Categories
News

Regulators propose first global rules before ‘crypto winter’ thaw

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – Cryptoasset companies should set aside capital like banks when undertaking similar activities, regulators proposed on Tuesday in their first global rules as a “crypto winter” wiped $2 trillion off the sector, leaving investors nursing losses.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), which coordinates financial rulemaking among Group of 20 Economies (G20), made nine recommendations for members to apply.

Currently, the sector is largely unregulated in most countries, having to only comply with rules for safeguarding against money laundering and terrorist financing as regulators warn investors they risk losing every penny.

Klaas Knot, the Dutch central bank president who chairs the FSB, said the “crypto winter” or recent sharp pullback in cryptocurrencies, has reinforced the board’s assessment of existing structural vulnerabilities.

The FSB has said crypto, which has a combined value of about $935 billion versus $3 trillion at their peak in November last year, are not big enough to threaten financial stability, but rules were needed to regulate a likely recovery.

“Concerns about the risks they pose to financial stability are therefore likely to come back to the fore sooner rather than later,” Knot said in a letter to G20 finance ministers meeting in Washington this week.

FSB recommends putting in place a framework for oversight, and managing risks and data at crypto firms, and having plans in place for a smooth shutting down of cryptoasset firms in trouble.

“Several crypto-asset lenders failed during the recent market turmoil as a result of vulnerability to runs, thin capitalisation, concentrated exposures to risky entities, and risky trading and business ventures,” the FSB said.

The proposals seek cross-border consistency to regulating crypto-assets, particularly as the European Union finalises groundbreaking rules to regulate the sector from 2024.

The underlying principle is that the same activity should be regulated in the same way, whether undertaken by a cryptoasset company, bank or payments provider, and that crypto firms may need to separate some functions to ensure this, the FSB said.

The proposals have been put out to public consultation until Dec. 15, before being finalised by mid-2023, when FSB members would be expected to fast-track their implementation.

The FSB also reviewed its guidance on regulating stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency usually backed by a currency like the dollar or assets.

The crash of the dollar-backed Terra stablecoin in May highlighted the high risk of loss and potential fragility of stablecoins that lack a stabilisation mechanism, the FSB said.

The watchdog said that most existing stablecoins don’t meet its guidance and it proposed revisions to the guidance include strengthening governance and stabilisation mechanisms of stablecoins, and clarifying and strengthening redemption rights.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by David Evans)

Categories
News

Fear driving China’s tech manipulation poses threat to all -UK spy chief

LONDON (Reuters) – China is using its financial and scientific muscle to manipulate technologies in a manner that risks global security, Britain’s top cyber spy will say on Tuesday, warning that Beijing’s actions could represent “a huge threat to us all.”

In a speech, Jeremy Fleming, director of the GCHQ spy agency, will say that the Chinese leadership was seeking to use technologies such as digital currencies and its Beidou satellite navigation network to tighten its grip over its citizens at home, while spreading its influence abroad.

“They seek to secure their advantage through scale and through control,” Fleming will say in the annual security lecture at the Royal United Services Institute think tank, according to extracts released by his office.

“This means they see opportunities to control the Chinese people rather than looking for ways to support and unleash their citizens’ potential. They see nations as either potential adversaries or potential client states, to be threatened, bribed, or coerced.”

The remarks are Fleming’s latest public warnings about Beijing’s behaviour and aspirations. Last year, he said the West faced a battle to ensure China did not dominate important emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, synthetic biology and genetics.

Fleming will say the Chinese leadership was driven by a fear of their own citizens, of freedom of speech, of free trade and open technological standards and alliances, “the whole open, democratic order and the international rules-based system.”

That fear combined with China’s strength was driving it “into actions that could represent a huge threat to us all,” he will say.

China has previously described similar accusations from Western governments as being groundless and politically motivated smears.

Fleming will also highlight technologies where he says China is seeking to gain leverage, such as its development of a centralised, digital currency to allow it to monitor the transactions of users, as well as to possibly evade the sort of sanctions Russia has faced since its invasion of Ukraine.

He will also point to Beidou, China’s answer to the U.S.-owned GPS navigation system.

“Many believe that China is building a powerful anti-satellite capability, with a doctrine of denying other nations access to space in the event of a conflict,” he will say. “And there are fears the technology could be used to track individuals.”

(Reporting by Michael Holden in London; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

EU watchdog trying to understand UK bond market moves

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – The European Union’s securities watchdog has asked Britain about recent extreme moves in UK government bond yields and is monitoring for “spillovers” into the bloc, its chair Verena Ross said on Monday.

UK finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng last month triggered a bond market rout with plans for unfunded tax cuts. Pension funds struggled to meet margin calls on derivatives linked to investment funds listed in EU states Ireland and Luxembourg.

“We are obviously in close touch with the UK authorities to understand the market developments that are currently happening,” Ross, chair of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), told reporters.

“I think we saw very initially some reaction also in the European markets.”

The UK bond market rout showed how developments can quickly have quite a significant impact and spillover from one market sector to another, Ross said.

“That is something that we address together with national authorities, obviously watching very carefully,” Ross said.

The Bank of England took additional steps on Monday to ease concerns about the expiry of its programme to calm turmoil in the UK government bond market.

Ross was outlining ESMA supervisory priorities for coming years, which will include helping the bloc implement it’s new rules for cryptoassets from 2024, and cracking down on ‘greenwashing’ or companies downplaying their impact on the environment and how climate change will affect their botton line.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Mark Heinrich, Kirsten Donovan)

Categories
News

Binance-linked blockchain hit by $570 million crypto hack

By Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON (Reuters) – A blockchain linked to Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, has been hit by a $570 million hack, a Binance spokesperson said on Friday, the latest in a series of hacks to hit the crypto sector this year.

Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao said in a tweet that tokens were stolen from a blockchain “bridge” used in the BNB Chain, known until February as Binance Smart Chain.

Blockchain bridges are tools used to transfer cryptocurrencies between different applications. Criminals have increasingly targeted them, with some $2 billion stolen in 13 different hacks, mostly this year, researcher Chainalysis said in August.

The hackers stole around $100 million worth of crypto, Zhao said in his tweet. BNB Chain later said in a blog post that a total of 2 million of the BNB cryptocurrency – worth around $570 million – was withdrawn by the hacker.

The majority of the BNB remained in the hacker’s digital wallet address, while about $100 million worth was “unrecovered,” the Binance spokesperson said by email.

BNB Chain supports BNB, formerly known as Binance Coin, which is the world’s fifth-largest token with a market value of over $45 billion, according to data site CoinGecko.

Elliptic, a London-based crypto blockchain researcher, told Reuters that the hacker had minted 2 million new BNB tokens before transferring most of the funds to other cryptocurrencies including Tether and USD Coin.

BNB Chain suspended its blockchain for several hours before resuming at around 0630 GMT, it said in a tweet.

BNB Chain was “able to stop the incident from spreading” by contacting the blockchain’s “validators,” – entities or individuals who verify blockchain transactions, it said in its blog post. There are 44 validators across several different time zones, it added without elaborating.

BNB Chain, described by Binance as a “community-driven, open-sourced and decentralized ecosystem,” said it would introduce a new “governance mechanism” to counter future hacks, as well as expand the number of validators.

In March, hackers stole around $615 million from a blockchain bridge called Ronin Bridge, in one of the largest crypto heists on record, ter linked by the United States to North Korean hackers.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Tom Wilson, Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Louise Heavens)

Categories
News

EU crypto rules set to cap dollar-pegged stablecoins

By Huw Jones and Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON (Reuters) – European Union rules to regulate crypto assets will curb the market share of non-euro denominated stablecoins from 2024, potentially limiting EU competitiveness, industry representatives have said.

Ambassadors for the 27 EU states on Wednesday gave their approval to a deal on the new Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation (MiCA) thrashed out in June with the European Parliament.

To become law, the Parliament must vote on the rules, something which is expected to happen in December or early 2023.

The ambassadors also published a full text of the deal, revealing details such as that stablecoins not denominated in the euro will be limited to 1 million transactions and 200 million euros ($196 million) in transaction value when marketed in the euro zone.

A joint letter by crypto industry groups Blockchain for Europe and the Digital Euro Association said that the world’s three largest stablecoins – Tether, USD Coin and Binance USD – account for 75% of crypto trade volumes and already exceed the transaction-count and volume limits set out in the EU rules.

Anto Paroian, CEO of cryptocurrency hedge fund ARK36, said the curb “will likely limit the EU’s competitiveness and innovation potential”.

The European Crypto Initiative, a Brussels-based crypto lobbying group, said in a statement the outcome could be “burdensome”.

But it said a more favourable approach to euro-denominated stablecoins was likely to emerge after “initial fears for the EU’s financial stability and monetary sovereignty”.

Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value, usually via a 1:1 peg with a fiat currency.

“If the directive’s current wording does not change, it will significantly restrict the use of dollar-denominated stablecoins such as USD Coin, Tether, and Binance US,” Fabian Astic, Global Head of DeFi and Digital Assets at Moody’s Investors Service, said.

Stefan Berger, a member of the European Parliament who helped to negotiate the final deal, told Reuters: “Indeed, this might increase the euro-pegged stablecoins, which is a welcome development.”

Tether’s dollar-pegged coin is the world’s third largest cryptocurrency, with a market cap of $68 billion, compared to$202 million for the euro-pegged version, CoinGecko data shows.

($1 = 1.0202 euros)

(Reporting by Huw Jones and Elizabeth Howcroft, editing by Barbara Lewis)

Categories
News

India’s RBI to soon commence pilot project of digital rupee

MUMBAI (Reuters) – The Reserve Bank of India will soon commence limited pilot launches of a central bank backed digital rupee for specific use cases, it said in a concept paper released on Friday.

The RBI has been exploring the pros and cons of a central bank digital currency for some time and is working towards a strategy to implement it in a phased manner, it said.

Use cases are being examined for an e-rupee in a way that there is minimal or no disruption to the financial system, the RBI added.

In February, the Indian government had said that a digital rupee will be launched during the course of this financial year.

The discussion around a central bank led digital currency has gained traction across a number of countries as cryptocurrencies became popular.

“It is the responsibility of central bank to provide its citizens with a risk free central bank digital money which will provide the users the same experience of dealing in currency in digital form, without any risks associated with private cryptocurrencies,” the RBI said.

The bank also indicated that it may consider both retail and wholesale digital currency, saying there is merit in both.

In its wholesale form, a digital currency could make settlement systems more efficient and secure, said RBI, while a retail e-rupee would offer safer means of digital payment for citizens.

The digital rupee seeks to replicate the features of cash and hence would not pay out interest, unlike bank deposits. It would also provide “reasonable anonymity for small value transactions akin to anonymity associated with physical cash,” the RBI said.

The RBI could consider a “token-based” retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) since they are comparable to cash, while a wholesale CBDC could be “account-based.”

Further, the e-rupee could be issued via banks as intermediaries, the RBI said. The central bank remains open to different technology options, it added.

The results of the pilot projects will be incorporated into the final design, according to the concept paper.

“A CBDC is aimed to complement, rather than replace, current forms of money and is envisaged to provide an additional payment avenue to users, not to replace the existing payment systems,” the bank said.

(Reporting by Ira Dugal; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Dhanya Ann Thoppil)

Categories
News

MENA emerges as world’s fastest-growing crypto adopter -study

By Yousef Saba

DUBAI (Reuters) – The Middle East and North Africa are the world’s fastest-growing cryptocurrency markets, with the volume of crypto received in the region jumping 48% in the year to June, blockchain researcher Chainalysis said in a report on Wednesday.

While the MENA region is one of the smallest crypto markets, its growth to $566 billion received in cryptocurrency between July 2021 and June 2022 shows adoption is rising rapidly.

(GRAPHIC: MENA countries by growth in crypto transaction volume, July 2020-June 2021 vs July 2021-June 2022 – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopanxwllva/Mideast%20crypto%20growth.png)

Latin America saw the second biggest growth in the same period, at 40%. North America was next at 36% growth, followed closely by Central and Southern Asia and Oceania at 35% growth, Chainalysis said.

Three MENA countries are among the top 30 in Chainalysis’ 2022 Global Crypto Adoption Index, with Turkey in 12th place, Egypt taking the 14th spot and Morocco 24th.

“In Turkey and Egypt, fluctuating cryptocurrency prices have coincided with rapid fiat (traditional) currency devaluations, strengthening the appeal of crypto for savings preservation,” Chainalysis said.

The Turkish lira has weakened nearly 30% this year to new record-lows, after losing 44% of its value last year amid a currency crisis triggered by rate cuts.

Turkey tops the MENA region in terms of value of crypto received by far, having received $192 billion worth of crypto in the year to end-June, though only saw 10.5% year-on-year growth.

Egypt’s currency has also lost about a quarter of its value against the dollar at the start of the year.

“Remittance payments account for about 8% of Egypt’s GDP, and the country’s national bank has already begun a project to build a crypto-based remittance corridor between Egypt and the UAE, where many Egyptian natives work,” Chainalysis said.

The six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council “seldom make it to the top of our grassroots crypto adoption index, as it weighs countries by purchasing power parity per capita, which favours poorer nations,” Chainalysis said.

GRAPHIC: MENA countries by crypto value received, July 2021 to June 2022 – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xmpjozbrovr/Mideast%20crypto%20adoption.png)

“Nevertheless, their role in the crypto ecosystem should not be underestimated. Saudi Arabia, for example, is the third-largest crypto market in all of MENA, and UAE is fifth.”

Afghanistan, which was 20th in Chainalysis’ adoption index last year, has tumbled to the bottom of the list as Taliban authorities have “equated crypto to gambling,” which is forbidden in Islam, Chainalysis said.

From November 2021 to now, Afghanistan-based users received less than $80,000 in crypto a month on average from $68 million a month on average before the Taliban’s takeover, Chainalysis said.

(Reporting by Yousef Saba. Editing by Jane Merriman)

Categories
News

SWIFT sets out blueprint for central bank digital currency network

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – Financial messaging system SWIFT has laid out its blueprint for a global central bank digital currency (CBDC) network following an 8-month experiment on different technologies and currencies.

The trial, which involved France and Germany’s national central banks as well as global lenders like HSBC, Standard Chartered and UBS, looked at how CBDCs could be used internationally and even converted into fiat money if needed.

Around 90% of the world’s central banks are now using, trialling or looking into CBDCs. Most don’t want to be left behind by bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but are grappling with technological complexities.

SWIFT’s head of innovation Nick Kerigan said its trial, which will be followed by more advanced testing over the next year, resembled a bicycle wheel where 14 central and commercial banks in total connected spoke-like into its main hub.

The idea is that once scaled-up, banks may need only one main global connection, rather than thousands if they were to set up connections with each counterpart individually.

“We believe that the number of connections needed is much fewer,” Kerigan said. “Therefore, you are likely to have fewer breaks (in the chain) and you are likely to achieve greater efficiency.”

The trial also tested different underlying CBDC technologies known as Distributed Ledger Technologies. The use of various technologies has also been raised as a potential hurdle for rapid global adoption.

There was a separate trial too carried out alongside Citi, clearing house Clearstream and Northern Trust on ‘tokenised’ assets – traditional assets like stocks and bonds transformed into digital tokens that can then be issued and traded in real-time.

Some countries such as the Bahamas and Nigeria already have CBDC’s up and running. China is well advanced with real-life trials of an e-yuan, while central bank umbrella group, the Bank for International Settlements, has also been running cross-border trials.

SWIFT’s main advantage though is that its existing network is already usable in over 200 countries and connects more than 11,500 banks and funds.

The Belgium-based firm has gone from being virtually unknown outside banking circles to a household name this year after it cut most of Russia’s banks off from its network as part of the West’s sanctions for the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Kerigan said that kind of move could also happen in a new CBDC system, but doubted whether it would stop countries joining one.

“Ultimately what most central banks are looking to do is to provide us with a CBDC for the people, the businesses and the organisations in their jurisdiction.”

“So a solution that’s fast and efficient and that gains access to as many other countries as possible would seem to be an attractive one.”

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa)

Categories
News

Celsius co-founder and strategy head Leon resigns from bankrupt crypto lender

(Reuters) – Celsius Network’s co-founder and chief strategy officer Daniel Leon has stepped down, the bankrupt crypto lender said on Tuesday, joining a wave of executive departures from beleaguered digital asset companies.

The announcement comes a week after chief executive officer Alex Mashinsky’s resignation. Leon’s departure was first reported by CNBC.

Hoboken, New Jersey-based Celsius filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in July, a month after freezing withdrawals citing extreme market conditions.

Lenders such as Celsius boomed in lockstep with the surge in popularity of major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, as they offered interest rates much higher than traditional banks and easy access to loans.

However, the collapse of digital tokens terraUSD and luna, coupled with a tough macroeconomic environment, tested their business model and eroded customers’ optimism.

Voyager Digital Ltd, another major U.S. crypto lender, also filed for bankruptcy in July.

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

Categories
News

Dollar slides as U.S. yields ease; euro, sterling jump

By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar slid against most major currencies on Tuesday as the yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury fell after Australia’s central bank surprised investors with a smaller-than-expected interest rate hike, with the euro climbing more than 1%.

The Australian dollar was down 0.2% at $0.6503, dragged down after the move by the Reserve Bank of Australia, which said rates had increased substantially in a short period.

The euro was last up 1.6% at $0.9978, recovering from its 20-year low of $0.9528 on Sept. 26, while sterling shot up 1.2% to $1.1456, off a record low of $1.0327 also hit Sept. 26.

A calmer British government bond market was a relief for the pound after recent government-inspired turmoil. In a statement on Monday, the Bank of England reaffirmed its willingness to buy long-dated gilts and the head of Britain’s debt management office, overseeing the bond market, told Reuters in an interview the market was resilient.

The moves in the dollar and yields appear to partially reflect market participants’ views on the outlook for rates, some strategists said. Investors are hoping that recent economic growth concerns may be enough to force the Federal Reserve and other central banks to become less aggressive in their fight against inflation. At the same time, stocks were rallying.

“We’re seeing a drop in interest rate expectations across the financial markets on the basis of Reserve Bank of Australia’s surprise smaller-than-expected hike,” said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay in Toronto.

“That has sort of had a canary in the coal mine effect from market participants globally. People are ratcheting down what they expect from the Federal Reserve and other central banks and that’s really compelling a drive out of the dollar and into risk sensitive assets.”

Also, economic data showed job openings in the United States fell to 10.053 million in August, the most in nearly 2-1/2 years.

“It’s a much more-drastic-than-expected drawdown in the number of job openings, and that is what we would expect to see if the Fed were nearing the end of their tightening trajectory,” Schamotta said.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes was down 6.6 basis points to 3.585%.

The Fed’s aggressive push to raise rates and the recent steady climb in Treasury yields have helped support the dollar’s sharp gains this year.

Investors were still closely watching China’s yuan, with Chinese authorities having come out in recent weeks with maneuvers to slow its slide. But on Tuesday, the dollar fell against the offshore yuan. The dollar was last down 0.9% at 7.0383 and hit a session low late of 7.0332.

Elsewhere, the dollar was down 0.4% against the Japanese yen at 144.03 yen, keeping below 145 after briefly popping above that level on Monday for the first time since Japanese authorities intervened to support their currency on Sept. 22.

Japanese finance minister Shunichi Suzuki repeated on Monday that authorities stand ready for “decisive” steps in the foreign exchange market if “sharp and one-sided” yen moves persisted.

(Additional reporting by Kevin Buckland in Toyko and Alun John in London; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Andrea Ricci and Jonathan Oatis)

Categories
News

U.S. SEC’s crypto guidelines push up costs for lenders, disrupting projects

By Hannah Lang and Michelle Price

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Banks’ cryptocurrency projects have been upended by U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) accounting guidance that would make it too capital-intensive for lenders to hold crypto tokens on behalf of clients, according to more than half a dozen people with knowledge of the matter.  

A slew of lenders including U.S. Bancorp, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co, BNY Mellon, Wells Fargo & Co, Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas and State Street Corp offer or are working on crypto products and services for clients in a bid to tap in to the $1 trillion crypto market, according to their public statements and media reports.

But on March 31, the SEC said public companies that hold crypto assets on behalf of clients or others must account for them as liabilities on their balance sheets due to their technological, legal and regulatory risks.

While the guidance applies to all public companies, it is especially problematic for banks because their strict capital rules, overseen by bank regulators, require them to hold cash against balance sheet liabilities. The SEC did not consult the banking regulators when issuing the guidance, according to four of the people.

The SEC’s move complicates banks’ efforts to jump on the digital asset bandwagon, and could keep them on the sidelines even as they report increased demand from clients looking to access the burgeoning market.

“This has thrown a huge wrench in the mix,” one of the sources said. Lenders building out crypto offerings have had “to cease moving forward with those plans pending any kind of further action from the SEC and the banking regulatory agencies,” they added.

Custody banks State Street and BNY Mellon, which have been building digital asset offerings, are among those whose projects have been disrupted, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

While the accounting guidance does not stop State Street from offering crypto custody services, it would make doing so uneconomical, said Nadine Chakar, head of State Street Digital. “We do have an issue with the premise of doing that, because these are not our assets. This should not be on our balance sheet,” said Chakar.

A spokesperson for BNY Mellon declined to comment on the status of its crypto custody project. “BNY Mellon believes digital assets are here to stay, and increasingly becoming part of the mainstream of finance,” he added.

When asked about the SEC guidance, a U.S. Bancorp spokesperson said it is still servicing existing clients for which it offers bitcoin custody services. “However, we are pausing intake of additional clients in this service as we evaluate the evolving regulatory environment.”

One executive at a European bank looking to launch crypto custody services said it would now be prohibitively costly for the bank to do so in the United States due to the SEC guidance.

Spokespeople for the SEC and the other banks declined to comment.

The problems the SEC guidance is causing for banks, which have not previously been reported, underscore the broader challenges lenders face in trying to capitalize upon the growing crypto market amid ongoing regulatory confusion and skepticism.

“We’ve heard from a wide variety of stakeholders, banks among them, about how challenging this new staff accounting bulletin would be for them to be able to enter in to the space of custodying crypto assets,” U.S. Representative Trey Hollingsworth, who sent SEC Chair Gary Gensler a letter in July expressing concern about the guidance, said in an interview.

“This edict came down without guidance, without input, without feedback, without conversation being had with industry.”

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT?

As the cryptocurrency market ballooned in 2020, financial institutions were eager to cash in. Despite the crypto market contracting significantly this year, lenders still see an opportunity for their services.

Offering to hold clients’ digital assets appeared the safest way to enter the market. Banks commonly offer custody for a variety of financial instruments and have generally not been required to reflect them on their balance sheet, unless they are commingled with the bank’s own assets.

The SEC guidance departed from that practice. At a conference last week, the SEC’s acting chief accountant said that custodied crypto assets present “unique” risks which meet the definition of a liability under U.S. accounting standards.

In a June letter to bank regulators, however, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute said such risks are already mitigated by strict bank supervision and rules.

Factoring in planned international Basel capital rules, the guidance could cost more than $1 of capital for every $1 of digital assets held, the groups estimated, meaning crypto custody “effectively would be prohibited.”

The SEC guidance also appears to apply where lenders outsource the custody function to a third party, such as Anchorage Digital, the sources said.

Diogo Mónica, president of Anchorage Digital, said the capital cost was “completely unsupportable” and that “every single bank” Anchorage works with is now waiting on regulators before proceeding to work with Anchorage on crypto custody solutions.

Industry groups have been lobbying the SEC to carve banks out of the guidance, according to four of the sources and industry letters, although the agency appears unpersuaded, one of those people said. Some lenders, instead, are seeking individual exemptions, two people said.

The industry is also lobbying the banking regulators to issue guidance that would neutralize the capital impact of the SEC guidance, although changing capital rules would be a major undertaking which looks unlikely in the short term, the people said.

The Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp declined to comment.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang and Michelle Price in Washington; Additional reporting by Pete Schroeder in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

U.S. Senate to grill SEC’s Gensler over climate, China and crypto

By Pete Schroeder and Michelle Price

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – An aggressive regulator is critical to maintaining the United States as the “gold standard” for capital markets, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler will tell the U.S. Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.

Gensler will appear before the panel for its regular oversight duties, but the hearing comes at a time of Republican frustration over his agenda. They claim he has overstepped his authority with a broad assault on U.S. capital markets and adopted a hostile stance toward the financial industry.

Republican representative Tom Emmer told Reuters in July that, under Gensler, the SEC had “politicized rulemaking and discouraged good faith cooperation.”

But in prepared testimony released ahead of the hearing, Gensler insisted his new rules are critical to the predominant status of U.S. markets.

“As markets have evolved, our rules have continued to evolve as well,” he said. “I think we should do everything we can to maintain and enhance that gold standard of our capital markets.”

CLIMATE RULE CONCERNS

Republicans are especially concerned about a draft SEC rule requiring public companies to disclose climate-related risks, including greenhouse gas emissions. Corporate groups say it is onerous and exceeds the agency’s authority.

Gensler is likely to be grilled on the climate rule, especially in light of a recent Supreme Court decision to curb the Environmental Protection Agency’s power, which some legal experts say undermines the SEC’s authority on the rule.

But Gensler said the rule would provide needed clarity and consistency to an issue important to investors and being disclosed by some companies under disparate frameworks.

CRYPTOCURRENCY CRITICISMS

Republicans will also pressure Gensler on what some see as his increasingly hawkish stance on cryptocurrency oversight, said Isaac Boltansky, director of policy research for brokerage BTIG.

Gensler made headlines last week when he said crypto companies may need multiple SEC registrations and split their operations into separate legal entities.

Senator Pat Toomey, the senior Republican on the committee criticized Gensler’s approach in July.

“What is the SEC doing now to help ensure the crypto community gets the regulatory clarity it has repeatedly asked for? They deserve answers now, not later.”

In his prepared testimony, Gensler said such “disaggregation” could enhance investor protections and guard against conflicts of interest. He added that SEC staff was working with traditional market intermediaries interested in entering the crypto market, and urged Congress to not inadvertently undermine existing investor protections while crafting cryptocurrency legislation.

U.S.-CHINA AUDIT DEAL

Gensler also struck a cautious tone on a recent deal between U.S. and Chinese officials on auditing U.S.-listed Chinese firms, noting the accord is meaningful only if U.S. officials actually are permitted to fully investigate Chinese auditors.

If not, roughly 200 companies would still face the prospect of trading restrictions in the United States, he warned.

“There was a fair amount of fanfare after the agreement in August, but there are still some real questions about how the agreement will work and some understandable skepticism on Capitol Hill about its prospects for success,” said Boltansky.

(Reporting by Michelle Price and Pete Schroeder; Editing by Josie Kao)

Categories
News

Explainer-Ethereum’s energy-saving Merge upgrade

By Elizabeth Howcroft and Hannah Lang

(Reuters) – Ethereum, the blockchain that underpins the world’s second-largest crypto token ether, on Thursday underwent a major software upgrade that slashes the amount of energy needed to create new coins and carry out transactions.

Here’s what you need to know about the “Merge” as the shift is known.

WHAT IS ETHEREUM?

Like other blockchains, Ethereum is essentially a digital database shared across a network of computers. It records ownership of the cryptocurrency ether, and other Ethereum-based digital assets such as non-fungible tokens.

Proponents say Ethereum will form the backbone of much of the widely hyped but still unrealised “Web3” vision of an internet where crypto takes centre stage in applications and commerce.

SO WHAT IS THE MERGE?

The “Merge” is a change to the way Ethereum processes transactions and how new ether tokens are created.

It involved the Ethereum blockchain combining with a new separate blockchain. The new system, known as “proof-of-stake”, slashes the Ethereum blockchain’s energy consumption by 99.9%, developers say.

Most blockchains, including bitcoin’s, devour large amounts of energy, sparking criticism from some investors and environmentalists.

The Ethereum Foundation, a prominent non-profit organisation that says it supports Ethereum, says the upgrade will pave the way for further blockchain updates that will facilitate cheaper transactions.

HOW BIG OF A DEAL IS THIS?

Ethereum backers say the Merge is a monumental moment for the $1 trillion crypto sector.

Proponents believe the Merge will make Ethereum more favourable compared to arch-rival bitcoin – the world’s top cryptocurrency – in terms of price and usability.

That could see Ethereum applications become more widely used.

Some investors are betting the change will be significant for the price of ether, which has gained more than 50% since the end of June, compared to bitcoin’s minimal gains.

Ether’s price showed little reaction to the Merge’s completion on Thursday, trading at around $1,624.

PROOF-OF-STAKE? SOUNDS TECHNICAL

It is. But it’s also important.

There are different ways transactions on the blockchain – the software that underpins most crypto – can be verified. In the “proof-of-work” system previously used by Ethereum, new transactions were checked by crypto miners.

Miners used powerful computers that solved complex maths puzzles and updated the blockchain, earning new crypto tokens. While this made records on the blockchain secure, it was highly energy-intensive.

In the “proof-of-stake” system, ether owners will lock up set amounts of their coins to check new records on the blockchain, earning new coins on top of their “staked” crypto.

SOUNDS LIKE A NO-BRAINER, RIGHT?

Maybe. While Ethereum developers say the “proof-of-stake” model has safeguards to ward off hackers, others say criminals could attack the blockchain under the new system.

If a single entity accumulated the majority of ether staked to validate new transactions, they could alter the blockchain and steal tokens. Crypto experts also say there is a risk that technical glitches could mar the Merge, and that scammers could take advantage of confusion to steal tokens.

It may also become easier for developers to build programmes on the Ethereum network, potentially boosting adoption. Still, those updates are likely months, if not years, away.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington and Elizabeth Howcroft, editing by Tom Wilson, Chizu Nomiyama and Jason Neely)

Categories
News

Ethereum blockchain has completed major software upgrade, co-founder says

(Reuters) – A major software upgrade to the Ethereum blockchain aimed at drastically reducing its energy usage has been completed, Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum inventor and co-founder tweeted on Thursday. The upgrade, known as the “Merge”, will change how transactions on the Ethereum blockchain occur and how ether tokens, the second-largest crypto coin after bitcoin, are created. Under the change, Ethereum will move from a “proof of work” system, in which energy-hungry computers validate transactions by solving complex maths problems, to a “proof of stake” system, where individuals and companies act as validators, using their ether as collateral, to win newly created tokens.

(Reporting by Tom Wilson and Maria Ponnezhath in Bengaluru; editing by Jason Neely)

Categories
News

Yen jumps vs dollar after BOJ rate check, hints on intervention, U.S. PPI data

By Caroline Valetkevitch and Alun John

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – The yen was up more than 1% against the dollar on Wednesday after the Bank of Japan conducted a rate check in possible preparation for currency intervention, with the Japanese currency strengthening more in the wake of U.S. producer prices data.

In a rate check, central bank officials call up dealers and ask for the price of buying or selling yen. However, actually intervening to support the currency would be a larger step.

Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki told reporters on Wednesday that recent yen moves have been “rapid and one-sided”, adding that yen-buying currency intervention was among the government’s options should such moves continue.

“Most market participants are on pins and needles awaiting whether or not we’re going to get any sort of intervention from the ministry of finance in Japan,” said Bipan Rai, North American head of FX strategy at CIBC Capital Markets in Toronto.

“It’s one of those things where we’ve seen comments so many times about the fact that they’re watching and monitoring the yen. The fact that they did a rate check overnight kind of indicates we’re in greater proximity toward intervention. But just intervention by itself we don’t think is going to be all that successful outside of an immediate knee-jerk reaction.”

The recent sharp gains in the dollar versus the yen have been tied to the hawkish stance from the Federal Reserve in raising interest rates to control inflation. The dollar hit a 24-year peak against the yen last week.

The dollar fell 1% against the yen right after news of the rate check. Nikkei website reported the rate check, citing unidentified sources, and Reuters later confirmed it with a market source. The dollar was last down 1.4% at 142.67 yen, hitting a session low of 142.6 in the wake of the PPI data.

The dollar index, which tracks the currency against six main peers, was down 0.3% on Wednesday at 109.55, a day after registering its largest daily percentage gain since March 2020 on an unexpected rise in the U.S. consumer price index (CPI).

On Wednesday, data showed producer prices fell for second straight month in August, while it also showed underlying producer inflation rising moderately last month.

Financial markets now have fully priced in an interest rate hike of at least 75 basis points at the conclusion of the Fed’s policy meeting next week, according to the CME’s Fedwatch tool.

As inflation is a small concern in Japan, authorities are keeping yields on Japanese government bonds pinned down to help with the economic recovery. [JP/T]

In contrast, the two-year U.S. Treasury yield, a bellwether for interest rate expectations, rose another 3.2 basis points to 3.788% after jumping 18.5 bps on Tuesday following the consumer price data.

The euro was up 0.1% against the dollar at $0.9979.

========================================================

Currency bid prices at 10:42AM (1442 GMT)

Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid

Previous Change

Session

Dollar index

109.5500 109.8300 -0.25% 14.517% +109.9300 +109.2700

Euro/Dollar

$0.9979 $0.9968 +0.11% +0.00% +$1.0024 +$0.9956

Dollar/Yen

142.6700 144.6200 -1.35% +0.00% +144.9550 +142.5800

Euro/Yen

142.36 144.08 -1.19% +0.00% +144.4700 +142.3000

Dollar/Swiss

0.9609 0.9619 -0.10% +0.00% +0.9631 +0.9591

Sterling/Dollar

$1.1565 $1.1494 +0.61% +0.00% +$1.1578 +$1.1480

Dollar/Canadian

1.3159 1.3175 -0.11% +0.00% +1.3206 +1.3149

Aussie/Dollar

$0.6742 $0.6733 +0.14% +0.00% +$0.6748 +$0.6705

Euro/Swiss

0.9588 0.9583 +0.05% +0.00% +0.9628 +0.9582

Euro/Sterling

0.8628 0.8674 -0.53% +0.00% +0.8684 +0.8629

NZ

Dollar/Dollar $0.6012 $0.6000 +0.08% +0.00% +$0.6013 +$0.5978

Dollar/Norway

10.1000 10.1125 +0.10% +0.00% +10.1460 +10.0710

Euro/Norway

10.0806 10.0641 +0.16% +0.00% +10.1251 +10.0577

Dollar/Sweden

10.6880 10.6882 +0.09% +0.00% +10.7160 +10.6211

Euro/Sweden

10.6662 10.6570 +0.09% +0.00% +10.6779 +10.6369

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch in New York and Alun John in London and Kevin Buckland; Editing by Kim Coghill, Edmund Klamann, Toby Chopra, Mark Heinrich and Jonathan Oatis)

Categories
News

Cryptoverse: Ether snaps at bitcoin’s heels in race for crypto crown

By Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) – For years, ether could barely dream of challenging its big brother bitcoin. Now, its ambitions may be becoming more realistic.

The second-biggest cryptocurrency is taking market share from bitcoin ahead of an all-important “Merge” software upgrade that could sharply reduce the energy usage of its Ethereum blockchain, should the developers pull it off in coming days.

Bitcoin’s dominance, or its share of the crypto market’s market value, has slipped to 39.1% from this year’s peak of 47.5% in mid-June, according to data platform CoinMarketCap. Ether, on the other hand, has climbed to 20.5% from 16%.

The upstart is still a long way from overtaking bitcoin as the No.1 cryptocurrency, a reversal known to aficionados as “the flippening”. It’s made up ground, though; in January 2021, bitcoin reigned supreme at 72%, while ether occupied a slender 10%.

As for price, one ether is now worth 0.082 bitcoin, near December 2021 highs and sharply above the 2022 low of 0.049 in June.

“People are now viewing Ethereum as essentially a safe asset because they’ve seen the success of the network, they think it’s not going anywhere,” said Joseph Edwards, head of financial strategy at fund management firm Solrise Finance.

“There’s a permanency to how Ethereum is perceived in the crypto ecosystem.”

Graphic: Bitcoin dominance wanes: https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/WEEKLY/zdvxomazgpx/chart.png

CAPRICIOUS CRYPTO

The Merge, expected to take place on Thursday after several delays, could lead to wider use of the blockchain, potentially boosting ether’s price – although nothing is certain in a capricious crypto market.

Ethereum forms the backbone of much of the “Web3” vision of an internet where crypto takes centre stage, powering applications involving crypto offshoots such as decentralised finance and non-fungible tokens – although this much-hyped dream is still unrealised.

Bitcoin and ether have both nearly halved this year on concerns about supersized interest rate hikes from central banks. Nonetheless, investors seem to like the look of the Merge, with ether up over 65% since the end of June. Bitcoin has barely budged in the same period.

“We’re going to see (ether’s) attractiveness to some investors who are concerned about energy consumption,” said Doug Schwenk, CEO of Digital Asset Research, although he cautioned that ether was still a long way behind bitcoin.

THE KING IS STRONG

The diminishing bitcoin dominance in crypto’s current bear market is a departure from previous market cycles when investors sold lesser tokens – “altcoins” – in favor of the more liquid and reliable bitcoin.

Dethroning the king is no easy feat, though.

Bitcoin is still by far the most well-known cryptocurrency. Mainstream investors who have dipped their toes in the crypto market since 2020 have tended to turn first to bitcoin, as the most liquid and widely-traded token.

Its market cap of $427 billion is still more than double Ether’s $210 billion, and market participants firmly believe the original digital coin remains the gold standard in crypto due to its limited supply.

Some market players say bitcoin’s grip on the crypto crown is still strong, even if it has to accept other contenders. For example, Hugo Xavier, CEO of K2 Trading Partners, said its dominance could improve to 50%-60% range if the crypto market turns bullish but it is unlikely to touch 70% again.

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Tom Wilson and Pravin Char)

Categories
News

Bank capital rules for cryptoassets due by year end

LONDON (Reuters) – The global Basel Committee of banking regulators will complete work on “robust” rules for how banks must set aside capital to cover cryptoassets on their books, the committee’s oversight body said on Tuesday.

“On cryptoassets, members reiterated the importance of designing a robust and prudent regulatory framework for banks’ exposures to cryptoassets that promotes responsible innovation while preserving financial stability,” the Group of Central Bank Governors and Heads of Supervision (GHOS) said in a statement.

“The GHOS tasked the Committee with finalising such a framework around the end of this year.”

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Alison Williams)

Categories
News

Brother of ex-Coinbase manager pleads guilty to insider trading charge

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The brother of a former Coinbase Global Inc product manager pleaded guilty on Monday to a wire fraud conspiracy charge in what U.S. prosecutors have called the first insider trading case involving cryptocurrency.

Nikhil Wahi said in a virtual court hearing before U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska that he made trades based on confidential Coinbase information.

Prosecutors say Ishan Wahi, the former product manager, shared confidential information with his brother and their friend Sameer Ramani about forthcoming announcements of new digital assets that Coinbase would allow users to trade.

Ishan Wahi has pleaded not guilty. Ramani, who was also charged, is at large.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Bernadette Baum)

Categories
News

Ethereum blockchain to undergo major upgrade to cut energy use

By Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON (Reuters) – A long-awaited software upgrade to the Ethereum blockchain aimed at slashing its huge energy consumption is expected this week, a move proponents say may widen the technology’s use and support the price of the ether token.

The upgrade, known as the “Merge,” will mark a radical change to how transactions on the Ethereum blockchain occur and ether tokens are created. The new system will consume 99.95% less energy, according to the Ethereum Foundation https://ethereum.org/en/upgrades/merge/, a body which acts as a spokesperson for the network.

The exact timing for the Merge is unknown, but Google and other sites tracking the blockchain were on Monday predicting it would take place in the early hours of Thursday. The Ethereum Foundation has said it will take place on Sept. 10-20. The event has been delayed several times previously.

If successful, Ethereum will move from a “proof of work” system – in which energy-hungry computers validate transactions by solving complex mathematical problems – to a “proof of stake” protocol, in which individuals and companies act as validators, using their ether as collateral, in a bid to win fresh tokens.

Ether is the second-largest cryptocurrency after bitcoin, with a market capitalisation of around $200 billion, according to data site CoinGecko. There are around 1 million to 1.5 million transactions per day on the Ethereum blockchain, compared to Bitcoin’s 200,000 to 300,000, according to CoinMetrics data.

Crypto prices plunged earlier this year as a broader downturn in financial markets prompted investors to ditch risky assets. Ether has risen around 65% since the end of June ahead of the Merge, while bitcoin has seen little change.

“This is a very material development in the overall evolution plan for Ethereum,” said James Malcolm, head of FX strategy at UBS. Still, he said, it may not necessarily impact the price of ether as the Merge is already priced in.

ENERGY-SAVING?

The high energy use of crypto and blockchain tech has drawn criticism from some investors and environmentalists. A single transaction on Ethereum currently requires as much power as an average U.S. household uses in a week, according to researcher Digiconomist https://digiconomist.net/ethereum-energy-consumption.

To proponents, the energy-saving upgrade represents a major step forward in the race to become the world’s top blockchain.

Ethereum has become the blockchain of choice for various functions in the world of decentralised finance, including smart contracts and projects involving tokens representing traditional assets such as stocks and bonds.

Ethereum backers say the tech will form the basis of a new financial system, in which money and assets can be traded in the form of crypto tokens without the need for providers of traditional financial services.

Others see it as a cornerstone of so-called “Web3,” a hyped but still unrealised iteration of the internet where blockchain and crypto assets take centre stage.

Still, ether has so far seen limited mainstream adoption as a means of payment, with trading by far the most popular use.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; editing by Tom Wilson and Louise Heavens)

Categories
News

U.S. SEC to set up new office for crypto filings

(Reuters) – The U.S. securities regulator will set up two new offices to deal with filings related to crypto assets and the life sciences sector, the agency said on Friday.

The “Office of Crypto Assets” and the “Office of Industrial Applications and Services” will join seven existing offices under the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) department which handles corporate disclosure filings.

“As a result of recent growth in the crypto asset and the life sciences industries, we saw a need to provide greater and more specialized support,” Renee Jones, director of the Division of Corporation Finance, said in a statement.

Cryptocurrencies and other digital assets have soared in popularity over recent years and are getting increasingly intertwined with the regulated financial system, saddling policymakers with monitoring risks in a largely unregulated sector.

2022 has seen a sharp drop in crypto demand though, as global risk sentiment was walloped by the Ukraine crisis, aggressive monetary policy tightening and decades-high inflation.

Allegations of money laundering against some crypto firms as well as consumer data violations in the United States, the biggest market for digital assets, have also affected demand.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath)