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U.S. SEC delays decision on ARK 21Shares spot bitcoin ETF

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday delayed a decision on whether to allow a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund by stock-picker Cathie Wood’s Arc Invest and crypto investment product firm 21Shares US to list and trade on Cboe Global Markets until Aug. 30.

The delay follows a series of rejections this year by the market regulator on ETFs that track bitcoin, including proposals from Grayscale, Fidelity, and NYDIG.

(Reporting by John McCrank; Editing by Chris Reese)

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Crypto hedge fund Three Arrows’ liquidators get OK to claim U.S. assets

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) – Liquidators for crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC) obtained U.S. court permission on Tuesday to issue subpoenas and lay claim to the bankrupt Singapore-based company’s assets, noting that 3AC’s missing-in-action founders no longer control its accounts.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in Manhattan gave the liquidators authority to claim 3AC’s U.S.-based assets and issue subpoenas to its founders and about two dozen banks and cryptocurrency exchanges that may have information about its assets and transfers.

Adam Goldberg, a lawyer for the liquidators, said at an emergency hearing Tuesday before Glenn that the whereabouts of company founders Zhu Su and Kyle Livingstone Davies remain unknown.

Without the founders’ cooperation, the liquidators have been unable to get a complete view of 3AC’s assets and their location, Goldberg said. The assets’ digital nature creates a real risk that the founders or other parties will whisk them away unless stopped by a court order, he said.

“A key part of this order is to put the world on notice that it is the liquidators that are controlling the debtor’s assets at this stage,” Goldberg said.

Zhu and Davies did not appear in bankruptcy court and did not oppose the liquidators’ request for subpoena authority. Zhu tweeted for the first time in almost a month on Tuesday, saying the liquidators had rebuffed their good faith offer to cooperate.

3AC, which was reported to have $10 billion in cryptocurrency earlier in 2022, held $3 billion in assets as of April, according to the liquidators’ court filing. The company filed for bankruptcy in the British Virgin Islands in late June after being hammered by a sharp sell-off in digital currencies.

3AC’s insolvency has destabilized other crypto lenders like Voyager Digital, which filed for bankruptcy after 3AC failed to repay a loan of about $650 million in cryptocurrency, and Blockchain.com, which loaned $270 million to 3AC.

The liquidators were appointed by a British Virgin Islands court to wind down the company and pay its debts. They filed a parallel bankruptcy case in Manhattan to shield 3AC’s U.S. assets.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Richard Chang)

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Exclusive-Binance served crypto traders in Iran for years despite U.S. sanctions, clients say

By Tom Wilson and Angus Berwick

LONDON (Reuters) – The world’s largest crypto exchange, Binance, continued to process trades by clients in Iran despite U.S. sanctions and a company ban on doing business there, a Reuters investigation has found.

In 2018, the United States reimposed sanctions that had been suspended three years earlier as part of Iran’s nuclear deal with major world powers. That November, Binance informed traders in Iran it would no longer serve them, telling them to liquidate their accounts.

But in interviews with Reuters, seven traders said they skirted the ban. The traders said they continued to use their Binance accounts until as recently as September last year, only losing access after the exchange tightened its anti-money laundering checks a month earlier. Until that point, customers could trade by registering with just an email address.

“There were some alternatives, but none of them were as good as Binance,” said Asal Alizade, a trader in Tehran who said she used the exchange for two years until September 2021. “It didn’t need identity verification, so we all used it.”

Eleven other people in Iran beyond those interviewed by Reuters said on their LinkedIn profiles that they too traded crypto at Binance after the 2018 ban. None of them responded to questions.

The exchange’s popularity in Iran was known inside the company. Senior employees knew of, and joked about, the exchange’s growing ranks of Iranian users, according to 10 messages they sent to one another in 2019 and 2020 that are reported here for the first time. “IRAN BOYS,” one of them wrote in response to data showing the popularity of Binance on Instagram in Iran.

Binance did not respond to Reuters’ questions about Iran. In a March blog post, published in response to Western sanctions on Russia, Binance said it “follows international sanction rules strictly” and had assembled a “global compliance task force, including world-renowned sanctions and law enforcement experts.” Binance said it used “banking grade tools” to prevent sanctioned people or entities from using its platform.

Iran’s mission to the United Nations in New York did not respond to a request for comment.

The Iranian trading on the exchange could draw interest from U.S. regulators, seven lawyers and sanctions experts told Reuters.

Binance, whose holding company is based in the Cayman Islands, says it does not have a single headquarters. It does not give details about the entity behind its main Binance.com exchange which does not accept customers in the United States. Instead, U.S. clients are directed to a separate exchange called Binance.US, which – according to a 2020 regulatory filing – is ultimately controlled by Binance founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao.

Lawyers say this structure means Binance is protected from direct U.S. sanctions that ban U.S. firms from doing business in Iran. This is because the traders in Iran used Binance’s main exchange, which is not a U.S. company. But Binance does run a risk of so-called secondary sanctions, which aim to prevent foreign firms from doing business with sanctioned entities or helping Iranians evade the U.S. trade embargo. As well as causing reputational damage, secondary sanctions can also choke off a company’s access to the U.S. financial system.

Binance’s exposure would depend on whether sanctioned parties traded on the platform and whether Iranian clients dodged the U.S. trade embargo as a result of their transactions, four lawyers said. Non-U.S. exchanges “can face consequences for facilitating sanctionable conduct, whereby they have exposure for allowing the processing of transactions for sanctioned parties, or if they’re on-boarding those types of users,” said Erich Ferrari, principal attorney at Ferrari & Associates law firm in Washington.

Reuters did not find evidence that sanctioned individuals used Binance.

Asked about traders in Iran using Binance, a spokesperson for the U.S. Treasury declined to comment.

Binance kept weak compliance checks on its users until last year, despite concerns raised by some senior company figures, Reuters reported in January, drawing on interviews with former senior employees, internal messages and correspondence with national regulators. The exchange said in response it was pushing industry standards higher. Reuters’ new reporting shows for the first time how the gaps in Binance’s compliance programme allowed traders in Iran to do business on the exchange.

Binance dominates the $950 billion crypto industry, offering its 120 million users a panoply of digital coins, derivatives and non-fungible tokens, processing trades worth hundreds of billions of dollars a month. The exchange is increasingly going mainstream. Its billionaire founder Zhao – known as CZ – this year extended his reach into traditional business by pledging $500 million to Tesla boss Elon Musk’s planned takeover of Twitter. Musk has since said he is pulling out of the deal. Last month Binance hired Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo to promote its NFT business.

“BINANCE PERSIAN”

Since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, the West and the United Nations have imposed sanctions on Iran in response to its nuclear programme, along with alleged human rights violations and support for terrorism. Iran has long maintained the nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

Under the 2015 deal between Iran and six world powers, Tehran curbed its nuclear programme in return for an easing of some of the sanctions. In May 2018, President Donald Trump ditched the accord and ordered the reimposition of the U.S. sanctions that were relaxed under the deal. The curbs came back into effect in August and November that year.

After Trump’s move, Binance added Iran to a list of what it called “sanctioned countries” on its terms of use agreement, saying it could “restrict or deny” services in such areas. In November 2018, it warned its customers in Iran by email to withdraw their crypto from their accounts “as soon as possible.”

Publicly, some Binance executives lauded its compliance programme. Its then chief financial officer said in a December 2018 blog it had invested heavily in countering dirty money, saying it took a “proactive approach to detecting and squashing money laundering.” In March the following year, it hired a U.S. compliance platform to help it screen for sanctions risks.

By August 2019, Binance deemed Iran – along with Cuba, Syria, North Korea and Crimea – a “HARD 5 SANCTIONED” jurisdiction, where the exchange would not do business, according to an internal document seen by Reuters. The May 2020 document included Iran on a list of countries headed “strictly no,” citing Chief Compliance Officer Samuel Lim.

Even as Binance’s stance on Iran hardened, its profile among the country’s legions of crypto users was growing, traders said, citing their knowledge of the local industry.

Cryptocurrencies grew attractive there as sanctions took a heavy toll on the economy. Since the birth of bitcoin in 2008, users have been drawn to crypto’s promise of economic freedom beyond the reach of governments. Cut off from global financial services, many Iranians relied on bitcoin to do business on the internet, users said.

“Cryptocurrency is a good way to circumvent sanctions and make good money,” said Ali, a trader who spoke on condition he was identified by only his first name. Ali said he used Binance for around a year. He shared with Reuters messages with Binance customer service representatives that showed the exchange closed his account last year. They said Binance was not able to serve users from Iran, citing recommendations from United Nations Security Council sanctions lists.

Other traders at the exchange cited its weak background checks on clients, as well as its easy-to-use trading platform, deep liquidity and a large number of cryptocurrencies that could be traded as reasons for its growth in Iran.

Pooria Fotoohi, who lives in Tehran and says he runs a crypto hedge fund, said he used Binance from 2017 until September last year. Binance won over Iranians because of its “simple” know-your-customer controls, he said, noting how traders could open accounts simply by providing an email address.

“They succeeded in gaining a huge trading volume, with many pairs of currencies, within a short period of time,” said Fotoohi.

Binance’s Angels – volunteers who share information on the exchange across the globe – also helped spread the word.

In December 2017, Angels announced the launch of a group called “Binance Persian” on the Telegram messaging app. The group is no longer active. Reuters couldn’t determine how long it operated, but identified at least one Iranian who was an active Angel after Washington reimposed sanctions.

Mohsen Parhizkar was an Angel from November 2017 to September 2020, managing the Persian group and helping its users, according to his LinkedIn profile. A person who worked with Parhizkar confirmed his role and shared messages they exchanged. Contacted by Reuters, Parhizkar said Binance had cancelled programmes in Iran because of sanctions. He didn’t elaborate.

After its 2018 ban, at least three senior Binance employees were aware that the exchange remained popular in Iran and was used by clients there, 10 Telegram and company chat messages between the employees that were seen by Reuters show.

By September 2019, Tehran was among the top cities for followers of Binance’s Instagram page, topping New York and Istanbul, one message from the same month shows. The employees then made light of this. One jokingly suggested advertising Binance’s popularity in Iran, saying, “Push that on Binance U.S. Twitter.”

In a separate exchange from April 2020, a senior employee also noted that Iranian traders were using Binance, without saying how he knew this. A Binance compliance document from the same year, reviewed by Reuters, gave Iran the highest risk rating of all countries for illegal finance.

“BEGINNERS’ GUIDE TO VPNS”

Further underpinning Binance’s growth in Iran, traders said, was the ease with which users could skirt curbs via virtual private networks (VPNs) and tools to conceal internet protocol (IP) addresses that can link internet use to a location. North Korean hackers used VPNs to obscure their locations while setting up accounts on Binance to launder stolen crypto in 2020, Reuters reported in June.

Mehdi Qaderi, a business development worker, said he used a VPN to trade around $4,000 worth of crypto on Binance in the year to August 2021. “All of the Iranians were using it,” Qaderi said of Binance.

In a 2021 guide to how sanctions applied to crypto firms, the U.S. Treasury said sophisticated analytic tools existed that could detect IP address obfuscation. Crypto companies could also gather information to alert them to users in a sanctioned country, it said, such as from email addresses.

“Crypto exchanges would be expected to have these types of measures in place in order to comply with sanctions,” said Syedur Rahman, legal director at Rahman Ravelli law firm in London.

Binance itself had supported the use of VPNs.

Zhao, Binance’s CEO, tweeted in June 2019 that VPNs were “a necessity, not optional.” He deleted the remark by the end of 2020. Asked about the tweet, Binance didn’t comment. In July the following year, Binance published on its website a “Beginners’ Guide to VPNs.” One of its tips: “You might want to use a VPN to access sites that are blocked in your country.”

Zhao was aware of crypto users circumventing Binance’s controls in general. He told interviewers in November 2020 that “users do find intelligent ways to get around our block sometimes and we just have to be smarter about the way we block.”

((reporting by Tom Wilson and Angus Berwick; editing by Janet McBride))

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Central banks face key decisions on digital currency, says BIS

LONDON (Reuters) – Central banks will have to make “fundamental” decisions on cross-border access for a digital version of their currency to serve as a means of payment effectively, a committee at the Bank for International Settlements said on Monday.

“Central banks must make critical choices on the access of non-residents and foreign financial institutions to central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), as well as ensuring multinational interoperability, to fully harness the potential for CBDCs to enhance cross-border payments,” the BIS committee said in a statement.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Catherine Evans)

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Russia’s Sberbank executes first digital asset issue on its platform

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia’s dominant lender Sberbank on Saturday said it had carried out the first digital financial asset transaction on its own platform, with its subsidiary SberFactoring executing a 1-billion rouble ($16 million) issue with three-month maturity.

The Bank of Russia has long voiced scepticism over cryptocurrencies, but is more open to other digital assets and gave blockchain platform Atomyze Russia the first licence to exchange digital assets.

No.2 lender VTB and fintech company Lighthouse carried out the country’s first cash-backed digital financial asset transaction in late June.

Sberbank, which received its licence in March, said in a statement that digital assets are issued on its platform using blockchain technology and smart contracts.

Sberbank’s platform will soon be available to all the bank’s corporate clients, it said.

Russia is working on improving its monitoring of cryptocurrency transactions and may begin introducing regulation of the industry later this year, officials said this week.

($1 = 62.4000 roubles)

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Christina Fincher)

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Blockchain.com faces $270 million hit on loans to bankrupt Three Arrows – CoinDesk

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency exchange Blockchain.com could lose $270 million from lending to hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC), which filed for bankruptcy earlier this month, CoinDesk reported on Friday.

“Three Arrows is rapidly becoming insolvent and the default impact is approximately $270 million worth of cryptocurrency and U.S. dollar loans from Blockchain.com,” the report said, quoting Chief Executive Officer Peter Smith’s letter to shareholders.

Blockchain.com declined to comment when contacted by Reuters and 3AC did not immediately respond.

3AC has sought protection from creditors under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, which allows foreign debtors to shield U.S. assets.

Aggressive rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve and recession fears have led to a turmoil in equities and sparked a selloff in cryptocurrencies. The crypto winter has hit several companies in the sector including lending platform Celsius Network and Voyager Digital.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

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Fed’s Brainard urges swift action on regulating cryptocurrencies

(Reuters) – The world of cryptocurrencies needs strong regulation to be begun to be put in place now before it becomes so pervasive it poses financial stability risks, Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard said on Friday.

“It is important that the foundations for sound regulation of the crypto financial system be established now before the crypto ecosystem becomes so large or interconnected that it might pose risks to the stability of the broader financial system,” Brainard said in prepared remarks to a Bank of England conference in London.

In a full-throated speech, Brainard made the case that not doing so would store up problems for the future and said that until there are robust guardrails for crypto finance, bank involvement might further entrench a “riskier and less compliant ecosystem.”

The risks of loosely-regulated cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, which exploded in value during the COVID-19 pandemic, have come into sharp focus with the crypto market slumping sharply and the downfall of major “stablecoin” terraUSD. Leading cryptocurrency Bitcoin has dropped more than 75% from its all-time high over the past seven months.

Brainard noted that cryptocurrencies are highly vulnerable to deleveraging, fire sales and contagion and argued that new technologies and financial engineering cannot alone transform risky assets into safe ones.

National and international cooperation would be needed, Brainard said, to ensure compliance with existing regulations and tailor new ones, in particular in the area of decentralized protocols and platforms.

“Future financial resilience will be greatly enhanced if we ensure the regulatory perimeter encompasses the crypto financial system and reflects the principle of same risk, same disclosure, same regulatory outcome,” Brainard said.

She added that a U.S. central bank digital currency, which she has shown support for, could help financial stability “by providing the neutral trusted settlement layer in the future crypto financial system.”

(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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Russia to improve crypto transaction monitoring as regulation draws closer

(This content was produced in Russia where the law restricts coverage of Russian military operations in Ukraine)

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia’s financial monitoring agency, Rosfinmonitoring, said on Friday it was using software to track cryptocurrency transactions and hopes to improve its capabilities, as Moscow ushers in regulation on what one lawmaker dubbed “cryptomania”.

The Bank of Russia has long voiced scepticism over cryptocurrencies, citing financial stability concerns, and has advocated for a complete ban on trading and mining, at odds with a government keen to regulate the industry.

Russia has already identified specific criminal cases involved in cryptocurrencies, said Rosfinmonitoring’s head Yuri Chikhanchin, adding that the agency wants to improve its systems and identify transactions and blockchains that are currently hidden.

Chikhanchin said it was not currently possible to cover everything, partly because not all countries are so eager to regulate the industry.

“It is very difficult when cryptocurrency accounts go into the unregulated zone and we don’t understand who is on the other end,” he said. “But I think we will still solve this task.”

The blockchain technology on which cryptocurrencies are based records transactions, but not the identity of wallet-owners, making them difficult to track.

Anatoly Aksakov, head of the financial committee in Russia’s lower house of parliament, on Thursday said draft legislation on regulating cryptocurrencies would be put to the house in the autumn.

“Obviously there will be strict regulation,” Aksakov said, comparing “cryptomania” to addiction in the gambling sector, which is tightly regulated in Russia.

“The same needs to be done with crypto exchanges and trading,” he said. “The phenomenon exists and it cannot be ignored.”

The crypto industry has been in the crosshairs of regulators, who worry that a recent meltdown in the volatile market could hit the broader financial sector.

The slump – sparked by the downfall of two major tokens in May – has led to crypto lender Celsius pausing withdrawals and Singapore-based crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital entering into liquidation.

Russia’s central bank has said it is open to allowing cryptocurrencies to be used for international settlements and has approved other digital asset transactions.

Aksakov also expects a cryptocurrency mining law to be considered soon, an area the government hopes to tax.

Unlike payment companies, most crypto exchanges initially rejected calls to cut off all Russian users, sparking concerns among U.S. lawmakers that digital assets could be used to evade Western sanctions on Moscow over its actions in Ukraine.

Major exchanges said they would comply with sanctions by blocking sanctioned users. In April, Binance froze deposits and trading for Russian users with crypto assets of more than 10,000 euros.

(Reporting by Reuters, Editing by Louise Heavens)

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UK think tank calls for global digital currency rules

LONDON (Reuters) – Global rules would allow central bank digital currencies to operate smoothly cross-border and speed up wholesale payments, a think tank backed by the City of London Corporation said on Friday.

Most central banks, including the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank, are studying the potential launch of a digital version of their currencies.

Britain has said any digital version of sterling would not be available under the second half of this decade, while the Fed has said a digital dollar could help maintain the greenback’s international standing.

“Key to realising the full potential of CBDCs is ensuring that they can operate across different markets to facilitate wholesale cross-border payments,” said Kay Swinburne, chair of the International Regulatory Strategy Group, a think tank backed by the City and TheCityUK.

“Global regulatory principles and collaboration will be needed to realise this vision.”

The IRSG said in a report https://www.irsg.co.uk/publications/irsg-report-the-use-of-central-bank-digital-currencies-cbdcs-in-wholesale-markets-2 published on Friday there are many benefits to including CBDCs in wholesale digital payments if they are made “interoperable” for cross-border transactions.

Harmonisation of rules would allow firms who are licensed in one jurisdiction to provide services in another, and stop countries trying to undercut each other with laxer rules, the report said.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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U.S. Treasury calls for inter-agency approach on digital asset risks, benefits

(Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury said on Thursday it had delivered “a framework” to President Joe Biden for international engagement and an inter-agency approach to address the risks and benefits of digital assets.

The framework also directs the administration to promote development of digital asset and central bank digital currencies (CBDC) technologies.

The United States must continue working with international partners on standards for the development of digital payment architecture and CBDCs, according to the Treasury.

“Uneven regulation, supervision, and compliance across jurisdictions creates opportunities for arbitrage and raises risks to financial stability and the protection of consumers, investors, businesses, and markets,” the Treasury said in a statement posted to its website. (https://bit.ly/3P8jIHr)

The Treaury also said it will continue to work with various organisations, including the G7, G20, and the International Monetary Fund.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Bengaluru; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)

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Lawsuit accuses troubled crypto lender Celsius Network of fraud

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A former investment manager at Celsius Network sued the crypto lender on Thursday, saying it used customer deposits to rig the price of its own crypto token and failed to properly hedge risk, causing it to freeze customer assets.

The complaint said Celsius ran a Ponzi scheme to benefit itself through “gross mismanagement of customer deposits,” and defrauded the plaintiff KeyFi Inc, run by the former manager Jason Stone, into providing services worth millions of dollars and refusing to pay for them.

Celsius had no immediate comment on the lawsuit, which seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages and was filed in New York state court in Manhattan.

Stone’s accusations follows Celsius’ June 12 decision to freeze withdrawals and transfers for its 1.7 million customers because of “extreme” market conditions.

The Hoboken, New Jersey-based company later hired advisers on a possible debt restructuring, which reportedly could include a bankruptcy filing.

Crypto lender Voyager Digital Ltd filed for bankruptcy protection this week, while the crypto hedge fund entered liquidation late last month.

Celsius promised retail customers outsized returns, sometimes as much as 19% annually.

But Stone said Celsius struggled to pay investors because it failed to hedge investments, resulting in “severe” losses as the values of different coins fluctuated.

He also accused Celsius of logging some deposits onto its books on a U.S. dollar basis even if it paid customers with bitcoin or other tokens, causing a $100 million to $200 million hole that it “could not fully explain or resolve.”

According to Thursday’s complaint, Stone, largely working without a written agreement, generated $838 million of profit for Celsius and KeyFi before costs and overhead from August 2020 to March 2021, with KeyFi entitled to 20% of net profit.

Stone says he exited the relationship in March 2021 after it became clear that the hedging issues “could be financially ruinous” for Celsius and damage KeyFi’s reputation, but that Celsius has refused to recognize his resignation.

The case is KeyFi Inc v. Celsius Network Ltd et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Brazil police raids gang allegedly using crypto to launder illegal gold mining

SAO PAULO (Reuters) – Brazil’s federal police on Thursday carried out an operation against an alleged criminal gang that it said used crypto tokens to launder money made from illegal gold mining.

Police arrested five people and served 60 search and seizure warrants in the operation.

The operation, called Greed, was related to health care companies that, since at least 2012, had laundered money from illegal gold mining in the northern state of Rondonia, the federal police said. The criminal group used its own crypto token to move around billions of dollars, among other money laundering methods, the police said.

The token, created by one of the group’s shell companies, was used to “justify the amounts arising from the illegal extraction of gold … as if they were investments of third parties interested in receiving dividends,” it said.

A banking analysis performed by the federal police found that between 2019 and 2021, over 16 billion reais ($3 billion) moved through the group’s bank accounts.

Police also said that the group owned a mining company that laundered gold extracted from other illegal mines in the northern part of the country, using invalid environmental permits.

($1 = 5.3391 reais)

(Reporting by Peter Frontini; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

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FDIC probing Voyager’s marketing on deposit accounts safety – WSJ

(Reuters) – The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is looking into Voyager Digital Ltd’s marketing of deposit accounts for cryptocurrency purchases, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Voyager did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

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Britain’s asset managers call for blockchain funds regime

By Carolyn Cohn

LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s Investment Association on Thursday called for the government and regulators to give the green light to tokenised funds using blockchain technology, which could make it easier for retail investors to buy illiquid assets.

Tokenised funds split their assets under management into fractions, enabling a reduced minimum investment, making them more affordable for small investors.

The use of blockchain technology, which underpins cryptocurrencies, to support tokenised funds can also reduce operational costs, industry specialists say.

“With the ever-quickening pace of technological change, the investment management industry, regulator and policymakers must work together to drive forward innovation without delay,” said Chris Cummings, chief executive of the Investment Association.

The government and the Financial Conduct Authority should establish a framework for tokenised funds to operate, the IA said in a statement.

Regulators should also assess the eligibility of cryptocurrencies in investment funds with well-diversifed portfolios, the IA added.

Abrdn is among major asset managers considering launching tokenised funds.

“We are looking at tokenisation and are currently assessing how the benefits of blockchain technology could be leveraged in the regulated funds space,” an abrdn spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

“Tokenised solutions should provide new ways for both retail and sophisticated investors to access investment products, including in the illiquid space, thanks to lower investment minimums and improved liquidity mechanisms via secondary token markets.”

Fund technology firm FundAdminChain is working with the London Stock Exchange and four asset managers on tokenised funds. FundAdminChain CEO Brian McNulty declined to name the managers.

Investors have since last year been able to buy tokens in a fund managed by private equity firm Partners Group through Singapore digital securities exchange ADDX. Investors can get in with an outlay of $10,000, rather than a typical minimum of $100,000.

However, the global Financial Stability Board has warned that tokenisation still leaves retail investors exposed to any underlying illiquid assets, like commercial property and private equity, which are hard to get out of in a hurry if prices fall.

(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn, editing by Huw Jones and Bernadette Baum)

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Crypto exchange Genesis discloses exposure to bankrupt Three Arrows Capital

(Reuters) – Digital asset exchange Genesis Trading said on Wednesday it had been exposed to Three Arrows Capital (3AC), but had mitigated its losses after the bankrupt crypto hedge fund failed to meet a margin call.

Genesis Chief Executive Officer Michael Moro in a tweet said the firm’s parent company Digital Currency Group has assumed some of its liabilities.

Genesis is also pursuing all strategies to recover any potential loss, he added.

The loans to Three Arrows had a weighted average margin requirement of over 80%, Moro said.

The disclosure comes weeks after Moro said Genesis had mitigated its losses with a “large counterparty” that had failed to meet a margin call.

Aggressive rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve and recession fears have led to a turmoil in equities and sparked a sell-off in crytocurrencies. The crypto winter has also hurt other major players like Coinbase Global Inc, which last month said it would cut about 18% of its workforce.

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Factbox-Crypto lenders run into difficulties

(Reuters) – Crypto lenders, which boomed during the COVID-19 pandemic, have run into difficulties recently due to a slump brought on by the downfall of a major token in May and a global risk-off sentiment.

Below are some of the firms that have run into trouble recently:

Terraform Labs

The South Korea-based company, which is behind the dollar-pegged stablecoin TerraUSD and its paired token Luna, has plunged in value in May, sparking sell-offs and igniting a chain reaction.

The company’s co-founder, Do Kwon, announced in May a “recovery plan”, with additional outside funding and rebuilding of TerraUSD so that it is backed by reserves rather than relying on an algorithm to maintain its 1:1 dollar peg.

An official at South Korea’s Supreme Prosecutors’ Office said on June 21 that several employees of Terraform had been put on a no-fly list and cannot leave the country.

Voyager Digital

The U.S.-based crypto lender said on July 6 it had filed for bankruptcy.

In its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, Voyager estimated that it had more than 100,000 creditors and somewhere between $1 billion and $10 billion in assets, and liabilities worth the same value.

Three Arrows Capital (3AC)

The Singapore-based crypto hedge fund has entered liquidation on June 29, two days after receiving a notice of default from lender Voyager for failing to make payments on a crypto loan of about more than $650 million.

According to a court filing on July 1, the company was seeking protection from creditors under the U.S. bankruptcy code’s Chapter 15, which allows foreign debtors to shield U.S. assets.

Celsius Network

The lending company froze its withdrawal and transfer services, citing “extreme” market conditions, and has hired advisers on a possible bankruptcy filing.

On July 4, the American-Israeli company said it has laid off a quarter of its workforce, Calcalist reported.

Vauld

The Singapore-based company said on July 4 it had suspended withdrawals for its more than 800,000 customers. In a blog post, Vauld said it was facing “financial challenges” due to volatile market conditions.

“The financial difficulties of our key business partners inevitably affecting us,” the company said, adding that customers had withdrawn around $200 million since June 12.

Babel Finance

The Hong Kong-based crypto lender said it had temporarily suspend withdrawals and redemption of crypto assets on June 17, as the company scrambles to pay its clients.

“Due to the current situation, Babel Finance is facing unusual liquidity pressures,” the company said, highlighting high volatility of the digital currency market.

(Compiled by Dina Kartit; Editing by Maju Samuel)

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Crypto exchange FTX has “a few billion” to support industry – Bankman-Fried

By John McCrank and Megan Davies

(Reuters) – Sam Bankman-Fried, head of one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges, FTX, said he and his company still have a “few billion” on hand to shore up struggling firms that could further destabilize the digital asset industry, but that the worst of the liquidity crunch has likely passed.

Bankman-Fried, 30, who is from California but lives in the Bahamas where FTX is based, has become crypto’s white knight in recent weeks, throwing lifelines to digital asset platforms which have faltered as cryptocurrencies prices have cratered. Bitcoin is down around 70% from its all-time November high of nearly $69,000.

“We’re starting to get a few more companies reaching out to us,” Bankman-Fried said in an interview. Those firms are generally not in dire situations, though some smaller crypto exchanges may still fail, he said, adding that the industry has moved beyond “other big shoes that have to drop.”

Bankman-Fried’s crypto-trading firm, Alameda Research, gave crypto-lender Voyager Digital a $200 million cash and stablecoin revolving credit facility, and a facility of bitcoin, as the company faced losses from exposure to crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital. On Wednesday, Voyager filed for bankruptcy.

Also in June, FTX handed U.S. cryptocurrency lender BlockFi a $250 million revolving credit facility and on Friday announced a deal giving FTX the right to purchase it based on certain performance triggers.

The goal of the bailouts was to protect customer assets and stop contagion from ricocheting through the system, Bankman-Fried said.

“Having trust with consumers that things will work as advertised is incredibly important and if broken is incredibly hard to get back,” he said.

In January, FTX unveiled FTX Ventures, a $2 billion venture capital fund focused on digital asset investments, which it has since drawn on to help bail out firms that are lacking liquidity, but not assets.

“It does get increasingly expensive with each one of these,” Bankman-Fried said, adding that the firm still had enough cash on hand to do a $2 billion deal if necessary.

“If all that mattered was one single event, we could get above a couple billion,” he said, stressing that isn’t his preference.

On one or two occasions, Bankman-Fried, who made billions arbitraging cryptocurrency prices in Asia beginning in 2017, said he has used his own cash to backstop failing crypto companies when it didn’t make sense for FTX to do so.

“FTX has shareholders and we have a duty to do reasonable things by them and I certainly feel more comfortable incinerating my own money,” he said.

Bankman-Fried also in May revealed he had personally taken a 7.6% stake in Robinhood Markets Inc, capitalizing on the trading app’s weakened share price.

Forbes pegged Bankman-Fried’s net worth this year at around $24 billion, but Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index in May said that figure has been cut in half due to the crypto crash.

CRYPTO WINTER

As the U.S. Federal Reserve has begun aggressively hiking rates to combat hyperinflation, investors have fled the crypto markets.

The crash in cryptocurrency prices, referred to as “crypto winter,” may have bottomed, as prices have stabilized, but it will largely depend on the macro-economic situation, said Bankman-Fried, a 2014 graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

“I don’t think it’s an existential threat to the industry, but I do think it is a fair bit worse that I would have anticipated,” Bankman-Fried said.

Bankman-Fried started his career in finance at quantitative trading firm Jane Street, then founded crypto trading firm Alameda Research and in 2019 set up FTX, which was valued in January at $32 billion.

He has said he plans to give away 99% of his wealth, and that he could spend up to $100 million supporting candidates in the 2024 election cycle, focusing on issues like pandemic prevention and bipartisanship.

While rival crypto exchanges face layoffs after earlier hiring sprees, FTX has around 300 employees, and Crunchbase pegs Alameda’s staff at fewer than 50.

“Every quarter this year, I expect our workforce to be bigger than the previous quarter, but we’re trying not to grow insanely quickly,” he said.

(Reporting by John McCrank and Megan Davies in New York; additional reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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Crypto lender Voyager files for bankruptcy

(Reuters) – Voyager Digital has filed for bankruptcy, the crypto lender said in a statement on Wednesday, a week after suspending withdrawals, trading and deposits to its platform as it sought additional time to explore strategic alternatives.

In its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing on Tuesday, Toronto-listed Voyager estimated that it had more than 100,000 creditors and somewhere between $1 billion and $10 billion in crypto assets. The company also recorded the same range for its liabilities.

Chapter 11 bankruptcy procedures put a hold on all civil litigation matters and allow companies to prepare turnaround plans while remaining operational.

“The prolonged volatility and contagion in the crypto markets over the past few months, and the default of Three Arrows Capital on a loan from the company’s subsidiary, Voyager Digital, LLC, require us to take deliberate and decisive action now,” Voyager Chief Executive Officer Stephen Ehrlich said.

Many of the crypto industry’s recent problems can be traced back to the spectacular collapse of so-called stablecoin TerraUSD in May, which saw the stablecoin lose almost all its value, along with its paired token.

(Reporting by Shivam Patel in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Ann Maria Shibu; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

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Cryptoverse: The bonfire of the NFTs

By Elizabeth Howcroft

(Reuters) – The NFT dream isn’t dead, but it’s taken a big non-fungible beating.

The market shone gloriously last year as crypto-rich speculators spent billions of dollars on the risky assets, pumping up prices and profits. Now, six months into 2022, it’s looking ugly.

Monthly sales volume on the largest NFT marketplace, OpenSea, plunged to $700 million in June, down from $2.6 billion in May and a far cry from January’s peak of nearly $5 billion.

By late June the average NFT sale sunk to $412, from $1,754 at the end of April, according to NonFungible.com, which tracks sales on the Ethereum and Ronin blockchains.

“The crypto bear market has definitely had an impact on the NFT space,” said Gauthier Zuppinger, co-founder of NonFungible.com.

“We have seen so much speculation, so much hype around this kind of asset,” he added. “Now we see some sort of decrease just because people realise they will not become a millionaire in two days.”

The NFT market has collapsed along with cryptocurrencies, which are typically used to pay for the assets, at a time when central banks have jacked up rates to combat inflation, and risk appetite has withered.

Bitcoin lost around 57% in the six months of the year, while ether has dropped 71%.

Graphic: Monthly NFT sales volume on OpenSea marketplace, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lgpdwbzbjvo/Monthly%20NFT%20sales%20volume%20on%20OpenSea%20marketplace.png

DIP OR DEATH SPIRAL?

For critics, the crash confirms the folly of buying such assets, tradable blockchain-based records linked to digital files such as images or videos, often artwork.

The Malaysian businessman who bought an NFT of Jack Dorsey’s first tweet for $2.5 million last year struggled to get bids of more than a few thousand dollars when he tried to re-sell it in April.

But Benoit Bosc, global head of product at crypto trading firm GSR, sees the downturn as the perfect time to build a corporate NFT collection – the crypto equivalent of the fine art traditional banks display to impress clients.

Last month, GSR spent $500,000 on NFTs from what Bosc calls “blue-chip” collections – those with large online fan bases.

His purchases include an NFT from the Bored Ape Yacht Club, a set of 10,000 cartoon monkeys made by U.S.-based company Yuga Labs and promoted by the likes of Paris Hilton and Jimmy Fallon.

Such is the hype surrounding Bored Apes that Yuga Labs raised $285 million in April by selling tokens it says can be exchanged for land in a Bored Apes-themed virtual world it has not yet launched.

Yet the average sale price for a Bored Ape tumbled to around $110,000 in June, having halved since its January peak of $238,000, according to market tracker CryptoSlam.

In his New York office, Bosc put up three screens on which to display his NFTs, which include various pixelated characters and a Bored Ape bought for $125,000.

“For us, it’s also a brand exercise,” Bosc said. Owning a valuable NFT and using it as a profile picture on social media is a way to establish “respectability, authority and influence” in the crypto sphere, he said.

Graphic: Average NFT sale price per week, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/klvykryrbvg/Average%20NFT%20sale%20price%20per%20week.png

GAME OVER? GAME ON?

Nonetheless, the future of NFTs is distinctly uncertain, as the era of low interest rates which encouraged investors to take risky bets comes to an end.

Some market watchers say the influence of NFTs on the art market will shrink. Meanwhile, even though the much-hyped vision for a blockchain-based metaverse hasn’t materialised yet, enthusiasts expect NFTs to shake up the gaming industry, for example by allowing players to own in-game assets such as avatar skins.

“Everyone believes games are going to be the next big thing in blockchain,” said Modesta Masoit, chief financial officer at blockchain tracker DappRadar.

This risky combination of gaming and financial speculation may face difficulties, though. Most gamers prefer games which do not include NFTs or “play-to-earn” components, according to John Egan, CEO of technology research firm L’Atelier.

Although the groundbreaking new crypto regulations agreed by the European Union last week mostly excluded NFTs, Spain is separately seeking to clamp down on the way video games sell virtual assets for real money.

Meanwhile, the biggest NFT-based game, Axie Infinity, has seen its in-game token collapse to less than half a cent, down from a peak of 36 cents last year.

For L’Atelier’s Egan, the NFT market is unlikely to recover in its current form.

“Ultimately it’s a situation where extraordinary amounts of money are being paid for extraordinarily limited assets that don’t really produce any cash flow,” he said.

But the underlying concept of creating unique digital assets is still “fundamentally important” and will have “massive applications” for the financial sector in future, he said.

Graphic: Quarterly NFT sales volume by type, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/dwpkrmbmqvm/Quarterly%20NFT%20sales%20volume%20by%20type%20across%2015%20top%20blockchains.png

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Pravin Char)

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Hacker claims to have stolen 1 billion records of Chinese citizens from police

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – A hacker has claimed to have procured a trove of personal information from the Shanghai police on one billion Chinese citizens, which tech experts say, if true, would be one of the biggest data breaches in history.

The anonymous internet user, identified as “ChinaDan”, posted on hacker forum Breach Forums last week offering to sell the more than 23 terabytes (TB) of data for 10 bitcoin, equivalent to about $200,000.

“In 2022, the Shanghai National Police (SHGA) database was leaked. This database contains many TB of data and information on Billions of Chinese citizen,” the post said.

“Databases contain information on 1 Billion Chinese national residents and several billion case records, including: name, address, birthplace, national ID number, mobile number, all crime/case details.”

Reuters was unable to verify the authenticity of the post.

The Shanghai government and police department did not respond to requests for comment on Monday.

Reuters was also unable to reach the self-proclaimed hacker, ChinaDan, but the post was widely discussed on China’s Weibo and WeChat social media platforms over the weekend with many users worried it could be real.

The hashtag “data leak” was blocked on Weibo by Sunday afternoon.

Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at Beijing-based consultancy Trivium China, said in a post on Twitter it was “hard to parse truth from rumour mill”.

If the material the hacker claimed to have came from the Ministry of Public Security, it would be bad for “a number of reasons”, Schaefer said.

“Most obviously it would be among biggest and worst breaches in history,” she said.

Zhao Changpeng, CEO of Binance, said on Monday the cryptocurrency exchange had stepped up user verification processes after the exchange’s threat intelligence detected the sale of records belonging to 1 billion residents of an Asian country on the dark web.

He said on Twitter that a leak could have happened due to “a bug in an Elastic Search deployment by a (government) agency”, without saying if he was referring to the Shanghai police case. He did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.

The claim of a hack comes as China has vowed to improve protection of online user data privacy, instructing its tech giants to ensure safer storage after public complaints about mismanagement and misuse.

Last year, China passed new laws governing how personal information and data generated within its borders should be handled.

(Reporting by Brenda Goh, Sophie Yu, Stella Qiu, Eduardo Baptista and Josh Ye; Editing by Robert Birsel)