Thursday, January 24, 2019

More Bitcoin ETF woes

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January 24, 2019

ETF PULLED: A long-awaited bitcoin ETF proposal by VanEck and SolidX was withdrawn by the Cboe BZX Exchange Wednesday due to the ongoing U.S. government shutdown. Cboe filed the withdrawal on Jan. 22, but it was not made public until Jan. 23, when Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) deputy secretary Eduardo Aleman published the notice.

The withdrawal is temporary, VanEck director of digital asset strategy Gabor Gurbacs told CoinDesk, and the company intends to re-file the proposal at some future point.

VanEck president and CEO Jan van Eck expanded on the decision in an interview with CNBC, explaining that the proponents of the ETF had been discussing issues around the bitcoin market with the SEC until the government shut down. 

“We think we actually have pretty solid answers to those [questions], but we just need to really demonstrate it very, very clearly and convincingly to the regulators,” he said, adding: “We were trying to do that but we obviously can’t have meetings while they’re shut down.” Full Stories

XRP CAPPED: A report by crypto data startup Messari estimates that the circulating supply and actual market capitalization of the XRP cryptocurrency may be much lower than what current data sites present. 

According to sites like CoinMarketCap, as well as Ripple, a company closely linked to the digital asset, XRP's circulating supply is roughly 41 billion tokens. However, 27.6 billion of those tokens may not actually be circulating, or may be "subject to significant selling restrictions," according to the report. 

As a result, Messari also estimates that XRP’s market cap may be “overstated” by $6 billion. According to CoinMarketCap, XRP’s current market cap is roughly $13 billion as of press time. Full Story​

HEALTH CHAINS: A number of major U.S. health insurance providers are teaming up with IBM to determine if a "blockchain-based ecosystem" can improve how sensitive data is stored and shared, as well as make health claims and transactions more efficient. 

Announced Thursday, IBM is working with Aetna (which was acquired by CVS Health last year), Anthem, Health Care Service Corporation and PNC Bank, which altogether account for nearly 100 million healthcare plans in the U.S. 

PNC Treasury Management head Chris Ward explained that the collaboration should make it easier for patients, payers and providers handling payments, saying “using this technology, we can remove friction, duplication and administrative costs that continue to plague the industry.” Full Story

TOKENIZED DECACORNS: Zilliqa and MaiCoin are partnering to launch a security token exchange in Singapore that will let investors trade traditional asset classes using blockchain technology. 

The new Hg Exchange plans to act as a “one-stop solution” for token issuers, buyers, sellers and market makers, allowing investors access to privately held shares and security tokens alike. According to a press release, Hg Exchange will provide access “to high-growth startups and also decacorns such as Uber, Airbnb, Space X [sic], Grab and Didi Chuxing.”

Hg has not explained how it will provide such access. The platform does claim to be the first “member-driven exchange” in southeast Asia, meaning participants must go through the licensed financial intermediaries who have signed up, which at launch include Phillip Securities, PrimePartners, RHT Capital and Fundnel. Full Story

NOTES FROM DAVOS: The island of Bermuda made waves at Davos last year when it issued a challenge to the blockchain industry: If you want to help construct a regulatory framework from scratch – come talk to us.

Five months later, it had unveiled one of the most comprehensive digital asset legislative frameworks created to date. After passage late 2018, more than 60 blockchain companies are now in the pipeline to incorporate in the British overseas department.

Not resting on his laurels, Bermuda Premier David Burt sat down with CoinDesk at the ConsenSys Ethereal Lounge in Davos this morning to outline the next prong in his push to woo crypto and blockchain companies to the island: A framework for issuing portable and tokenized digital identities that can be used with any service provider on the island.

Complying with know-your-customer and anti-money-laundering requirements remains a tremendous burden for companies in the financial services realm, Burt explained. “Identity is a silo. Every company currently has to do KYC procedures. It’s a huge barrier to entry.”

While a foundational element of a future blockchain and token-based financial system, identity solutions have been slow to come to market in a practical way. For Burt, this is more of a governance question than anything else.

“The problem isn’t the technology, it’s the regulation,” he said.

Bermuda is also working behind the scenes to build out the professional services infrastructure that crypto and blockchain companies require, such as banking, custody and insurance – an area the island figures to have a strong competitive advantage given its status as a global hub for the reinsurance industry.

If its showing at the World Economic Forum thus far is a leading indicator, Bermuda remains a key jurisdiction to watch in the crypto universe for 2019.

Be sure to follow CoinDesk’s Twitter feed and daily newsletter for more dispatches from Davos. The WEF event ends Friday, Jan. 25.



CoinDesk’s Crypto-Economics Explorer aggregates data points across the industry to measure the size and opportunity of crypto markets. In addition to price and market cap, CoinDesk’s explorer provides users with a comprehensive way to view the crypto-economic forces that shape an asset’s market maturity, growth and potential.

We observed the top five cryptocurrencies by market cap, as of January 24, over the past week using the CEX visualizer. The visualizer allows users to see different dynamics shaping the activity of the cryptocurrencies. Those dynamics may be more pronounced in certain areas on a particular blockchain and others on another.

For example, one can observe EOS and ETH fluctuating in the network category. Some days EOS has more activity and on others ETH does.
 
Check out the CoinDesk Crypto-Economic Explorer to learn more

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UNFAZED: Bitcoin's calm response to the Cboe's withdrawal of its proposal to the SEC for a bitcoin ETF yesterday likely indicates seller exhaustion. As a result, the odds are high that the cryptocurrency will end its 14-day-long period of consolidation with a strong bullish move. Full Story​

BEST OF THE BEST

ENGADGET: Samsung's upcoming Galaxy S10 may come with its own built-in crypto wallet, according to Engadget. 

Leaked images of the phone, if genuine, display a "Samsung Blockchain KeyStore" app that the on-screen text states is a "secure and convenient place for your cryptocurrency." 

The wallet appears to support only ethereum, but Engadget notes that other sources suggest support for bitcoin, bitcoin cash and ERC-20 tokens are likely. Another image suggests that it will allow users to import third party wallets.

Samsung’s new flagship phone is due for its public unveiling on Feb. 20 with a full launch likely a few weeks later.

THE REST

CNBC: JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon is now famous for having called bitcoin a "fraud" back in September 2017. He has also said he would fire any trader known to be trading the cryptocurrency.

The CEO was in a less strident mood when CNBC asked him at the World Economic Forum in Davos Wednesday if he "took any satisfaction in being right after bitcoin dropped 80 percent." 
 
Dimon replied,"Nope!" Although he joked that CNBC should stop publishing articles on bitcoin “every day,” he said he didn’t want “to be the spokesperson against it.”

When asked if bitcoin was better than marijuana, he said, yes, "but we're not banking pot either." 

THE NEXT WEB: You've heard of a steam train, but what about a steem train? A Dutch man has hacked his son's LEGO Duplo toy train to be controlled by the blockchain activity of the cryptocurrency steem.

Roeland P. Lanparty told The Next Web that he’d bought the toy as a gift and noticed that it featured BlueTooth LE. “I was curious if I would be able to ‘reverse engineer’ the train’s commands and started to research,” he said.

He looked online and found a custom Node-js library specifically for the Duplo train and swapped it for the code in the high-tech toy’s official app. He was then able to program the train to be instructed to move every time a block was written on the steem blockchain – which happens once every few seconds.

Lanparty, who is a steem miner too, also managed to get the train to sound its horn every time he wins a block reward.

WHO WON #CRYPTOTWITTER

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