Categories
News

FTX Ventures plans to take 30% stake in Scaramucci’s SkyBridge Capital

By Mehnaz Yasmin

(Reuters) – FTX Ventures plans to scoop up a 30% stake in SkyBridge Capital, the companies said, making it the latest in a flurry of deals by cryptocurrency’s white knight Sam Bankman-Fried.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed by the companies.

SkyBridge, the alternative investment firm led by Anthony Scaramucci, will use a portion of the proceeds from the deal to deploy $40 million in cryptocurrency investments to hold on its balance sheet as a long-term investment, according to a joint statement by the companies.

The news was first reported by CNBC earlier in the day.

“I don’t think that Sam Bankman-Fried’s recent movement is an altruistic gesture,” said Richard Gardner, chief executive officer of Modulus Global, a software provider to big-ticket Wall Street clients.

“Some investors may see this as a turnaround for the industry, but I think it is more of a life jacket than a lifeboat.”

The cryptocurrency sector found a savior in Bankman-Fried, 30, who threw several lifelines to digital asset platforms as cryptocurrency prices cratered this year.

The head of one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges had said in July that he and his company still have a “few billion” on hand to shore up struggling firms that could further destabilize the digital asset industry.

His crypto trading arm, Alameda Research, provided $200 million in cash, a stablecoin revolving credit facility and a facility of bitcoin to Voyager Digital before it went bankrupt, while FTX had handed another $400 million revolving credit facility to BlockFi with an option to buy it for up to $240 million.

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.

(This story corrects last name to “Gardner”, not “Garner” in paragraph 5)

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

Categories
News

Bitcoin leaps above $21,000 as U.S. dollar sags

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Bitcoin surged past the $20,000 barrier and was potentially heading for its best day in six months on Friday as the U.S. dollar fell broadly and markets found reasons to be cheerful at the end of a dour week.

Bitcoin, the biggest cryptocurrency by market value, rose more than 9% to $21,254, a two-week high. If it holds, the daily percentage gain would be the largest since late February.

Ether, the second-biggest, rose more than 5% to hit a three-week peak at $1,746. Bitcoin had been as low as $18,540 on Wednesday.

Market participants said there was no particular trigger for the gains beyond a broad upbeat mood in evidence across asset classes on Friday, led by a drop in the safe-haven dollar and reinforced by positive moves in global shares. [MKTS/GLOB]

Marcus Sotiriou a market analyst at GlobalBlock attributed Bitcoin’s climb to optimism that the United States could report another decline in inflation next week.

Such a decline would typically be expected to support assets like cryptocurrencies that do well when markets have an optimistic tone.

If cryptocurrencies can hold their gains until Sunday’s close, Bitcoin could log a second weekly rise in a row, and its best week in about a month.

Ether’s weekend volatility may be heightened by a looming software upgrade known as the “merge”, due sometime between Sept. 10 and 20, with the exact timing uncertain.

The shift will radically change how transactions are processed and is supposed to slash energy consumption. Some exchanges plan to pause deposits and withdrawals while the upgrade occurs.

(Reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singpaore, additional reporting by Alun John in London; Editing by Mark Potter and Jane Merriman)

Categories
News

Explainer-Understanding Ethereum’s major “Merge” upgrade

By Hannah Lang

(Reuters) – Ethereum, the blockchain that underpins the world’s second-largest crypto token ether, will soon undergo a major software upgrade that promises to slash 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.

SO WHAT IS THE MERGE?

The Ethereum blockchain is due to merge with a separate blockchain, radically changing the way it processes transactions and how new ether tokens are created.

The new system, known as “proof-of-stake,” will slash 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 organization that says it supports Ethereum, says the upgrade will pave the way for further blockchain updates that will facilitate cheaper transactions. High costs and slow transaction times are currently two of the main issues users have with the Ethereum network.

AND WHEN’S IT HAPPENING?

Very soon. The merge is scheduled for completion between Sept. 10 and 20, though the exact timing is uncertain. Independent estimates point to Sept. 15 as the likely date.

Major crypto exchanges, including Coinbase Global and Binance, have said they will pause ether deposits and withdrawals during the merge. Users won’t need to do anything with their funds or digital wallets as part of the upgrade, they say.

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. 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 a slight loss for bitcoin.

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 currently used by Ethereum, new transactions are checked by crypto miners.

Miners use powerful computers that solve complex maths puzzles and update the blockchain, earning new crypto tokens. While this makes records on the blockchain secure, it’s 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 programs on the Ethereum network, potentially boosting adoption. Still, those updates are likely months, if not years, away.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; editing by Tom Wilson and)

Categories
News

Crypto intermediaries should register with U.S. SEC, agency chair says

By Michelle Price

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Companies that help facilitate transactions in the cryptocurrency market should register with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) just like other market intermediaries, the agency’s chair said on Thursday.

Gary Gensler said intermediaries in the crypto market provide a range of functions regulated by the SEC, including operating as an exchange, broker dealer, clearing agent and custodian, and should be registered accordingly.

“If you fall into any of these buckets, come in, talk to us, and register,” Gensler told an audience of attorneys in Washington, D.C., reiterating that the vast majority of crypto tokens qualify as securities and are captured by relevant laws.

“The commingling of the various functions within crypto intermediaries creates inherent conflicts of interest and risks for investors,” he added.

While Gensler has previously said crypto lenders fall under the SEC’s purview, his comments provide more detail on other crypto market actors the SEC believes fall within its jurisdiction.

The comments will likely spook crypto market participants who had hoped to avoid the costly requirements typically associated with SEC registration, including disclosures, risk management controls and capital and liquidity minimums, although it remains to be seen if such firms will voluntarily comply.

Gensler said he has asked SEC staff to work with crypto intermediaries to ensure they register each of their functions, which could involve splitting them out into separate legal entities to mitigate conflicts of interest.

He added, however, that the SEC may need to be flexible in applying existing disclosure requirements, noting tailored product disclosures exist elsewhere under the SEC’s regime.

(Reporting by Michelle Price; Additional reporting by Hannah Lang; Editing by Josie Kao)

Categories
News

U.S. seizes $30 million in crypto from North Korea-linked hackers

(Reuters) – The United States has seized over $30 million in cryptocurrency stolen by North Korean-linked hackers Lazarus from the popular online game Axie Infinity, crypto intelligence firm Chainalysis said on Thursday.

The company said in a blog post it played a role in the recovery with U.S. law enforcement and other crypto organizations, without naming them, in the first ever recovery of stolen cryptocurrency by a North Korea hacking group.

Chainalysis and North Korea’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The seizures represent about 10% of the total funds stolen in March from Ronin Network, a sidechain built for the play-to-earn game Axie Infinity, Chainalysis said.

Ronin said in March hackers stole about $615 million in cryptocurrency.

“We estimate that so far in 2022, North Korea-linked groups have stolen approximately $1 billion of cryptocurrency from DeFi protocols,” Chainalysis said. He was referring to decentralized finance protocols, an umbrella term for financial services offered on public blockchains.

The U.S Department of Treasury in May sanctioned virtual currency mixer Blender, saying it was used in the laundering process for the Axie Infinity heist.

The Treasury Department in April also linked Lazarus to the attack.

(Reporting by Rachna Dhanrajani in Bengaluru; Editing by Richard Chang)

Categories
News

Coinbase backs lawsuit against U.S. Treasury over Tornado Cash sanctions

(Reuters) – Crypto exchange Coinbase on Thursday said it was funding a lawsuit against the U.S. Treasury Department to block sanctions barring Americans from Tornado Cash, a virtual currency mixer accused of helping hackers launder proceeds for cybercrimes.

The Treasury Department imposed sanctions on Tornado Cash last month over allegations they had laundered more than $7 billion worth of virtual currency. Some of those proceeds went to North Korean government-backed hackers, the department says.

Tornado Cash did not comment on the sanctions when they were imposed on Aug. 8 and representatives for the platform were not immediately reachable. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said the Treasury Department had gone too far “by sanctioning an entire technology instead of specific individuals.”

Armstrong added: “[There] are legitimate applications for this type of technology and as a result of these sanctions, many innocent users now have their funds trapped and have lost access to a critical privacy tool.”

Armstrong said Coinbase was funding the lawsuit, which he said was brought by six people. The New York Times reported that the lawsuit was filed on Thursday in federal court in the Western District of Texas.

The Treasury Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

(Reporting by Rami Ayyub; Editing by Susan Heavey and Mark Porter)

Categories
News

Elon Musk $258 billion Dogecoin lawsuit expands

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The $258 billion racketeering lawsuit accusing Elon Musk of running a pyramid scheme to support the cryptocurrency Dogecoin has expanded, adding seven new investor plaintiffs and six new defendants including his tunnel construction business Boring Co.

According to an amended complaint filed on Tuesday night in Manhattan federal court, Musk, his electric car company Tesla Inc, his space tourism company SpaceX, Boring and others intentionally drove up the price of Dogecoin more than 36,000% over two years and then let it crash.

By doing so, the defendants “profited tens of billions of dollars” at other Dogecoin investors’ expense, while knowing all along that the currency lacked intrinsic value and that its value “depended solely on marketing,” the complaint said.

Tesla, SpaceX and Boring did not immediately respond on Wednesday to requests for comment. Tesla disbanded its media relations department in 2020.

The original lawsuit was filed in June.

Shortly afterward, Musk, the world’s richest person, tweeted that he would “keep supporting Dogecoin,” and in an interview said “people that work around the factory at SpaceX or Tesla” asked him for that support, the amended complaint said.

Other new defendants include the Dogecoin Foundation, which calls itself a nonprofit providing governance and support for Dogecoin. It could not immediately be reached for comment.

The $258 billion in damages is triple the estimated decline in Dogecoin’s market value since May 2021.

That was around the time Musk, playing a fictitious financial expert on a “Weekend Update” segment of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” called Dogecoin “a hustle.”

Dogecoin traded at about 6 cents on Wednesday, down from around 74 cents in May 2021.

The case is Johnson et al v. Musk et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 22-05037.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

A year on, El Salvador’s bitcoin experiment is stumbling

By Nelson Renteria

CONCHAGUA, El Salvador (Reuters) – A year after El Salvador adopted bitcoin as legal tender, the area where the world’s first cryptocurrency city was meant to be built – a circular metropolis powered by a volcano – is still dense jungle.

President Nayib Bukele had promised that “Bitcoin City” would be a tax haven for crypto investors and miners equipped with an airport, residential and commercial areas, and a central plaza designed to look like a bitcoin symbol from the sky.

“Invest here and make all the money you want,” he said dressed all in white and wearing a reversed baseball cap, in front of hundreds of bitcoin enthusiasts in November 2021.

But on a recent visit to the area in the shadow of the Conchagua volcano in the east of the Central American country, Reuters found no heavy machinery, construction workers, or raw materials to indicate any progress towards building this grand symbol to bitcoin.

To many it has become, instead, a symbol of folly as bitcoin has crashed.

“This experiment has been very risky, too risky for a poor country,” said Oscar Picardo, director of the Institute of Science, Technology and Innovation at the private Francisco Gavidia University.

“It has been seen that (bitcoin) is a very speculative, highly variable financial asset,” he added.

A major part of the problem is that the drop in the value of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies has alienated investors.

When El Salvador, one of the poorest countries in Latin America, adopted bitcoin as legal tender on September 7, 2021, the cryptocurrency was close to $47,000.

A year later, it is worth less than half and on Tuesday was trading at around $19,770.

The Bukele government declined to comment for this story but has defended doubling down on bitcoin -including the acquisition of 2,381 bitcoins- assuring it is a long-term plan.

It says its bitcoin policy has attracted investment, reduced bank commissions to zero, increased tourism and promoted financial inclusion. But the price drop has elevated El Salvador’s financial risk, complicating its search for funds to pay 1.6 billion dollars of sovereign bonds due in 2023 and 2025.

The International Monetary Fund has called on El Salvador to reverse bitcoin’s status as legal tender citing financial, economic and legal concerns; complicating a deal with the lender.

The use of the cryptocurrency has also failed to catch on, experts said.

Neither the presidency nor the ministry of finance would share figures on the use of bitcoin through the government’s bitcoin digital wallet Chivo.

But a survey by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), a U.S.-based NGO, found that only 20% of Salvadorans who downloaded the Chivo app continued to use it after spending the $30 that the government gave in free credit to promote its use.

The study indicates the vast majority of Chivo downloads occurred in 2021, specifically in September, and that almost no downloads have taken place so far in 2022.

In theory, developing nations like El Salvador are ideal candidates for cryptocurrency adoption due to a continued reliance on cash and a largely unbanked population.

But, according to the April report, “bitcoin is not being widely used as a medium of exchange” because users “do not understand it, they do not trust it, it is not accepted by businesses, it is very volatile, and it involves high fees.”

Despite Salvadoran law requiring all companies to accept cryptocurrency, only 20% do so, according to the survey that interviewed 1,800 Salvadoran households.

Jesus Caceres’ small watch store in central San Salvador is one business that does. Three signs read “We accept bitcoin,” but the 47-year-old watchmaker has only ever made two sales with the cryptocurrency.

“One for $3 and one for $5, it was $8 in total. From then on, no one has approached me,” he said.

The government has also encouraged Salvadorans working abroad to send money home through the Chivo government wallet, or other private ones, without charging commissions. Known as remittances, those transfers from abroad represent 26% of the GDP of the Central American country, one of the highest percentages in the world.

But according to statistics from the central bank, between September 2021 and June 2022, the country received nearly $6.4 billion dollars in remittances and less than 2% was transferred by digital cryptocurrency wallets.

Like the use of bitcoin, the government shares few details about “Bitcoin City”. But its future looks increasingly uncertain since the issuance of the “Bitcoin Bond,” which Bukele said would support the city’s construction, has been postponed following the cryptocurrency crash. Residents of the place where the city is planned, between the Conchagua volcano and the Gulf of Fonseca on the Pacific coast, feel the majority of the country’s 6.5 million inhabitants will not be favored. “It doesn’t benefit us poor people at all,” lamented fisherman and farmer Jose Flores, 48, who has lived in Conchagua for over three decades.

(Reporting by Nelson Renteria; Writing by Sarah Kinosian; Editing by Diego Ore, Stephen Eisenhammer and Alistair Bell)

Categories
News

Cryptoverse: Bitcoin’s no longer the king of the swingers

By Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) – Bitcoin’s been called a lot of things. Buzzy, beguiling, baffling, even bogus. But never boring.

Yet, of late, it’s been eerily subdued.

The king of the swingers has been uncharacteristically treading water for days at around $20,000 and hasn’t ventured far beyond that since June.

That spells trouble for traders and exchanges that profit from bitcoin’s wild price lurches, and is opening the door to its archrival ether which is preparing to up its crypto game by moving to a meaner and leaner blockchain.

“Bitcoin is not dead, it’s just boring at the moment, so traders are already looking for alternatives,” said Martin Leinweber, digital asset product strategist at MarketVector.

Bitcoin’s average 30-day volatility – a measure of how its price varies over a set period of time – has slumped to 2.7% from over 4% in early July, according to data firm Coinglass.

That number has stayed firmly below 5% in 2022, even in the most turbulent months of the “crypto winter” of depressed prices – a departure from the past five years when even periods of lower volatility were followed by spikes as high as 7%.

Similarly, an index from CryptoCompare, which uses bitcoin futures contracts to work out how far prices are expected to change, stands at just over 77, down from above 90 at the start of the year.

Bitcoin has seen periods of reduced volatility in the past, often during periods of depressed or falling prices, with its price swings often coming back as trading activity picks up.

This slump may be different, though.

“This has been a relatively long period of decreased volatility, it’s now beyond anything we’ve seen in even 2019 where these levels lasted around a quarter to a quarter-and-a-half,” said StĂ©phane Ouellette, CEO at crypto derivatives provider FRNT Financial.

ETHER OVERDRIVE

Leinweber at MarketVector pointed to an uptick in trading for ether and its derivatives as a side-effect of bitcoin’s subdued volatility.

Indeed, the price of ether – the No.2 crypto with a market cap of roughly $190 billion versus bitcoin’s $380 billion – has risen 50% since the start of July while bitcoin has been flat.

Ether doesn’t offer more price drama; it is far less volatile, with its highest level being just over 2% in March 2020 during the worst of the COVID market rout, according to data firm Messari.

Yet it is soaking up a lot of the crypto buzz at the moment as it stands on the verge of its “Merge”, expected to finally happen later this month, when it undergoes a radical shift to a system where the creation of new ether tokens becomes far less energy-intensive.

BURNED BY CRYPTO

For longer-term investors in traditional assets such as stocks or bonds, narrower swings in prices may seem like a positive. But for many investors and major cogs in the bitcoin and crypto economy, that’s not the case. Exchanges, for instance, make money by charging fees on trades; when volatility falls, trading activity tends to evaporate.

For crypto hedge funds, which tend to trade on swings in price, stabler values also offer diminishing chances to profit.

So what’s behind bitcoin’s fall in volatility?

For one, an investor flight from the broader crypto space, meaning fewer people are willing to trade their coins.

Cryptocurrencies have endured a torrid year as investors have dumped risky asset across the board in the face of rising inflation, with bitcoin falling about 60% and ether dropping 55%. Major blow-ups at two major coins and the bankruptcy of a big-name lender have also eroded confidence in the sector.

The dollar value of bitcoin trading volumes on major exchanges over a 7-day period has fluctuated between $127 million and $142 million, according to data from Blockchain.com, the lowest levels since October 2020. Similarly, trading in bitcoin futures is at its lowest levels since November 2020, data from the Block showed.

“The most elevated levels of volatility typically coincide with the greatest levels of interest in crypto,” said Ouellette added. “People got burned and are saying ‘I don’t really care about crypto right now’.”

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

Categories
News

Binance to convert users’ USDC into its own stablecoin

(Reuters) – Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, said on Monday it is introducing “BUSD Auto-Conversion,” which will be used to convert any existing user balances and new deposits of USD Coin (USDC), Pax Dollar (USDP) and True USD (TUSD) into its own stablecoin.

The move is intended to enhance liquidity and capital efficiency for users, the company said in a statement.

Binance said it will remove and cease any trading on spot pairs that include USDC, USDP and TUSD; it will start the conversion on Sept. 29.

USDC, which is principally operated by Circle Internet Financial and is the second largest stablecoin, has a nearly $51.9 billion market capitalization. Binance’s stablecoin, BUSD, is valued at about $19.4 billion, according to crypto data provider CoinGecko.

USDC products affected include saving accounts, DeFi staking subscriptions and crypto loans, which will be closed and liquidated on Sept. 23.

(Reporting by Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Categories
News

Exclusive-U.S. sought records on Binance CEO for crypto money laundering probe

By Angus Berwick and Tom Wilson

LONDON (Reuters) – U.S. federal prosecutors asked Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, to provide extensive internal records about its anti-money laundering checks, along with communications involving its chief executive and founder Changpeng Zhao, according to a late-2020 written request seen by Reuters.

The Justice Department’s money laundering section asked Binance to voluntarily hand over messages from Zhao and 12 other executives and partners on matters including the exchange’s detection of illegal transactions and recruitment of U.S. customers. It also sought any company records with instructions that “documents be destroyed, altered, or removed from Binance’s files” or “transferred from the United States.”

The December 2020 request, which has not been previously reported, was part of a Justice Department investigation into Binance’s compliance with U.S. financial crime laws that remains ongoing, four people familiar with the inquiry said.

U.S. authorities, the people said, are investigating whether Binance violated the Bank Secrecy Act. This requires crypto exchanges to register with the Treasury Department and comply with anti-money laundering requirements if they conduct “substantial” business in the United States. The law, designed to protect the U.S. financial system from illicit finance, provides for jail terms of up to 10 years.

Reuters could not establish how Binance and Zhao, one of the most prominent figures in the crypto sector, responded to the request from the department’s criminal division.

In response to Reuters’ questions about the letter and investigation, Binance Chief Communications Officer Patrick Hillmann said, “Regulators across the globe are reaching out to every major crypto exchange to better understand our industry. This is a standard process for any regulated organization and we work with agencies regularly to address any questions they may have.” Binance has “an industry leading global security and compliance team” with over 500 employees, including former regulators and law enforcement agents, Hillmann added.

He didn’t say how Binance responded to the Justice Department request. A Department spokesman declined to comment.

The request reveals the broad scope of the U.S. investigation into Binance. The probe’s existence was reported last year by Bloomberg but until now little has been known about it. A Binance spokeswoman told Bloomberg at the time, “We take our legal obligations very seriously and engage with regulators and law enforcement in a collaborative fashion.”

The letter made 29 separate requests for documents produced since 2017, covering the company’s management, structure, finances, anti-money laundering and sanctions compliance, and business in the United States. “Binance is requested to produce all documents and materials that are responsive to this letter in its possession, custody, or control,” it said.

Binance was launched by Zhao, known as CZ, in Shanghai in 2017 and as of July controlled over half of the world’s crypto trading markets, processing transactions worth more than $2 trillion that month. Born in China and educated in Canada, where he holds citizenship, Zhao told Bloomberg in March that he will be based for the “foreseeable future” in Dubai, which that month granted Binance a license to conduct some operations.

A series of Reuters articles this year revealed how Binance drove its explosive growth while keeping weak customer checks and withholding information from regulators. Reuters found that the gaps in Binance’s compliance programme enabled criminals to launder at least $2.35 billion in illicit funds through the exchange, which also served traders in Iran despite U.S. sanctions. Until mid-2021, Binance customers could trade crypto by registering with just an email address.

Binance disputed Reuters’ findings, calling them “outdated.” The exchange said it is “driving higher industry standards” and seeking to “further improve our ability to detect illegal crypto activity on our platform.” It said it did not consider Reuters’ calculations of illicit fund flows to be accurate.

U.S. SCRUTINY

Crypto exchanges are under increasing scrutiny in the United States, where top government figures including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen this year have publicly backed greater regulation of the sector. In February, the Justice Department established a national cryptocurrency enforcement team to “tackle the growth of crime involving these technologies,” with a focus on exchanges.

That month, the founders of another exchange, BitMEX, pleaded guilty to violating the Bank Secrecy Act and were later sentenced to up to two and a half years of probation. BitMEX agreed to pay a $100 million fine to settle separate charges for breaching the Act. BitMEX now says it “fully committed to operating its business in compliance with all applicable laws” and has made “substantial investments” in its compliance programme.

The Justice Department’s 2020 letter was addressed to Binance Holdings Ltd., a company in the Cayman Islands, and to Roberto Gonzalez, a Washington-based attorney at law firm Paul, Weiss. Binance Holdings owns the Binance trademark and, according to regulatory filings, is owned by Zhao. Gonzalez and Paul, Weiss did not respond to requests to comment.

Binance has an opaque corporate structure. It has declined to give details of the ownership or location of its main Binance.com exchange, which has not accepted customers in the United States since mid-2019. Clients there are instead directed to a separate U.S.-based exchange called Binance.US, which also is controlled by Zhao, regulatory filings show. Binance.US registered with the Treasury in 2019; the main exchange never did so.

Since last year, over a dozen financial regulators around the world have issued warnings about Binance, saying it was either serving users without licenses or violating anti-money laundering rules. In July, the Dutch central bank said it had fined Binance over 3 million euros for operating in breach of its financial crime laws. A Binance spokesperson said at the time that the fine marked a “pivot in our ongoing collaboration” with the central bank.

In the 2020 request, the Justice Department sought all documents that identified Binance employees responsible for compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act, details of its policies to combat illegal finance, and any reports of suspicious financial activity it had filed to authorities. Binance was asked to provide information on any transactions between the exchange and users involved in ransomware, terrorism and darknet marketplaces, along with those targeted by U.S. sanctions.

The department also requested documents related to the “business rationale” for establishing Binance.US. It asked for communications involving the 13 executives and partners – including Zhao, his co-founder Yi He, and his chief compliance officer, Samuel Lim – on the subject of “the creation of Binance.US and its relationship to Binance.” Lim and He are still at Binance.

Reuters reported in January that Lim and other senior employees were aware that Binance’s money-laundering checks were not rigorous, according to company messages reviewed by the news agency. Neither Lim nor Binance has commented on the messages.

In addition to the Justice Department request, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued a subpoena to Binance.US’s operator, BAM Trading Services, that same month. The subpoena, reviewed by Reuters, required BAM to hand over documents showing whether any employees also worked for the main Binance exchange and what services it was providing the U.S. company.

Binance.US did not respond to Reuters’ questions. The SEC said it does not comment on possible investigations.

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

Categories
News

European markets watchdog on red alert for Ukraine war contagion

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – The European Union’s markets watchdog said on Thursday it was on red alert for contagion after inflation stoked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has threatened markets’ ability to function in an orderly way.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) in its latest risk monitor report gave an overall red risk rating for markets, with only credit risks and environmental risks flashing amber, and none green.

Contagion and operational risks, such as liquidity, were very high, it said.

Against a backdrop of already increasing inflation, the Ukraine war has profoundly impacted financial markets, leading to rapid price rises and volatility, especially in commodities.

“These present liquidity risks for exposed counterparties and show the continued importance of close monitoring to ensure orderly markets, a core objective for ESMA,” Verena Ross, the watchdog’s chair, said in a statement.

As European Union states revert to more polluting sources of energy, such as coal to cut dependence on Russian energy, EU investment funds, which tout their environment, social and governance (ESG) credentials saw net outflows for the first time in two years in March.

But the fundamental shift into ESG investments continues overall, with ESG assets averaging 27% of the total in the second quarter of 2022, compared with under 10% in the first half of 2020.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine raised questions over the compatibility of sustainable investment practices with the financing of non-democratic regimes or weak democracies, ESMA added.

“The Russian invasion highlights the importance of the ‘S’ (social) pillar in ESG investing and its clear link to ‘E’ pillar,” ESMA said.

During the first half of 2022, there was also big drop in crypto-asset prices and liquidity, meaning investors with big positions have limited options to exit, ESMA said.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by Barbara Lewis)

Categories
News

Fugitive Turkish crypto fraud suspect arrested in Albania resort

TIRANA (Reuters) – Albanian police on Tuesday arrested the fugitive Turkish founder of crypto-exchange Thodex, wanted by Interpol for suspected crypto fraud and at large for a year, police and media said.

Albanian and Turkish media identified the suspect as Faruk Fatih Ozer. The Turkish interior ministry said authorities had launched extradition proceedings.

Police referred to the suspect only by the initials F.O. and said the 28-year-old was arrested in the southern resort area of Himare along with two Albanian helpers in an operation codenamed “Brain”.

“After many searches in several regions of the country, based on the information received on the operative route about the location of a person highly wanted by Turkish justice … Operation ‘Brain’ was organised and finalised,” police said in a statement.

“As part of this operation, Turkish citizen F.O., 28 years old, was arrested and detained.”

Police seized laptops, mobile devices and bank cards, the statement said.

Thodex had been handling daily crypto trade worth hundreds of millions of dollars when Turkish authorities raided it last year and six suspects, including company executives and Ozer’s brother and sister, were arrested and later jailed.

On Turkey’s request, Interpol had issued a red notice for Ozer, who had flown to Albania before news of the company’s problems surfaced while the company closed down its website.

Thodex lawyer Sevgi Erarslan had previously said the exchange crashed due to extreme volatility in some crypto currencies and a hacking attack. She said the suspicion of fraud was unrealistic.

Erarslan also said the company covered the losses of more than 800 people who lost money as the exchange crashed.

Turkish authorities later banned the use of crypto assets for payments while some local exchanges were investigated for fraud. There has been a boom in usage of digital currencies in Turkey fuelled by rising inflation and a slide in the lira currency.

(Reporting by Florion Goga in Tirana and Ezgi Erkoyun in Istanbul; Writing by Daria Sito-Sucic; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Categories
News

Russia needs higher share of rouble in international trade – PM

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia should increase the rouble’s share in international settlements and gradually move towards stopping using currencies of designated ‘unfriendly’ countries that imposed sanctions on Russia, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said on Tuesday.

Mishustin also said that Moscow deems digital assets to be an alternative to foreign currencies in cross-border transactions.

(Reporting by Andrey Ostroukh, Editing by William Maclean)

Categories
News

Crypto lender Hodlnaut granted creditor protection by Singapore Court

(Reuters) – Hodlnaut said on Tuesday it has been placed under interim judicial management by the Singapore High Court, after the troubled cryptocurrency lender suspended withdrawals earlier this month.

Judicial management allows a financially distressed company to be restructured under court supervision.

The Singapore-based crypto firm said the court had appointed Ee Meng Yen Angela and Aaron Loh Cheng Lee of EY Corporate Advisors as interim judicial managers.

“We will not be able to provide further information at this juncture, but hope to provide further updates once our IJMs (Interim Judicial Managers) determine it necessary to do so,” Hodlnaut said.

Earlier this month, Hodlnaut suspended withdrawals, swaps and deposits to focus on stabilizing its liquidity and preserving the company’s assets.

Hodlnaut is the latest in a string of crypto players globally to run into difficulties following a sharp sell off in markets that started in May with the collapse of two paired tokens, Luna and TerraUSD.

The company also said it had laid off about 40 employees, while also disclosing an investigation by the Singapore police.

(Reporting by Rishabh Jaiswal in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)

Categories
News

Cryptoverse: Bleeding bitcoin’s holding out for a hero

By Lisa Pauline Mattackal and Medha Singh

(Reuters) – Who can save bitcoin?

The world’s biggest cryptocurrency can’t seem to catch a break. It finally looked to be regaining strength this month, breaching $25,000 for the first time since its June collapse, only to relapse towards $20,000.

A deflating end to August has forced the market to confront the Big Bitcoin Question: where will a real rally come from?

Right now, doughty retail investors are looking like the most likely source of relief, as institutional players get cold feet in the midst of a macro maelstrom.

The amount of “illiquid bitcoin” across the market – held by wallets that rarely spend or sell – has risen by 73,840 bitcoin over the past week, the largest weekly increase for more than two months, according to Chainalysis data. That equates to roughly $1.7 billion at recent prices.

Furthermore, the amount of bitcoin held for over a year has increased by 54,300 on average in the last four weeks, the largest rise in about four months, Chainalysis said. Meanwhile, cryptocurrency exchanges have seen net outflows for three straight months as investors pulled their tokens into “cold storage” rather than selling, according to Arcane Research.

“It’s clear that longer-term holders at the retail level are also accumulating, the number of wallets holding relatively small amounts of bitcoin is indeed growing,” said Jay Fraser, head of strategy at BSTX securities exchange.

“Don’t underestimate the impact of the retail HODLers,” Fraser added, referring to a cohort whose name emerged years ago from a trader misspelling “hold” on an online forum. “Their lack of selling helps to create more scarcity so that, eventually, a supply shock for bitcoin will again play out.”

INSTITUTIONS ‘DROVE MARKET DOWN’

So what about those deep-pocketed institutional players that jumped on the crypto bandwagon when prices were high?

They have been selling hard, according to some market participants who say these big investors have been the primary driver of the crypto slump over recent months.

In the week to Aug. 19 – the week that saw bitcoin slide anew – the digital asset investment products favored by traditional institutional finance players saw outflows of around $9 million according to Coinshares data.

“The latecomers – institutions that came in close to the highs or the $30,000 to $50,000 levels – they’re the ones that drove the market down, mostly,” said Ed Hindi, chief investment officer at Tyr Capital Partners.

Hindi pointed to a steep discount between futures contract prices and the bitcoin spot price on the CME exchange as further evidence of institutional bearishness.

The discount for the most traded contract hit an all-time low of 3.36% last week, Arcane Research analysts said.

‘READY TO BUY THE DIP’

But don’t count institutional players out – there’s plenty of evidence they haven’t given up on bitcoin, which is down a whopping 70% since its all-time high of $69,000 touched in November, and has lost 56% since the start of 2022.

Some market watchers point to the decision of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, to launch a private bitcoin investment product specifically for institutional investors as a strong sign that demand remains strong and could drag crypto out of the doldrums.

Andy Edstrom, managing director of Swan Advisor Services, said his firm had continued to see interest from financial advisors and their clients in bitcoin investments despite some “fair weather interest” going away.

“Some advisors are ready to buy the dip, they’re telling us ‘I’ve got dry powder to invest in $20,000 bitcoin’,” he added.

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

Categories
News

Dollar sags below 20-year peak as euro lifted by ECB bets

By Kevin Buckland

TOKYO (Reuters) – The dollar languished on Tuesday after being beaten back from a two-decade high versus major peers by a reinvigorated euro.

The tables turned for the two currencies as traders began ramping up bets for a super-sized 75 basis-point rate hike by the European Central Bank, while paring the odds for one by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

The dollar index – which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, with the euro the most heavily weighted – stood at 108.65 at the start of the Asian day, after dropping back from 109.48 overnight, a level not seen since September 2002.

The euro edged 0.08% higher to $1.00045, extending Monday’s 0.32% rally – which was its biggest in almost three weeks – after failing to keep its head above parity for the past week.

“The euro has found some stability near parity with help from reports that a 75bp hike could be on the cards at the September ECB meeting,” said Sean Callow, a currency strategist at Westpac in Sydney.

“But the euro’s yields remain unappetising and the deepening gas crisis in Europe means that more aggressive ECB hikes would only deepen recession. We expect EUR/USD to print fresh 20-year lows in coming days, with 0.98 the next obvious target.”

Traders see better than 50% odds for a 75 bps move by the ECB on Sept. 8 after a parade of ECB speakers at the Fed’s annual symposium in Jackson Hole backed the case for a big hike.

By comparison, bets for a 75 bps increase by the Fed on Sept. 21, while higher at 70%, have receded from as much as 75% on Monday.

Monthly U.S. jobs figures due on Friday will be closely watched for further clues on the rates outlook.

The euro was also helped by a retreat in European gas prices after German economy minister Robert Habbeck said the country was filling gas storage facilities faster than expected.

The dollar slid 0.17% to 138.505 yen, after rising to 139 overnight for the first time since mid-July.

Sterling added 0.1% to $1.17175, recovering from an almost 2-1/2-year low of $1.16495 reached on Monday.

The Aussie edged 0.04% higher to $0.69125, bouncing from $0.6841 in the previous session, a six-week low.

(The story corrects level of Australian dollar’s 6-week low in the last paragraph; $0.6841, not $0.6481)

(Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Categories
News

Singapore mulls tightening cryptocurrency trading by retail investors

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The chief of Singapore’s central bank said the city-state is considering new measures that will make it more difficult for retail investors to trade cryptocurrencies at a time when they seem to be “irrationally oblivious” about the risks.

“Adding frictions on retail access to cryptocurrencies is an area we are contemplating,” Ravi Menon, managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said at a seminar on Monday.

“These may include customer suitability tests and restricting the use of leverage and credit facilities for cryptocurrency trading,” he added.

The MAS in January issued guidelines to limit cryptocurrency trading service providers from promoting their services to the public, as part of its attempts to shield retail investors from potential risks.

(Reporting by Anshuman Daga and Yantoultra Ngui; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor)

Categories
News

Bitcoin drops 1.6% to below $20,000

(Reuters) – Bitcoin was off 1.63% at $19,920 by late afternoon in Europe on Saturday, down $330 from its previous close.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, is down 58.7% from the year’s high of $48,234 on March 28.

Ether, the coin linked to the ethereum blockchain network, dipped 2.76 % to $1,467.2 on Saturday, losing $41.60 from its previous close.

(Reporting by Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru)

Categories
News

India’s CoinSwitch cooperating with financial crime agency probe -CEO

By Aditya Kalra

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – India’s top crypto app CoinSwitch is cooperating with the national financial-crime agency, whose agents searched its offices this week to find out about its business model and user-onboarding processes, its CEO told Reuters on Saturday.

CoinSwitch, valued at $1.9 billion, says it is the largest crypto company in India, with more than 18 million registered users. The firm is backed by Andreessen Horowitz, Tiger Global and Coinbase Ventures.

Ashish Singhal, speaking for the first time publicly about Thursday’s search, said his company was engaging with the Indian Enforcement Directorate’s unit in the tech hub Bengaluru on functioning of its crypto platform.

“Most of their engagement with us has been about knowing what CoinSwitch does,” Singhal said, saying the inquiries included operations of crypto exchanges, how users were onboarded and details about know-your-customer norms.

A person with direct knowledge said the case relates to suspected violations of India’s foreign exchange laws. Agents asked about foreign investments, income and outflows to check on compliance, and seized financial documents, the source said.

Singhal declined to specify the agency’s allegations, citing legal sensitivities.

The Enforcement Directorate did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The investigation into CoinSwitch comes amid tightening regulatory scrutiny of the crypto sector in India.

In a separate case the agency this month froze $8 million in assets of WazirX, a top virtual currency exchange, in an investigation of a possible role in helping instant loan app companies launder the proceeds of crime by converting them into cryptocurrencies on its platform.

WazirX disputes the allegations.

The agency has said it was conducting money-laundering investigations against several shadow banks and their fintech companies for potential violations of central bank norms and predatory lending practices.

The CoinSwitch search was “not about money laundering,” Singhal said. The agency “has been engaged with us with respect to functioning of our crypto platform and we are fully cooperating with them,” he said.

While no official data is available on the size of India’s crypto market, CoinSwitch estimates the number of investors at up to 20 million, with total holdings of about $6 billion.

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by William Mallard)