Coinbase Pursuing Super App Strategy; Bank Of International Settlements On Tokenization

Coinbase on super app strategy

Coinbase – super app

At yesterday’s State of Crypto Summit (see agenda) in New York City organized by Coinbase and The Financial Times, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong laid out a global “super app” vision for his company.

CoinDesk reports, “Armstrong envisions that Coinbase, currently a centralized crypto exchange with various crypto products, will eventually become a ‘super-app,’ helping the Web3 economy. The term ‘super-app’ is used for Web2 applications like Tencent’s WeChat, which provide a vast array of services to users including financial services to booking doctors’ appointments.” Ultimately, Armstrong sees his company developing a super app of decentralized protocols. Read it.

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Are Super-Apps Coming to the U.S. Market? (from April) – Harvard Business Review

Coinbase – research

As part of its participation in their New York event yesterday, Coinbase released new research discussing adoption and interest in blockchain technologies across the Fortune 500 and a subset – the Fortune 100.

Continue reading “Coinbase Pursuing Super App Strategy; Bank Of International Settlements On Tokenization”

Bitcoin Miners Meet Environmentalists In NY State; Rep. Nickel Supports Stablecoin Legislation

bitcoin mining

bitcoin mining air

Environmentalists are continuing to fight to the crypto mining industry and Canadian company Digihost in New York State. “The opponents claim Digihost wants to increase the Fortistar natural gas burning plant’s output to full power. It would be a dramatic shift for a facility that previously served as a ‘peaker’ plant, operating only in times of high energy demand, and at very low output,” says Buffalo News. The end game is a potential denial of Digihost’s air permit for its Fortistar plant. Read more.

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And, see the Fortistar plant courtesy of Google Maps.

Democrat on stablecoins

Continue reading “Bitcoin Miners Meet Environmentalists In NY State; Rep. Nickel Supports Stablecoin Legislation”

Powell Says Stablecoins Are Money As McHenry Announces Markup For Digital Assets Legislation

Fed Chair Powell

Jerome Powell, the Republican Federal Reserve Chair appointed during the Trump administration, appeared before the House Financial Services (HFS) Committee today for his semi-annual hearing, “The Federal Reserve’s Semi-Annual Monetary Policy Report” a.k.a. the Humphrey-Hawkins report.

Although Powell’s prepared testimony was bereft of anything digital asset-related as was the Committee’s agenda for the hearing (see it), Chair Powell’s Q&A with members of Congress provided a taste of hot button digital asset issues for the Fed.

HFS Chair Rep. Patrick McHenry (R, NC) kicked things off right before Powell’s testimony saying before the full Committee that the stablecoin and market structure bills were on the HFS schedule for next month. Chair McHenry stated in the third person:

“The Chair would further announce to committee members that the Chair’s intention is that in the second week we return in July, we will have a markup, and that markup will include two important bills. One is giving digital assets a market structure and federal regulatory remit. And the second is a federal stablecoin regime. It is the intention of the Chair to have that as two pieces of committee markup in the second week when we return in July.”

More precisely, Digital Chamber’s Cody Carbone tweeted the tentative date for markup of both bills is July 19. (See: what is markup?)

After McHenry’s brief announcement, the hearing commenced.

Click below or scroll down for a selection of what Powell said about digital assets in answer to several Members of Congress during the Q&A portion of the hearing. Video is here.

(lightly edited for clarity)

Rep. Waters (D, CA): I’ve argued that we should allow states to be part of this process, but we must have a strong enforceable federal floor with the roll by the Federal Reserve to approve and provide oversight of payment stablecoins issued by non-banks in order to ensure that consumers are protected. Such a framework is similar to our dual-banking system and it would ensure that non-banks and banks are treated the same. We should also bear in mind that payments stablecoins are a new form of currency intended to allow individuals to pay for things with them. As such, do you agree that it is important for the Fed as our central bank to have a chance to approve or decline any state license non-bank entity before it starts issuing payments stablecoins nation-wide? Continue reading “Powell Says Stablecoins Are Money As McHenry Announces Markup For Digital Assets Legislation”

EDX Markets Collects TradFi Interest In Crypto; Feds Target Darknet’s Digital Currency

tradfi wants crypto

TradFi backing crypto

Calling itself a “first-of-its-kind digital asset marketplace designed to enable safe and compliant trading of digital assets through trusted intermediaries,” EDX Markets launched yesterday with backing from a number of traditional finance (TradFi) players such as Charles Schwab, Citadel Securities and Fidelity Digital Assets. Read the release.

Is this another Bakkt, which is backed by the New York Stock Exchange’s parent, ICE?

The Wall Street Journal breaks down the new entrant: “One major difference: EDX is a ‘noncustodial’ exchange, meaning it doesn’t directly handle its customers’ digital assets. Instead, EDX runs a marketplace where firms agree to execute trades of coins and dollars, using its platform to agree on prices. Then the firms move crypto and cash between each other to settle the trades. Later this year, EDX plans to launch a clearinghouse to facilitate the process of settling trades, but even then…” Read more.

Collins Belton of Brookwood P.C. commented on Twitter about the announcement, “Not surprising but a few takeaways: 1. Recreates exchange / broker split of TradFi. Good for mitigating risk of customer funds abuse; but arguably some needless intermediation + higher fees…” Read the others. Continue reading “EDX Markets Collects TradFi Interest In Crypto; Feds Target Darknet’s Digital Currency”

BlackRock Bitcoin ETF Reaction; CoinDesk Launches DC Event

BlackRock Bitcoin ETF

BlackRock and bitcoin

Some rare, seemingly, good news in a ravaged crypto economy emerged on Thursday and Friday as BlackRock’s S-1 filing became public for its iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (Exchange Traded Fund).

According to The Wall Street Journal, BlackRock aims to make its product “the first ETF with the cryptocurrency itself as the underlying asset, rather than futures contracts.” Will this time be different as a dozen companies have tried to register a similar ETF in the past? CoinDesk thinks BlackRock’s surveillance sharing agreement with NASDAQ is the difference maker. Read that one.

BlackRock and bitcoin – reaction

Genesis Head of Market Insights Noelle Acheson tweets her provocative take on the BlackRock ETF filing saying: “BIG news – BlackRock is the world’s largest asset manager; It’s not going to happen; BlackRock knows this; Rather, it is sending a political message; Larry Fink is a prominent Democrat.

Policy expert Justin Slaughter at investment firm Paradigm reviews Acheson’s take and doesn’t see political intrigue.  He begins, “So, I respectfully disagree with Noelle on this one. I think BlackRock is doing this on the merits (seeking to get a bitcoin ETF approved) rather than trying to send a political message. Bear with me, because this is complicated in terms of Democratic politics.” Read Slaugther’s tweet thread. Continue reading “BlackRock Bitcoin ETF Reaction; CoinDesk Launches DC Event”

Prometheum’s Hearing Appearance Getting Scrutiny; Polygon’s New Use Case Database

Prometheum

Prometheum – post-hearing buzz

Ever since Tuesday‘s House Financial Services (HFS) Committee meeting on the market structure and stablecoin bills, the participation of Aaron Kaplan, Founder and Co-CEO of alternative trading system Prometheum, has been the talk of Twitter. His support of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) approach to digital asset regulation, i.e. enforcement, and his company’s business model are getting the “side eye.”

The top line is: what is really behind the strategy for the Prometheum trading platformm which doesn’t even trade Ethereum or Bitcoin? Did Democratic HFS members not realize what they were stepping into with Prometheum? Some of Kaplan’s answers felt scripted… by someone not Kaplan.

Beyond Rep. Mike Flood (R, NE) admonishment of Kaplan at Tuesday’s hearing, Matt Walsh of crypto venture firm Castle Island breaks down the mystery in a Twitter thread that has seen nearly 3.5 million views as of publication.

Walsh begins: “In the midst of the SEC bringing cases on Coinbase + Gemini, and giving the stiff arm to Robinhood and others, Prometheum gets approval for a first-of-its-kind Special Purpose Broker-Dealer (SPBD) for digital asset securities… Then Prometheum’s CEO somehow gets a seat in front of Congress yesterday and starts reading off pre-written notes clearly coordinating narratives with Democratic members of Congress (or the SEC).”

Prometheum – scripting

The Prometheum mystery is reminiscent of the SEC’s Investor Advisory Committee and it’s April 6 letter which neatly (or clumsily) recommended to SEC Chair Gary Gensler that his agency continue to do exactly what it’s doing with its digital assets strategy of regulation by enforcement. This was in spite of a healthy list of committee members who must have some differing opinions including IAC’s Chair, Christopher Mirabile, who said he supported a regulatory framework for digital assets in December. Read more about it. Continue reading “Prometheum’s Hearing Appearance Getting Scrutiny; Polygon’s New Use Case Database”

McHenry Requests Secretary Yellen Rein In FSOC; Flyover Fintech In August

Flyover Fintech

FSOC, stand down please

House Financial Services (HFS) Chair Patrick McHenry (R, NC) wasted no time after his HFS committee hosted U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Tuesday.

Yesterday, he sent Secretary Yellen a letter that began, “I am writing to express my strong concerns with actions taken by the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) this past April seeking to make it easier to subject nonbank financial companies to prudential supervision by the Federal Reserve. The actions are contrary to the due process protections afforded by the Constitution and mark a sea change in the longstanding principles the Council uses to review these entities.” See the letter.

McHenry wants Secretary Yellen to “revisit [FSOC’s] April decision to evaluate risks posed by non-bank financial entities based on size, rather than the activities they undertake.Read the release.

And, read the U.S. Treasury press release for “Financial Stability Oversight Council Meeting on April 21, 2023.”

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Meanwhile, Politico reports that McHenry wants to put the market structure bill up for a vote after July 4 in spite of Democratic push back. Read a bit more. Continue reading “McHenry Requests Secretary Yellen Rein In FSOC; Flyover Fintech In August”

Hinman Documents Released; Market Structure Bill Seeks Bipartisan Support

Bill Hinman

Hinman on crypto -or not

At long last, “certain documents” from William Hinman, the former director of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)’s Division of Corporation Finance from 2017 to 2020, have been released. Amidst the Ripple lawsuit by the SEC, pro-Ripple forces believe his public statements around what makes a cryptocurrency a security were misguided and, indeed, disputed internally at the SEC.

The story starts with a speech Hinman made in 2018 at a “Yahoo Finance All Markets Summit: Crypto.” See it.

“Prior to making the speech, Hinman said in an email to multiple SEC employees that the speech suggests ‘we do not need to see a need to regulate Ether, as it is currently offered, as a security,'” according to The Block, which concludes, “The public release of the Hinman documents may ignite a significant debate about the classification of cryptocurrencies as securities…” Read more.

The upshot of the Hinman notes from pro-crypto forces: Congress needs to step up with regulation. Continue reading “Hinman Documents Released; Market Structure Bill Seeks Bipartisan Support”