market-wide plunge of Bitcoin (BTC). The top cryptocurrency by market capitalization dropped $150 within seconds on the exchange, well below the average market price at the time.

Researchers at CoinMetrics said:

Today's market drop was led by trade activity on Bitstamp, where Bitcoin's price dropped $150 in seconds, well below the rest of the market.

The price of Bitcoin drops lower on Bitstamp than other exchanges on July 10. Source: CoinMetrics

The sell-off on Bitstamp coincided with a sudden dump of BTC by miners. ByteTree shows miners sold 558 more BTC than they mined in the last 24 hours. This suggests that miners led the correction of Bitcoin on July 9, possibly trading on Bitstamp.

Miners are one of the two external sources of unmatched selling pressure on Bitcoin, as investor Willy Woo previously explained.

When miners begin to sell BTC and the market does not immediately absorb the selling pressure it can lead to an abrupt pullback. That is what likely happened on July 10 when the price of BTC dropped to around $9,100 from $9,400.

Throughout the past month, miners have been selling a modest amount of BTC regularly. But miners have always maintained a positive net inventory for over five straight weeks. In other words, miners have been selling less BTC than they mined since the start of June.

As miners started to sell a relatively large amount of Bitcoin for the first time in over a month, BTC saw a rapid, short-term price drop.

Miners sold off an unusually large amount of Bitcoin in the last 24 hours. Source: ByteTree

Although the sell-off primarily occurred on Bitstamp, the firms executive emphasized that it was not a flash crash. Hunter Merghart, head of U.S. operations at the exchange, said it was merely a normal market activity.

Merghart said:

Happy to see market moves analyzed but not sure a ~2% move should be called a flash crash. This is also how markets work, especially when an exchange doesn't act as a market maker. We let our clients try to take advantage of arbitrage opportunities, not ourselves.

Simply put, sellers on Bitstamp likely kickstarted the unexpected 2% price drop of Bitcoin followed by organic selling pressure from traders and clients on the exchange.

After the price of BTC dropped to around $9,110 across major exchanges, it rebounded quickly to above $9,200.

The swift rebound of Bitcoin might suggest that a sudden sell-off on Bitstamp possibly by miners triggered the drop. Based on the reaction of buyers in the $9,000 to $9,100 support area, the probability of a continued recovery of BTC price remains high.

If a one-off event caused a BTC drop to a level that presents significant liquidity for buyers, the probability of a strong reaction from bulls might increase.

Cryptocurrency trader Michael van de Poppe wrote:

Bitcoin is still holding support above the $9,000 barrier. A breakthrough further of $9,300 could lead toward $9,600. Essentially, anything between $8,500 and $10,500 is playground time for altcoins and that could last a few months longer.

In the near-term, traders generally consider the $9,300 level to be a strong area of resistance. A reclaim of $9,300 is likely to see a retest of the high-$9Ks, analysts say.

View original post here:
This Exchange Crashed Bitcoin Price to $9K: Heres Why Thats Bullish - Cointelegraph

Paypal Developing Cryptocurrency Capabilities, Letter to European Commission Confirms | News – Bitcoin News

Paypal has confirmed that it has been developing cryptocurrency capabilities in a letter the company sent to the European Commission regarding the EU framework for cryptocurrency markets. Recently, Paypal and Venmo were rumored to soon allow users to buy and sell cryptocurrencies directly.

In a letter to the European Commission (EC), Paypal revealed its work on developing crypto capabilities. The letter was in response to the public consultation launched in December last year on building an EU framework for markets in crypto assets. According to Ledger Insights, Paypals letter was published in June, along with a number of other responses the Commission received.

The crypto-asset industry has experienced substantial growth over the past few years, Paypal told the EC. As such, Paypal is continuously monitoring and evaluating global developments in the crypto and blockchain/distributed ledger space.

In the letter, the company explained its involvement with the Libra project, proposed by social media giant Facebook. Noting that it signed a non-binding letter of intent to participate in the Libra Association, Paypal clarified:

Since the projects inception, Paypal has taken unilateral and tangible steps to further develop its capabilities in this [crypto asset] area.

The company proceeded to explain that after leaving the Libra project, it has continued to focus on advancing our existing mission and business priorities to democratize access to financial services.

In the letter, Paypal claims to have more than 300 million active accounts across the globe, with millions of new users being added every year. The company serves customers and businesses in 31 European jurisdictions and has a license to provide banking and payments services in Luxembourg.

Regarding the EU framework for crypto assets, Paypal told the EC that The regulatory framework should allow for innovative products and services to be brought to market without undue regulatory burden while simultaneously providing regulatory clarity, guidance, and safeguards.

Three key points were mentioned. Firstly, Paypal suggested the EUs crypto framework should have a clear set of definitions on various crypto activities to ensure that companies engaged in such activities are properly licensed and regulated. Secondly, the company called for a proper application of a risk-based approach, in line with the principles underpinning existing EU AML regulation and global standards, and lastly any regulatory framework in Europe should strive to be technology-neutral to support innovation and competition in this fast-evolving space, the company described. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) also recommends a risk-based approach to regulating cryptocurrencies and related service providers.

Last month, Paypal and Venmo, a mobile payment service owned by Paypal, were rumored to soon offer direct crypto buying and selling. News.Bitcoin.com reached out to Paypal but the companys representative neither confirmed nor denied the rumor. Paypal, however, is not new to the crypto space. In 2018, the company filed a patent for an expedited cryptocurrency transaction system. Its CEO, Daniel Schulman, also said in November that he owned bitcoin.

What do you think about Paypal developing crypto capabilities? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

Go here to read the rest:
Paypal Developing Cryptocurrency Capabilities, Letter to European Commission Confirms | News - Bitcoin News

Institutional OG: The Fact That You Can Go 100x Leverage on Bitcoin Is Pretty Wild – Cointelegraph

Crypto-focused institutional trading desks are lately springing up. While Wall Street investment banks and hedge funds are still in the early stages of involvement, a class of crypto-native funds founded by institutional pros is by now well established.

Cointelegraph interviewed the co-founder of one of these funds, CMS Holdings Dan Matuszewski, to learn more about his views on the crypto market.

Before involving himself in crypto in 2012, Matuszewski worked for some years at Bay Hill, an institutional hedge fund. Most of his career was nevertheless tied to crypto, with a brief stint at Kraken and a longer tenure as the head of the OTC desk at Circle.

In 2019, Matuszewski left Circle to co-found CMS Holdings, a fund that operates like a hedge fund despite only working with principal capital the co-founders own money.

He shared his views on the growing derivatives market in crypto, highlighting some of the differences with traditional markets.

While derivatives have been growing, their volume is still below that of spot, or direct crypto trading. The majority of derivatives volume comes from futures, a derivatives contract that seeks to closely follow the price of the underlying asset. Commenting on this, Matuszewski said:

The derivatives market is always going to dwarf the spot market, just because theres bigger access to leverage and it's just a lot easier to trade.

But Matuszewski finds it odd that leverage in crypto is so high. The fact that you can go 100x on Bitcoin, it's kind of wild to me, he added. In his view, these crypto derivatives are really treated more like a casino rather than a hedging tool, as they see much higher retail trader participation who have much more of a gambling mentality. Though he disclaimed that traditional derivatives products are also highly speculated upon.

The differences in risk approaches are amply shown by CME Bitcoin futures. While the exchange allows double or triple digits of leverage for gold futures, on Bitcoin the maximum leverage is only about 3x, though it varies each day as maintenance margins change.

I hope a lot of people aren't doing that [using 100x leverage]. But Arthur [Hayes, CEO of BitMEX,] put out a post about BitMEX average margin usage [...] and its high. People are pretty wound up on that thing.

Matuszewski noted that futures by themselves are not particularly new for crypto, as some platforms offered them even when he first got into crypto in 2012. BitMEX popularized them in 2018, which led to a host of competitors springing up. But Matuszewski believes they do not have much to compete on:

There's only a couple of permutations right now. You give people more things to trade, or you give them more access to trade what they have already. So its either leverage or new assets.

On leverage, he noted that theres not that much further you can go. Until volatility falls to consistently low levels, there will be an upper bound on it. You can't give somebody 500x leverage in Bitcoin because the bid offer [spread] will just liquidate them, he added.

Nevertheless, he believes that the derivatives market will keep growing:

I think that's the trend, I think people will be getting more in the derivatives space than spot going forward. Options markets will grow, Deribits had very good growth on that thing, CME just got into it.

Read this article:
Institutional OG: The Fact That You Can Go 100x Leverage on Bitcoin Is Pretty Wild - Cointelegraph

Stocks, Greed and Exuberance: 5 Things to Watch in Bitcoin This Week – Cointelegraph

Bitcoin (BTC) begins Monday by avoiding another test of $9,000, but what could happen to change the mood or even set off a bull run?

Cointelegraph takes a look at five major facts that could influence the BTC price during the coming week.

The macro outlook seemed more or less stable on Monday. Prior to trading, futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and more were modestly up, despite concerns mounting over coronavirus.

Specifically, one source quoted by Bloomberg warned on Sunday, the sentiment is one of worry both about the spread of cases and the United States response to protect the economy.

If the Federal Reserve intervenes in equities yet again and adds to its balance sheet, it would increase the sense of an artificial presence on the markets in terms of competition.

There is an emerging possibility that the Fed hasnt gone far enough, quantitative strategists at Sanford C. Bernstein wrote in a note.

If that came to pass, then maybe valuation of the market simply doesnt matter.

Fed balance sheet as of July 7. Source: Federal Reserve

As Cointelegraph reported, Bitcoin has shown no signs of lessening its dependence on stocks in recent weeks. Moves up or down appeared to shape BTC/USD performance, with last weeks trip from $9,000 to near $9,500 and back down again being no exception.

Analysts particularly eye the S&P 500, an index with which Bitcoin currently shows a 95% correlation.

Coronavirus is also weighing on U.S. consumer confidence, fresh data meanwhile shows, with five indicators all flashing bearish in July after recovering during the two previous months.

On the topic of macro, trader sentiment in cryptocurrency still contrasts with that of traditional markets.

That was the conclusion from two incarnations of the Fear & Greed Index, a basket of factors designed to show whether traders are overly risk-off or unduly confident.

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains in the fear category with little movement for several weeks. By contrast, the traditional market equivalent is flashing greed, while slowly trending downwards towards neutral.

On a scale of 1 to 100, Monday scored 59, down 7 points from the same time one month ago. The cryptocurrency equivalent measured 43 for Monday and 38 last month.

Fuelling traditional greed was extreme greed in stock price breadth, while derivatives put and call options, along with safe-haven demand, also sat firmly in the greed range.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index 1-month chart. Source: Alternative.me

The greed narrative fits with other signs that stocks, in particular, are overly buoyant.

As noted by market commentator Holger Zschaepitz on Monday, the correlation between the Nasdaq and S&P 500 is on the up, in what he describes as a sign of exuberance.

At the same time, banks are gearing up for a dismal quarterly performance, something that is on track to be the worst since the 2008 financial crisis.

As Cointelegraph noted, misgivings about stocks recovery since March have long persisted in Bitcoin circles. The Feds interventions, in particular, have fuelled accusations that the entire atmosphere is now artificial, and true value is of limited relevance.

Numbers this week show that investors themselves have in fact gone for cash and gold not equities in 2020. Inflows into the two assets beat others since the start of the year, similar to 2008-9.

Inflows as a % of assets under management chart. Source: Jeroen Blokland/ Twitter

Monday sees a new Bitcoin difficulty adjustment, the latest in a series of bullish moves that underline miner confidence.

With the event just hours away at press time, estimates suggest a difficulty uptick of around 9.5%.

This is much stronger than the previous move two weeks ago, which was stagnant, and on the way to matching last months 15% surge, which was the largest since early 2018.

Difficulty represents how much effort is required to solve equations when mining new Bitcoin blocks. Upward adjustments suggest more competition, with Mondays estimate slowly increasing over the past week.

At the same time, the network hash rate, having reached an all-time average high last week, has tailed off slightly. Data from Blockchain estimates a seven-day average of 124.42 EH/s for Monday, having previously hit 126 EH/s.

Hash rate is a sensitive and inexact metric, but nonetheless provides an idea of how much computing power is being dedicated to Bitcoin mining. Major swings are not uncommon, and a popular theory suggests that bullish progress for hash rate is followed some time later by a copycat Bitcoin price move.

Bitcoin 7-day average hash rate 1-month chart. Source: Blockchain

Bitcoin futures markets generated few opportunities for price movements over the weekend. Low volatility means that markets will begin Monday in a similar position to that at which they ended on Friday.

If Monday and Friday do not match, a gap opens up in futures markets which the BTC/USD spot tends to fill in subsequent days or even hours.

CME Bitcoin futures chart showing lack of weekend gap. Source: TradingView

Nonetheless, futures remain a source of suspicion for some. As Cointelegraph reported, in-house analyst filbfilb warned last week that weak performance could be a sign of worse to come.

Specifically, one indicator showed uncanny similarities to the days before Bitcoins March crash. Should history repeat itself, he added, the drop, however, should not be as intense as at that time.

See the article here:
Stocks, Greed and Exuberance: 5 Things to Watch in Bitcoin This Week - Cointelegraph