November 10, 2020 By Daniel Kuhn If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here.
Top shelf Another billionaire investor disclosed his bitcoin bags. The Silvergate Exchange Network added another exchange member. Riot Blockchain, a publicly traded bitcoin mining firm, recorded bumper revenues with plans to expand.
Billionaire's bitcoin Botched BSV Legal maneuvers SEN zen Riot's returns CoinDesk's upcoming virtual event Bitcoin for Advisors, on two half days Nov. 9-10, showcases a program tailored to the financial advisor community that covers investment theses for bitcoin, why younger demographics are turning to this asset and how it fits into the current global macroeconomic picture.
We will also walk through the practicalities: how to answer client questions about bitcoin, how to talk to your compliance department about bitcoin, how can bitcoin can help grow your book. Apply for Bitcoin for Advisors, Nov. 9-10.
Quick bites
CoinDesk Research's latest Monthly Review covers asset performance in October, Bitcoin's congestion problem and Ethereum's shifting metrics as the launch of Ethereum 2.0 looms. Download the free report. Market intel Trend lines CoinDesk's Omkar Godbole examines three major trends contributing to bitcoin's two-month-long rally. Having peaked at 33-month highs near $16,000, experts are citing increased institutional participation (high-net-worth individuals such as investor Stanley Druckenmiller and publicly traded firms Square and MicroStrategy), a supply crunch (huge spot market buys from retail investors and funds like Grayscale's GBTC trust have significantly reduced bitcoin supply, driving up the price); and technical analysis to explain bitcoin's rise. (Grayscale, like CoinDesk, is a unit of DCG.) Webinar: How to Value Ethereum In this 30-minute webinar, the first of the four-part series How to Value Ethereum, CoinDesk Research looks at accounts - a concept that sounds familiar to blockchain addresses, but involves novelties and complexities that are critical to understanding how Ethereum works.
Register to join How to Value Ethereum on Nov. 11. At stake Regulatory matters "Regulators are slow and there's a reason we're slow," Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) member Hester Peirce said yesterday at CoinDesk's Bitcoin for Advisors virtual event.
When confronted with the quickly evolving crypto landscape, however, Peirce said the agency could do more to be proactive. Noting it is less top-heavy than it appears, Pierce said the SEC's five commissioners usually defer to the agency's staff to approve or disapprove novel products like exchange-traded funds (ETF).
In one such example of this arrangement, yesterday the SEC's Division of Investment Management issued a letter seeking comment on an expanded definition of a "qualified custodian."
In response to the Wyoming Division of Banking's recent decision to affirm the wealth management firm Two Ocean Trust as a qualified custodian eligible to custody digital assets for its clients, the SEC is now asking questions. Traditionally, qualified custodians were limited to banks, registered broker-dealers and certain derivatives merchants, all subject to stringent regulation.
Now, with at least one state granting a public trust company (Two Ocean) qualified custodian status under state law, the federal watchdog is looking to add clarity to the definition.
Industry publication Decrypt writes: "The SEC's letter asks for public comments on a variety of questions, for example, who's been left out of the qualified custodian definition that should be in? Who's in, who should be out? And, importantly, do state-chartered trust companies like Two Ocean have the same characteristics as banks?" Depending on where the SEC lands, this could open the door for other public trust companies – like pensions, endowments and foundations, Caitlin Long, head of Avanti said – to enter the crypto fold.
As Peirce said yesterday: "There are circumstances where we have a framework at the SEC that was built in the 1930s and 1940s and added on over time," she said. "Certainly now that we're seeing what's happening in the crypto space, for example, there are areas we are going to have to make adjustments and I do think we should move faster … I'm impatient there."
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