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Silvergate’s deepening crisis jolts crypto stocks (March 6)

(This March 6 story has been corrected to remove the reference to Signature Bank in paragraph 3)

By Manya Saini

(Reuters) – Shares of Silvergate Capital Corp fell as much as 11% on Monday after the bank suspended its crypto payments network and expressed doubts over the viability of its business.

The stock closed the volatile session 6.4% lower at $5.40, after wild swings between gains and losses through the day.

Several crypto stocks also closed in negative territory. BTC mining machine makers Ebang International and Canaan Inc dropped 2.8% and 8.4%, respectively. BTC buyer MicroStrategy declined 3.8% and exchange Coinbase Global slipped 2.7%.

Crypto-focused bank Silvergate said late on Friday it had made a “risk-based decision” to discontinue the Silvergate Exchange Network (SEN) effective immediately.

“The SEN is Silvergate’s main flagship product that previously was the key attraction for depositors to bring funds to the bank,” said analysts at Wedbush.

The discontinuation could signal that Silvergate may consider winding down its operations, they added.

Shares of Silvergate hit a record low of $4.86 on Friday, shedding nearly 98% of their value since closing at an all-time high in November 2021 and wiping out more than $7 billion from the company’s market capitalization.

“The crypto market reacted to the negative news from Silvergate Bank, with both bitcoin and ethereum down about 4.8% for the week,” analysts at brokerage Bernstein said.

Graphic: Crypto-related deposits at Silvergate plunge https://www.reuters.com/graphics/SILVERGATE-STOCKS/dwpkdzqorvm/chart.png

“We believe a receivership/liquidation scenario is a distinct possibility and arrive at a liquidation value of $5 per share,” Wedbush analysts said. The estimated price marks a roughly 13% downside to the stock’s previous close.

A slew of crypto heavyweights including Coinbase Global have dropped Silvergate as their banking partner.

The firm has been struggling to stay afloat after the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto exchange FTX in November drove investors to pull out $8 billion in deposits from the bank in the last three months of the year.

Graphic: Crypto-friendly bank’s shares dive as industry winter bites https://www.reuters.com/graphics/SILVERGATE-STOCKS/zgpobnyqevd/chart.png

Silvergate reported a net loss of $1 billion in the fourth quarter.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva, Devika Syamnath and Krishna Chandra Eluri)

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Silvergate in talks with FDIC officials on ways to salvage bank – Bloomberg News

(Reuters) – U.S. federal officials have been discussing with Silvergate Capital Corp’s management to avoid a shutdown, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

Shares of the cryptocurrency-focused bank rose about 5% in after-market trading.

Last week, the bank warned it was delaying its annual report and said it was evaluating its ability to operate as a going concern.

The company late on Friday said that effective immediately it made a “risk-based decision” to discontinue the Silvergate Exchange Network, which enabled round-the-clock transfers between investors and crypto exchanges, unlike traditional bank wires, which can often take days to settle.

U.S. regulators have been sent to the headquarters of Silvergate as the company looks for a way to stay in business, the report said.

One possible option involves lining up crypto-industry investors to help Silvergate shore up its liquidity, the report said.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) examiners were authorized to go to Silvergate’s offices by the Federal Reserve, which is its main federal overseer and the examiners are reviewing the company’s books and records, Bloomberg News added.

FDIC examiners arrived at the company’s La Jolla, California offices last week, the people told Bloomberg News, and added the company has not made a decision on how to deal with its deepening financial turmoil.

FDIC and Silvergate were not immediately available for comments.

Silvergate had been trying to ease investor concerns over its future as it reported a $1 billion loss for the fourth quarter after the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto exchange FTX in November drove investors to pull out $8 billion in deposits from the bank in the last three months of the year.

(Reporting by Ananya Mariam Rajesh in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

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US court questions SEC’s rejection of Grayscale’s bitcoin fund proposal

By Hannah Lang

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. federal appellate court judges questioned on Tuesday whether the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was correct to reject Grayscale Investment’s application for a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund, since the agency had previously approved bitcoin futures products.

The SEC rejected Grayscale Investment LLC’s application to convert its flagship spot Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) into an exchange-traded fund (ETF) last June, arguing the proposal did not meet anti-fraud and investor protection standards.

A panel of judges in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in Washington pressed the SEC on Grayscale’s argument that, because the regulator previously approved certain surveillance agreements to prevent fraud in bitcoin futures-based ETFs, the same setup should also be satisfactory for Grayscale’s spot fund, since both spot and futures funds rely on bitcoin’s price.

Bitcoin futures ETFs track bitcoin futures contracts, or agreements to purchase or sell bitcoin at a certain price on a specified date. A spot bitcoin ETF would track bitcoin’s underlying market price. Proponents say a spot bitcoin ETF would give investors exposure to bitcoin without directly buying it.

“It seems like it’s fine for an agency to say okay, we need some more information, but it seems there’s quite a bit of information here on how these markets work together, and the SEC has not offered any explanation… that the petitioners here are wrong,” said Judge Neomi Rao.

Grayscale’s lead counsel Donald Verrilli Jr., an Obama-era U.S. solicitor general, told the court that a spot bitcoin ETF would “better protect investors” because it would give them the benefit of oversight on the basis of the surveillance agreements set up with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, where bitcoin futures trade.

Emily True Parise, senior litigation counsel for the SEC, argued the regulator lacks data to determine whether those surveillance agreements could also pick up potential fraud and manipulation in the spot markets.

“The evidence is just mixed at this point. It’s bi-directional sometimes,” she said, noting that bitcoin futures have only been trading since 2017.

The case comes as the crypto industry has increasingly been at odds with the SEC over the regulator’s crackdown on digital asset products, including those that offer investors returns on certain digital tokens.

The case’s outcome could either vindicate the SEC’s posture or pave the way for other companies to offer spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) if the judges rule in favor of Grayscale.

Other would-be issuers of spot bitcoin ETFs that the SEC rejected include FMR LLC’s Fidelity, SkyBridge Capital and Valkyrie Investments Inc.

Valkyrie’s chief investment officer, Steven McClurg, said in a statement that his company does not believe a spot bitcoin ETF will be approved within the next year. A Fidelity spokesperson said the company looks forward to constructive dialogue with the SEC. A representative for Skybridge declined to comment.

Grayscale’s chief executive officer, Michael Sonnenshein, has said he expects a final ruling in the case this fall, and that he anticipates the court will rule in Grayscale’s favor. He told Reuters in January that Grayscale would appeal the case if the court backed the SEC’s decision to reject its bitcoin ETF proposal.

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, launched in 2013, has $14 billion in assets under management, according to Grayscale’s website. The GBTC discount to bitcoin is hovering around 45%, having come under pressure after crypto exchange FTX collapsed in November.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Louise Heavens and Josie Kao)

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Cryptoverse: Hooked on growth, bitcoin investors turn to smart tokens

By Hannah Lang and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) – For investors living on the digital edge, bitcoin is starting to look a little old-fashioned.

Hooked on high growth, some are turning away from the original cryptocurrency – designed as an alternative to regular cash – in favor of its descendants created as native tokens of blockchain platforms that host smart contracts and apps.

MarketVector’s Smart Contract Leaders Index, which tracks major tokens of this kind – including ether, dot and solana – is up 36% in 2023, outpacing even bitcoin’s 33% rise. Solana’s token is up 76% this year.

Bundeep Rangar, CEO of crypto-focused asset manager Fineqia, said he expected the biggest crypto returns to come from smart contract tokens on platforms that support decentralized finance (DeFi) apps.

“Those are ones that you will find capital appreciation, similar to what a growth stock will be,” he added.

Some investors in the $1 trillion world of digital assets appear to agree, according to CoinShares data which shows investment products tracking ether and solana have seen small inflows even as bitcoin products suffered four consecutive weeks of outflows.

Around seven of the top 20 biggest crypto assets are smart contract tokens, including ether and dot, solana and cardano.

BofA analysts also pointed to smart contract tokens and the blockchain-based applications they power as similar to growth stocks in the equities world, typically technology shares.

“We expect 2023 to be the year of token price divergence,” analysts at Bank of America wrote in a Feb. 24 research note.

BITCOIN STILL BOSS

Bitcoin has long traded in tandem with tech stocks, but that cord may be fraying just as smart-contract tokens increasingly take up its crypto super-growth mantle.

The cryptocurrency’s 30-day correlation with the Nasdaq turned negative on Feb. 23 for the first time since early December, where a measure of 1 indicates the two assets are moving in lockstep.

Some crypto watchers say the relative strength in smart-contract tokens this year points to a solid performance by the most established DeFi protocols despite the market ructions of 2022. They caution, though, that the global macro outlook and central bank policy could hit the growth of crypto projects and their associated tokens.

James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, warned it was also too early to call a major divergence in crypto. Indeed, bitcoin’s shadow still looms large over the sector, with its share of the total crypto market capitalization up slightly to 40%, from 38% at the start of the year.

But on the other hand, Butterfill said such departures could be a potential sign of the cryptoverse growing up.

“We should be increasingly adopting the view that the market, as it evolves, will become more sophisticated and more mature, and we will start to see that price divergence.”

(Reporting by Lisa Mattackal in Bengaluru and Hannah Lang in Washington, D.C.; Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Pravin Char)

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Factbox-Silvergate crisis: Crypto industry majors drop embattled lender

(Reuters) – A slew of cryptocurrency heavyweights including Coinbase Global Inc and Galaxy Digital ditched Silvergate Capital Corp as their banking partner after the lender’s latest filing raised questions about its ability to stay in business.

La Jolla, California-based Silvergate, one of the most influential banks in the digital asset industry, also said it has made a “risk-based decision” to discontinue the Silvergate Exchange Network that enabled crypto payments.

Shares of the crypto-friendly bank have lost nearly 98% in value from their record close in November 2021.

Here is a list of crypto firms that have issued statements in light of the developments at the embattled bank:

Okcoin:

The crypto exchange said its corporate and customer fund exposure to Silvergate was quite limited, adding that all customers’ funds were safe.

Bakkt Holdings Inc:

The digital asset platform said it was closely monitoring the situation with Silvergate and was in the process of discontinuing certain services.

Microstrategy Inc:

The crypto firm said it has a loan from Silvergate not due until the first quarter of 2025, adding that the bank’s insolvency or bankruptcy will not accelerate the loan. Acceleration clause requires a loan to be repaid immediately under certain conditions.

Coinbase Global:

The crypto exchange said it was no longer accepting or initiating payments to or from Silvergate. The firm also said it has minimum exposure to the crypto-focused bank.

Crypto.com:

A spokesperson for the crypto exchange said in an emailed statement to Reuters it was temporarily suspending USD deposits and withdrawals via Silvergate out of caution.

Gemini:

The crypto firm said on Twitter it has stopped accepting customer deposits/processing withdrawals via automated clearing house (ACH) and wire transfers through Silvergate on the Gemini exchange.

Galaxy Digital:

The company said in a tweet in light of recent developments that it has stopped accepting or initiating transfers to Silvergate, adding that it has no material exposure to the bank.

Bitstamp:

The crypto exchange said that as a precautionary measure in light of recent news it is no longer processing transfers with Silvergate, adding that client funds remain secure and fully available.

Circle:

The firm said it is sensitive to the concerns around Silvergate and is in the process of unwinding certain services with the bank and notifying customers.

Paxos:

The crypto firm said it does not have any material exposure to Silvergate but added that in light of recent developments with the bank, it has discontinued all Silvergate Exchange Network transfers and wires to its Silvergate account.

Cboe Clear Digital:

The company said it would be pausing all transactions with Silvergate Bank at this time until further notice.

Tether:

The company’s chief technology officer said on Twitter it has no exposure to Silvergate.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel and Vinay Dwivedi)

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Bankrupt FTX affiliate Alameda sues Grayscale

(Reuters) – FTX said on Monday its affiliate Alameda Research had sued asset manager Grayscale Investments for imposing a “redemption ban” that “could realize over a quarter billion dollars” of asset value for the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange’s customers.

If Grayscale had reduced its fees and did not implement redemption prevention measures, which the cryptocurrency exchange alleges are improper, FTX’s shares would be worth nearly 90% more than the current value of those locked up with the asset manager, FTX said.

FTX also accused Grayscale owner Digital Currency Group of breaching trust agreements and fiduciary duties.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)

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Brazil announces pilot for digital currency seeking to leverage financial services

BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazil’s central bank announced the start of a digital currency pilot project on Monday, aiming to replicate the success of its instant payment system Pix to popularize financial services in the country.

According to Fabio Araujo, coordinator of the initiative at the bank, the public use of the digital currency should begin at the end of 2024, after the completion of the testing phase – which will include buying and selling of federal public bonds among individuals – and its subsequent evaluation.

Araujo said the “digital real” will be built as a means of payment executed on distributed ledger technology (DLT), to support the provision of retail financial services settled through tokenized deposits in institutions of the financial and payment systems in Brazil.

“This environment reduces costs and brings the possibility of financial inclusion for people. You have services that are very expensive to carry out, such as repo operations, which today are only for banks, but which could be performed by anyone with a technology based on digital currencies,” he said.

“This could reduce the cost of credit, the cost of improving the return on investments. There is a great potential for new service providers, fintechs, democratizing access to the market and offering new services.”

Araujo stressed that the concept of the Brazilian central bank digital currency (CBDC) was not intended to leverage digital payments, as this is already being done on a large scale with Pix, which was launched at the end of 2021 and has been widely adopted in Brazil.

Bank deposits would continue to exist within the Brazilian CBDC, only being registered in a more modern environment, meaning that financial institutions would not lose this source of funds for credit generation.

“Banks are very interested in this new tokenized world, in every conversation we have they have shown a lot of interest,” said Araujo.

(Reporting by Marcela Ayres; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Brazil’s Nubank appoints former Meta executive to board

(Reuters) – Brazilian digital lender Nubank said on Monday it had expanded its board to add David Marcus, former digital wallet executive at Meta Platforms Inc.

Marcus, 49, who headed payments and cryptocurrency operations at Meta, left the social media company at the end of 2021 to launch a crypto-focused startup, Lightspark.

Prior to Meta, he was the president at digital payments company PayPal Holdings Inc for more than two years.

Nubank is one of the most popular financial technology platforms in Latin America, with around 75 million customers across Brazil, Mexico and Colombia.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Vinay Dwivedi)

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Binance execs’ texts, documents show plan to avoid U.S. scrutiny – WSJ

(Reuters) – Binance, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, developed a plan to avoid the threat of prosecution by U.S. authorities as it started an American entity in 2019, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

Any lawsuit from U.S. regulators, who had signaled a coming crackdown on unregulated offshore crypto players, would be like “nuclear fall out” for Binance’s business and its officers, the WSJ said, citing a Binance executive’s warning to colleagues in a 2019 private chat.

The report is based on messages and documents from 2018 to 2020 reviewed by The Wall Street Journal as well as interviews with former employees.

Binance, founded in 2017, and Binance.US are more intertwined than the companies have disclosed, mixing staff and finances, and sharing an affiliated entity that bought and sold cryptocurrencies, the report said.

It noted that Binance.com operated mainly from hubs in China and Japan, yet a fifth of its customers were based in the United States. Binance.US is based in San Francisco.

Binance developers in China maintained the software code that supported Binance.US users’ digital wallets, potentially giving Binance access to U.S. customer data, the WSJ reported.

Since 2020, the Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission have been investigating Binance’s relationship to Binance.US, the report said, citing subpoenas and people familiar with the matter. If U.S. regulators determine that Binance has control over its U.S. entity, they could claim the power to police Binance’s entire business.

Binance, Binance.US, the SEC and DOJ did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

Binance is under heightened scrutiny as three U.S. senators this week asked the giant cryptocurrency exchange and Binance.US for information about their regulatory compliance and finances.

Reuters has reported that Binance.US was created as a de facto subsidiary in 2019 to draw the scrutiny of U.S. regulators away from Binance.com.

(Reporting by Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Richard Chang)

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Bankman-Fried can have flip phone, limited internet while on bail, US proposes

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Sam Bankman-Fried should be allowed while on bail to have a flip phone with no internet capability and a basic laptop with limited functions, but be forbidden from using other electronic communication devices, the U.S. Department of Justice said.

The proposal to limit the indicted FTX cryptocurrency exchange founder’s communications was filed late on Friday in Manhattan federal court, on behalf of the government and Bankman-Fried’s defense team.

It requires approval by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan, who oversees the case.

Kaplan had signaled at a Feb. 16 hearing that he might jail the 30-year-old Bankman-Fried for testing the limits of his $250 million bail package by communicating in ways that could not be monitored.

The judge said he did not want to set Bankman-Fried “loose in this garden of electronic devices,” following accusations that Bankman-Fried tried to contact possible government witnesses and used a virtual private network to watch football.

Bankman-Fried pleaded not guilty after prosecutors said he stole billions of dollars of FTX customer funds to plug losses at his Alameda Research hedge fund. He faces 12 criminal charges under an indictment made public on Feb. 23.

The proposed flip phone or other non-smartphone for Bankman-Fried would be limited to voice calls and SMS text messages.

Laptop internet use would be restricted to specified virtual private networks, 23 websites for personal use including news, sports and food delivery, and websites to help Bankman-Fried prepare for his scheduled Oct. 2 trial.

Bankman-Fried is living under house arrest with his parents, both Stanford Law School professors, in Palo Alto, California.

The parents agreed to submit sworn affidavits that they would not bring other electronic devices into their home or let their son use theirs.

They also agreed that each device would carry software that periodically takes videos or photos of the user, which court officers would be allowed to review, the letter said.

Bankman-Fried’s lawyers did not immediately respond on Saturday to requests for comment.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York and Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

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Silvergate suspends crypto payments network; shares fall after-hours

By Hannah Lang and Akriti Sharma

(Reuters) – Silvergate Capital Corp said on Friday it made a “risk-based decision” to discontinue the Silvergate Exchange Network, its crypto payments network, two days after the digital asset-focused bank raised doubts about its viability.

“Effective immediately Silvergate Bank has made a risk-based decision to discontinue the Silvergate Exchange Network (SEN). All other deposit-related services remain operational,” Silvergate said in a statement posted on its website.

The Silvergate Exchange Network, one of the bank’s most popular offerings, enabled round-the-clock transfers between investors and crypto exchanges, unlike traditional bank wires, which can often take days to settle.

Silvergate shares on Friday slumped more than 2% in after-hours trading, after closing up 0.9% at $5.77 in regular trade. The shares on Thursday had fallen to a record low, ending the day down more than 97% from their all-time high in November 2021.

Silvergate on Wednesday warned in a filing that it was evaluating its ability to operate as a going concern, disclosing that it had sold additional debt securities this year at a loss and that further losses mean the bank could be “less than well capitalized.”

After the warning, cryptocurrency heavyweights including Coinbase Global Inc and Galaxy Digital dropped Silvergate as their banking partner. Stablecoin issuers Paxos and Circle, Cboe’s digital asset exchange, and crypto exchanges Bitstamp and Gemini also suspended their partnerships with Silvergate.

(Reporting by Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Bitcoin falls 5.2% to $22,253

(Reuters) – Bitcoin dropped 5.2% to $22,253 at 2204 GMT on Friday, losing $1,213 from its previous close.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, is down 11.9% from the year’s high of $25,270 on Feb. 16.

Ether, the coin linked to the ethereum blockchain network, dropped 5.3% to $1,560.9 on Friday, losing $87.1 from its previous close.

(Reporting by Kanjyik Ghosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

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Ripple says recent Supreme Court ruling weighs in its favor in SEC case

(Reuters) – Ripple Labs Inc said in court papers Friday that a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision supports one of its key defenses in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s case over the cryptocurrency XRP.

The San Francisco-based blockchain payments company said the ruling on Tuesday limiting the government’s ability to levy penalties on U.S. taxpayers who fail to report foreign bank accounts emphasized that federal laws must give “fair warning” of what they prohibit.

Ripple asked U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres to consider the decision when she rules in the SEC’s case accusing the company and its current and former chief executives of conducting a $1.3 billion unregistered securities offering by selling XRP, which Ripple’s founders created in 2012.

Ripple and the executives have denied the allegations, and the company has argued that XRP has traded and been used as a digital currency.

The SEC has asked Torres to decide that Ripple had fair notice that XRP was a security under U.S. law. Ripple and the executives have said the question of whether or not the law was vague should go to trial.

Torres may decide a trial is unnecessary to determine whether XRP was a security, or narrow the issues that go before a jury.

A ruling in the case could further define what digital assets are considered securities in the U.S.

The case is SEC v. Ripple Labs Inc, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 20-CV-10832.

(This story has been corrected to fix a typo in paragraph 6)

(Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York)

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Binance CEO reaffirms support for Voyager deal amid SEC pushback

(Reuters) – Binance Chief Executive Officer Changpeng Zhao on Friday reiterated support for the exchange’s U.S. partner to acquire Voyager Digital, after an earlier tweet indicated he was weighing walking away from the offer.

Voyager, a crypto lender which went bankrupt last year, signed an agreement to be acquired by Binance.US in December.

But the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the New York Department of Financial Services later opposed the deal.

At a court hearing on Thursday, a U.S. bankruptcy judge criticized the SEC for its vague objections to the proposed acquisition.

“We are still in support of the deal and helping returning funds to users as quickly as possible, if allowed to do so,” Zhao tweeted.

In an earlier tweet on Friday, Zhao had signaled the possibility of calling off the deal.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)

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US Senators question Binance and its US partner over compliance

By Angus Berwick and Tom Wilson

(Reuters) – Three U.S. Senators have asked giant cryptocurrency exchange Binance and its U.S. partner Binance.US for information about their regulatory compliance and finances, citing a series of investigations by Reuters and some other media reports, according to a letter released on Wednesday.

In the letter, Democrats Elizabeth Warren and Chris Van Hollen along with Republican Roger Marshall, called on Binance “to provide transparency about potentially illegal business practice,” adding that the exchange and its related entities “have purposefully evaded regulators, moved assets to criminals and sanctions evaders, and hidden basic financial information from its customers and the public.

In a statement, Binance said that “a lot of misinformation has been spread about our company” but that “we appreciate the senators’ request” and that it will provide information to help them better understand the firm.

The senators also questioned the legitimacy of the company’s business and the safety of customers’ assets, in the letter addressed to Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao and Binance.US CEO Brian Shroder.

The collapse of rival crypto exchange FTX, whose founder Sam Bankman-Fried has been charged with fraud, “underscored the need for real transparency and accountability in the crypto industry,” the senators wrote.

Warren and Van Hollen are members of the Senate Banking Committee.

The letter cited Reuters articles from last year that found that Binance intentionally kept weak anti-money laundering controls, processed over $10 billion in payments for criminals and companies seeking to evade U.S. sanctions, and plotted to evade regulators in the United States and elsewhere.

The letter also cited a Reuters report this February that Binance had secret access to Binance.US’s bank account and was able to move $400 million to an account held by a trading firm managed by Zhao.

Binance.US publicly maintains that it is entirely independent of the global Binance.com exchange and operates as its “US partner.” However, Reuters has reported that, in fact, Binance created Binance.US as a de facto subsidiary to draw the scrutiny of U.S. regulators away from Binance.com.

Binance has previously disputed Reuters’ articles, calling the illicit-fund calculations inaccurate and the descriptions of its compliance controls “outdated.” The exchange has said it is “driving higher industry standards” and seeking to “further improve our ability to detect illegal crypto activity on our platform.” A Binance.US spokeswoman said in February that “only Binance.US employees have access” to its bank accounts.

In the letter, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, the senators requested Binance and Binance.US provide documents and answers to their questions by March 16.

The senators are seeking information about the companies’ balance sheets, U.S.-based users, anti-money laundering policies. They want written policies regarding Binance and Binance.US’s relationship.

(Reporting by Angus Berwick; Editing by Anna Driver)

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U.S. losing revenue from crypto mining fueled by federal gas -watchdog report

(Reuters) – Some oil and gas drillers operating on U.S. public lands are diverting natural gas to power cryptocurrency mining operations without paying federal royalties, according to a government watchdog report published on Wednesday.

The Interior Department’s Office of Inspector General advised the agency, which oversees 420 million acres of federal lands, to issue guidance to address the rise of an industry that may operate unnoticed in its vast territory.

“Mining” cryptocurrency requires huge amounts of electricity to power computers that compete to solve mathematical puzzles to validate transactions.

The process has drawn criticism from environmentalists and governments that worry about its heavy reliance on climate-warming fossil fuels to create electricity.

In its report, the IG said cryptomining units in Colorado had been located on or near federal lands leased for oil and gas development and were diverting gas from those leases.

The mobile units may be undetected for long periods of time by federal officials responsible for overseeing large areas of public land, the report said.

“These activities generate revenues for private companies using federally owned gas, at times without the leaseholder paying mineral royalties,” the report said.

The issue was raised by the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, which told the IG that the crypto operations may pose environmental and health and safety risks and could be underinsured for accidents.

In its response to the IG, Interior said it would take action to inform staff of the threats outlined in the report and work with agency officials to discuss how guidance could be crafted for the department.

The royalty rate for federal onshore oil and gas leases issued since August of last year is 16.67%, and it is 12.5% for older leases, according to the Bureau of Land Management. The Interior Department generated more than $1.7 billion in revenue from onshore natural gas royalties last year, according to federal data.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Coinbase, Galaxy Digital abandon Silvergate after lender flags risks to business

By Niket Nishant

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency heavyweights including Coinbase Global Inc and Galaxy Digital on Thursday dropped Silvergate Capital Corp as their banking partner after the lender’s latest filing raised questions about its ability to stay in business.

Coinbase and Galaxy Digital also said they had minimal exposure to Silvergate, which has been plunged into a crisis stemming from a bank run after the collapse of major crypto exchange FTX in November spooked investors.

La Jolla, California-based Silvergate, one of the most influential banks in the digital asset industry, has drawn the ire of lawmakers in the United States over its dealings with FTX and Alameda.

In January, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators sent a letter to Silvergate, asking for details of the bank’s risk management practices and alleging its due diligence processes “failed miserably.”

“This does not bode well for the whole crypto market, as Silvergate is a major player in the space,” said Marcus Sotiriou, analyst at digital asset broker GlobalBlock.

“The result of this remains to be seen, but we could potentially see a contagion from crypto businesses who use Silvergate Bank being impacted,” Sotiriou added.

Stablecoin issuers Paxos and Circle, Cboe’s digital asset exchange and European crypto exchange Bitstamp also suspended their partnerships with Silvergate.

“It is now getting increasingly difficult for crypto companies to establish or sustain relationships with a U.S. bank,” said Ivan Kachkovski, FX and crypto strategist at UBS.

“This could potentially mean a certain trend towards crypto offshorization, at least until more comprehensive regulatory framework is established in the U.S.”

Silvergate was founded in 1988 and ventured into crypto in 2013. After high interest rates and the bankruptcy of FTX rattled crypto markets last year, the company reported a loss of $1 billion for the fourth quarter and slashed headcount by 40% in a bid to cut costs.

Coinbase, which was earlier one of Silvergate’s top clients, said it would partner with Signature Bank and others to facilitate cash transactions for institutional clients who had parked funds with the exchange.

Silvergate’s shares plunged to a record low of $6.80 following the announcement, erasing over $200 million of its market capitalization.

GRAPHIC: Silvergate stock performance vs peer Signature Bank https://www.reuters.com/graphics/SILVERGATE-PAYMENTS/COINBASE/gdpzqmbwqvw/chart.png

On Wednesday, Silvergate delayed its annual report and said it had sold additional debt securities – investments that can include bonds and notes – to repay debts this year and was evaluating the impact of these events on “its ability to continue as a going concern.” 

“The bank to some degree has become a lightning rod victim of circumstances, given industry news flow over the last few months,” Canaccord Genuity analysts wrote in a note after the disclosure.

The bank has also become a target for short sellers. Short interest in Silvergate stock is estimated to be as much as 22.6 million shares, or 82% of the float, making it the most shorted stock in the United States in terms of percentage of float, according to data from analytics firm S3 Partners.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Editing by Uttaresh Venkateshwaran, Sriraj Kalluvila, Anil D’Silva and Maju Samuel)

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SEC objections to Voyager-Binance deal criticized by U.S. judge 

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) – A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Thursday criticized the Securities and Exchange Commision for casting vague doubts about crypto lender Voyager Digital’s proposed sale to Binance.US, saying the regulator had essentially asked to “stop everybody in their tracks” without explaining how to address its concerns.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Wiles made the remarks at a court hearing in New York to consider Voyager Digital’s restructuring plan that would sell its assets and transfer its customers to crypto exchange Binance.US.

Even if Wiles confirms the plan, the sale, which Voyager values at $1.3 billion based on current crypto prices, cannot close until it gets final approval from the SEC and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which has also raised doubts about the deal.

The SEC, which has objected to the sale, is currently investigating whether Voyager’s crypto lending business involved the sale of unregistered securities. It has raised concerns in court filings that Voyager cannot prove that the Binance deal or any other crypto transaction complies with U.S. securities law.

When pressed by Wiles as to whether the SEC believed that the Voyager sale violated U.S. securities laws, SEC attorney William Uptegrove did not have a definite answer.

“We can’t take a position at this point,” Uptegrove said. “The SEC is a deliberative body, and it’s process is a nonpublic one by federal law.”

Wiles was not satisfied with that response.

“Deliberative is one thing, but what have you done?” Wiles asked. “If there are reasons to be concerned here, I need to hear specifics.”

Wiles is expected to rule on whether Voyager’s bankruptcy plan should be confirmed later on Thursday.

The Binance transaction includes a $20 million cash payment and an agreement to transfer Voyager’s customers to Binance.US’s crypto exchange. The crypto assets deposited by Voyager customers account for the bulk of the deal’s valuation, according court documents.

Once Voyager’s customers have Binance.US accounts in place, they will be able to make withdrawals for the first time since Voyager froze their accounts last summer.

Voyager filed for bankruptcy in July, months after the crash of major crypto tokens TerraUSD and Luna sent shockwaves across the digital asset industry.

It estimates the sale will allow customers to recover 73% of the value of their deposits at the time of Voyager’s bankruptcy filing, the company’s attorney Christine Okike said at Thursday’s hearing.

CFIUS did not formally object to the Binance sale, but it warned that its ongoing review of national security concerns could end up blocking the deal.

Binance.US has said that it is “fully independent” of its international parent company Binance, which is owned by Chinese-born and Singapore-based Changpeng Zhao.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Bill Berkrot)

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Analysis-Australia’s DIY pension funds lose millions on crypto bets, investors not sweating it

By Lewis Jackson

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Thousands of Australians who used do-it-yourself (DIY) pension funds to bet on cryptocurrencies face hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, jeopardising their savings in a scheme originally set up to ensure adequate retirement income.

    These risky bets are possible as DIY or self-managed superannuation funds (SMSFs) fall outside the remit of the prudential regulator that oversees professionally managed funds, thereby allowing them to invest with fewer restrictions.

DIY pension funds account for a fourth of Australia’s A$3.4 trillion ($2.29 trillion) pension pool. Tens of thousands set up such funds over the pandemic, pouring money set aside for retirement into markets, including cryptocurrency. But regulators can do little more than warn about the risks.

Peter, 50, who describes himself as a “bitcoiner”, is among those who is content to ignore the warnings.

He moved his A$130,000 nest egg from an Australian pension fund into an SMSF and invested it in bitcoin in 2021. At one point his fund was up A$100,000 as bitcoin scaled an all-time high, but is now “underwater” after prices crashed.

However, Peter continues to buy bitcoin.

“My conviction hasn’t changed,” said Peter, without giving his full name to keep his financial affairs private.

“It doesn’t bother me, honestly. After ten years of being on this ride, part of me has died inside when it comes to price.”

And Peter is not alone.

According to Australia’s tax office, more funds are adding cryptocurrencies, although they remain a small minority.

CRYPTO ‘WILL HELP’

There is about A$880 billion in Australia’s SMSFs, with crypto assets accounting for $1.4 billion of that in fiscal 2021. The quantity of crypto assets has likely grown since then.

Regulatory rules require investors to keep assets for retirement, run audits and acknowledge risks, but say nothing about the appropriateness of investments by SMSFs.

That is in stark contrast to measures in some other countries or even Australia’s oversight of the A$2.3 trillion professionally managed pension sector where funds can be barred from taking new members if they underperform.

The tax office does not provide information about portfolio losses. However, bitcoin prices, near $24,000 now, are 16% below the 2021 trough and 60% below the 2021 peak.

Assuming an average 40% decline would imply an almost A$600 million drop in the value of SMSF cryptocurrency investments, Reuters calculations show.

This estimate was validated by Liam Shorte, a financial planner specialising in SMSFs.

“Most of the people I’m dealing with got in late,” he says.

But crypto loyalists believe the asset class should be judged over decades, not days.

“If I want an early retirement, this will help,” said Ken, a 47-year old professional who piled into cryptocurrency in May 2021 after first checking with his wife.

He bought more than A$100,000 of bitcoin and ether via his SMSF, accounting for 10-20% of the fund.

“If the investment goes pear-shaped, I work an extra year,” said Ken, who also did not want his full name disclosed.

LITTLE REGULATION

New SMSFs grew 30% in 2021, a survey from Vanguard and Investment Trends shows, with more than half the new starters surveyed saying they could outperform their pension fund.

“I was getting calls every week at the peak,” says Sevan Tuna, managing director at financial adviser Alexander Spencer. “It was ridiculous, people had a lot of time on their hands.”

Australia’s DIY pension sector combines size and freedom in a way that sets it apart from other countries.

The United States also has a freewheeling DIY pension sector but take-up is negligible.

In Britain, self-managed pension funds cannot directly invest in bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies, according to Victoria Scholar, head of investment for Interactive Investor.

Hargreaves Landsdown, among Britain’s largest retail stockbrokers, also bars its 460,000 self-managed pension customers from property.

But in Australia, SMSFs can take out loans for houses and farms, buy shares in private companies or collectibles like fine wine and jewellery.

Australian regulators in 2019 recommended banning SMSFs from borrowing, and in the same year the Australian Tax Office (ATO) warned 17,700 fund trustees they were not diversified enough.

Where funds are highly concentrated, investors must show they have considered the risks, the ATO said in a statement.

Treasury, which oversees the ATO, said there are no changes planned to SMSF governance.

Regulating SMSF investment decisions could have unpopular consequences, Tuna said. Forced diversification could limit big property investments. Property and the loans to finance it make up a fifth of all SMSF assets.

John Maroney, who stepped down as head of Australia’s SMSF association this week, said big cryptocurrency investments are concerning but changing rules would add costs.

“Our general position is if it’s legal to invest in speculative assets, then no further restrictions should apply to SMSF investments.”

($1 = 1.4828 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Lewis Jackson; Editing by Praveen Menon and Himani Sarkar)

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Australia’s central bank pairs with industry on digital A$ projects

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia’s central bank is launching 14 pilot projects with the financial industry to develop real world applications for a digital Australian dollar, with the focus on business use rather than a new public means of exchange.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) said proposed uses for a central bank digital currency (CBDC) included offline payments, corporate bond and FX settlement, tokenised bills and even livestock auctions.

Partners include Australia and New Zealand Banking Corp, Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Mastercard, along with a range of fin tech firms.

“The project involves selected industry participants demonstrating potential use cases for a CBDC using a limited-scale pilot CBDC that is a real digital claim on the Reserve Bank,” the RBA said in a statement.

A report on the progress of the live pilots is expected around the middle of the year.

(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)