Thursday, October 3, 2019

Digital greenbacks

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October 3, 2019

DIGITAL GREENBACKS? Two U.S. lawmakers want the Federal Reserve to consider creating a digital dollar. In a letter sent to Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, Rep. French Hill (R-Ark.) and Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) write that the U.S. dollar might lose influence if another country or private company creates a widely used cryptocurrency, and ask whether the central bank is considering creating its digital greenback. “We are concerned that the primacy of the U.S. Dollar could be in long-term jeopardy from wide adoption of digital fiat currencies,” they say. Full story

FREE MONEY: You don’t have to be a trader on Coinbase to make a profit. Starting Wednesday, customers of the San Francisco-based exchange can earn interest on their holdings of the dollar-pegged stablecoin USDC. The annual percentage yield is 1.25 percent. “We’re trying to build more ways for customers to grow their wealth on Coinbase,” said Coinbase product manager Paul Katsen. Account holders with at least one dollar’s worth of USDC will automatically accrue rewards on their holdings, with no additional cost or fees. Full story

WAIT ALMOST OVER: Telegram Open Network (TON) is on track for its planned launch, according to an email from the company sent to investors on Wednesday. Mitja Goroshevsky, CTO of TON Labs, a startup building tools for TON developers, confirmed the authenticity of the email to CoinDesk. Investors need to provide Telegram with their public keys by Oct. 16 using the key generator to receive the tokens, or “grams,” they bought. Notably, the message says Telegram itself will recuse itself from running the network: “Investors have to select validators. Neither Telegram nor the TON Foundation will serve as validators post-launch.” Full story

FLAT-PACKER FIRST: In a “world first,” IKEA Iceland has taken part in a commercial transaction on ethereum using smart contracts and EU-licensed e-money to facilitate the settlement of an order from a local retailer, Nordic Store. The transaction was carried out on a platform provided by supply chain management firm Tradeshift and used “programmable digital cash” from ConsenSys-backed Monerium, according to an announcement on Tuesday. Nordic Store bought goods from IKEA and settled an e-invoice using Monerium’s tokenized Icelandic krona. Full story

SWISS ETP: Another crypto-based financial product is coming to the Swiss stock exchange SIX. Fintech firm Amun and crypto fintech service Bitcoin Suisse launched the Swiss franc-denominated Amun Bitcoin Suisse BTC/ETH exchange-traded product (ETP) under the “ABBA” ticker. Nine parts bitcoin and one part ether by percentage, the ETP captures some 75 percent of the total cryptocurrency market cap in one listed product. In an interview, Amun CEO Hany Rashwan said the ETP serves as an important financial hedge and is uniquely Swiss. Full story

POOR START: October hasn’t kicked off well for bitcoin traders looking to capture the rebound to $8,511 on Tuesday, as prices were swiftly rejected back below $8,300 in the Asian trading hours this morning. The top crypto is currently changing hands at $8,240, representing a 1.5-percent decline over the last 24 hours. Should the bulls fail to push BTC back over previous resistance at $9,400, further price drops are likely. Full story

BACK TO SCHOOL:  Leading VC Chris Dixon is launching a school to train young startups in the ways of crypto. “We are going to run a startup school for crypto-specific startups and what we’ve learned over the last 7 years as best practices in this category,” Dixon, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, told a TechCrunch conference. A landing page for the project says the school will help "crypto-curious builders navigate the idea maze." 

WHO WON #CRYPTOTWITTER
 

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📌 Libra Hesitation, SEC versus Block.one, and Cryptoasset Ratings

 MUST READS 

Major Backers of Facebook's Libra May be Getting Cold Feet


According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, some early supporters of Libra are reconsidering their positions following backlash from global governments. The report specifically mentions credit networks Visa and Mastercard as firms that are rethinking their involvement in the controversial stablecoin.
 

U.S. Crypto Exchanges Form Council to Evaluate Digital Assets


The U.S.' top crypto wizards are forming a council of elders. Formally called the Crypto Rating Council, these cryptomancers are banding together to communally decide which digital assets are likely to raise red flags with regulators.

It's already publishing ratings: See for yourself.
 

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 DEEP DIVE 

Central Banks Don't Need Their Own Digital Currencies


Whether central banks should issue their own digital currencies may sound like an arcane debate. But allowing them to do so could have a profound impact on a nation's economic and financial landscape — and not for the better.
 

Bitcoin Equals Freedom


This is a very basic take on Bitcoin and its ethos but the message is clear and concise.

Interesting too – a note on freedom from the words of an unfree man.
 

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 REGULATORY FRONT 

SEC Fines Block.one (...Kind Of)


The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced on Monday that it has settled charges against blockchain builder Block.one for conducting an unregistered initial coin offering (ICO). The firm has agreed to pay a $24 million penalty. To catch you all up – Block.one is the company behind the EOS blockchain that conducted an ICO between 2017-2018 in which it raised an iconic $4.1 billion.

The biggest takeaway from the report is that the pre-launch ERC-20 version of the EOS token was a security... and that the post-launch EOS token is not a security.

Here's what some of the experts had to say about the news:
Here's the entire settlement doc, dissected and annotated by Katherine Wu.
 

Venezuela's Central Bank Holding Bitcoin is Just Crazy Enough to Work


Venezuela's dreams of becoming a crypto nation evidently extend beyond just the state-backed petro.

Last week, it was reported that Venezuela's central bank could soon be holding an undisclosed amount of Bitcoin and Ethereum as part of its international reserves.

This news broke days before Venezuela President, Nicolas Maduro, stated that the country's government will activate a cryptocurrency payment method for citizens "very soon."

 

 TWEET OF THE WEEK 

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#165: Central banks are scrambling to cope with stablecoins.

Behind closed doors
MIT Technology Review
Sponsored by IBM
Chain Letter
Blockchains, cryptocurrencies,
and why they matter
Behind closed doors
10.03.19
Welcome to Chain Letter! Great to have you. Here’s what’s new in the world of blockchains and cryptocurrencies.

Central banks should consider teaming up with stablecoin providers, says the IMF.  For years, powerful central banks around the world have claimed to be studying digital currencies, and most have left open the possibility that one day they might launch their own. That day may be dawning—much earlier than anyone expected.

In a recent blog post, IMF economists Tobias Adrian and Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli called on policymakers to take “prompt regulatory action” to address the “notable risks” posed by privately issued digital currencies, called stablecoins, that are designed to maintain a consistent value. More to the point: central banks may need to get into the stablecoin business themselves.

Earlier this year, the possibility that we might see state-backed digital currencies any time soon seemed remote. What’s changed? Well, in June, Facebook revealed plans for its own stablecoin, called Libra. The prospect of a non-sovereign currency that could instantly reach the billions of people across the globe who use Facebook products suddenly has central bankers playing defense. 

What are they worried about? According to Adrian and Mancini-Griffoli, stablecoins could undermine financial stability, and stablecoin users risk losing their money. Policymakers will need to do something, they say, whether or not that means issuing central bank digital currencies. The pair suggest that one possible solution would be that governments require stablecoin providers to back their customer’s digital coins with central bank reserves, which they call “the safest and most liquid assets available.” Read more here.

But what does it mean? Cryptocurrency enthusiasts are scratching their heads at the news that Block.one, the company behind the smart contract platform EOS, will pay $24 million to the US Securities and Exchange Comission as penalty for selling unregistered securities. Hardly anyone is surprised at the SEC’s view that what the company sold during its ICO were securities. But $24 million is minuscule compared with the $4.1 billion the token sale raised before the network had even launched.

What gives? For starters, Block.one prohibited US persons from participating in the sale. Apparently some got through, however, according to the SEC. It’s possible that the $24 million is roughly correlated with the amount of US investment that went into EOS tokens, Stephen Palley, a blockchain-focused attorney in DC, writes for The Block. Palley also notes that this was a negotiated resolution. Unlike Kik, the messaging app maker that took on an expensive and damaging court fight with the SEC over allegations that it sold unregistered securities, Block.one settled. 

Still, Palley warns other crypto companies not to read much into the settlement. “The best one can say is that it’s a signal to market participants that they will have a better chance of surviving if they approach the SEC and work out a deal (like Block.one) than if they kick shins and fight a legal fight that they are likely to lose (like Kik).”

In leaked audio, Mark Zuckerberg downplayed backlash by policymakers against Libra. Facebook’s CEO told his employees not to worry about the backlash the company’s digital plans have received from policymakers. Why? Because the real action is going on behind the scenes, he says. In leaked comments from a July meeting with Facebook employees, published by The Verge, Zuckerberg assured them that despite public resistance from policymakers, Facebook was making progress by meeting with regulators privately.

Zuckerberg said Libra was just one of a number of projects that “touch very socially important aspects of society,” and that the company’s plan is to “have a more consultative approach” with regulators than it has in the past. Finance in particular is a “very heavily regulated space,” and “we kind of expected” the process to be “a long road,” he said. “There’s a lot of important issues that need to be dealt with in preventing money laundering, preventing financing of terrorists and people who with the different governments say you can’t do business with.”

David Marcus, who heads the digital currency project, faced a grilling by skeptical lawmakers during two congressional hearings in July. But those hearings were overly dramatic, according to Zuckerberg. Facebook’s “private engagement” with regulators is often “more substantive and less dramatic,” he is heard saying in the leaked audio. “And those meetings aren’t being played for the camera, but that’s where a lot of the discussions and details get hashed out on things.”

He may be right. We already know that Facebook has a strong lobbying force in DC, which it recently bolstered with new hires who will focus on Libra. But he’s also right that it might be a long road. Given all the regulatory issues yet to be ironed out, don’t be surprised if Libra misses its 2020 launch target.

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Loose change

Fill your pockets with these newsy tidbits.

  • Visa, Mastercard, and other firms that signed up to be part of the Libra network are reconsidering their involvement in light of backlash from government officials in the US and Europe. (Wall Street Journal $)
  • The company behind Sia, a decentralized data storage service, will pay $225,000 to the SEC as part of a settlement over allegations that it sold unregistered securities during its 2014 token sale, which raised $120,000. (CoinDesk)
  • The National Basketball Association will not allow Brooklyn Nets player Spencer Dinwiddie to use his contract as a blockchain-based digital investment vehicle, as he had planned to. (New York Times $)
  • Bitcoin developers have fixed a bug in the lightning network, the “layer two” payments network being developed to run on the Bitcoin blockchain, that would have let attackers drain user funds. (CoinDesk)
  • Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro says his government will activate a cryptocurrency-based system for banking transactions and international payments “very soon.” (Bloomberg $)
  • A hugely popular Ethereum-based gambling platform called Fairwin appears to be a ponzi scheme. (Decrypt)
  • Coinbase will now pay customers interest (1.25% per year) on their holdings of USD Coin, a dollar-pegged stablecoin it developed in collaboration with Circle. (CoinDesk)

Computing, but not as you know it. Join MIT Technology Review for our all-computing two-day conference this December. Book your tickets today.

The Money Quote

“I am much more nervous about projects which develop in a dark corner in the financial system somewhere, spread themselves out through cyberspace and one day are too big to be stopped.”

Mark Branson, head of Switzerland’s financial supervisor FINMA, speaking at a conference this week in Zurich. As for the Switzerland-based Libra project, which is being led by Facebook, Branson said: “Here is something which is being done transparently.” (Reuters)

Mike Orcutt
We hope you enjoyed today's tour of what's new in the world of blockchains and cryptocurrencies. Send us some feedback, or follow me @mike_orcutt.
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