What you need to know today in crypto and beyond Welcome to The Node. If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Questions? Feedback? We'd love to hear from you! Simply reply to this email. –Daniel Kuhn FIRST REPO TRADE: Goldman Sachs has finished its first repo trade using JPMorgan's private blockchain network, according to a report by Bloomberg on Tuesday. The initial trade came in the form of a U.S. Treasury bond exchanged for JPCoin and took three hours and five minutes to complete. Goldman's Mathew McDermott said this was a "pivotal moment for the digitization of transactional activity." CANAAN GOES WEST TOO: Canaan, one of the largest bitcoin mining machine manufacturers, has set up its first base in Kazakhstan, after multiple mining companies moved west to flee Chinese regulation. The company has already started deploying its latest Avalon Miner units and is also looking to expand its business scope and customer base, CEO Nangeng Zhang said in a press release on Wednesday. DELAYED: The U.S. Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) pushed back a decision on a bitcoin exchange-traded fund from Valkyrie Digital Assets, it said in a filing Tuesday. The revised date is now Aug. 10 instead of the original date of June 26. This comes after the SEC already delayed a decision on the VanEck Bitcoin Trust for the second time last week. BACK TAXES: South Korean officials seized more than 53 billion won ($47 million) in crypto from people accused of tax evasion, according to government officials. Crypto exchanges have to register with the financial regulator before September to determine the legality of their operations, as part of the country's broader crackdown on the industry to tackle fraud and money laundering. –Helene Braun Your digital assets deserve a savings account in their BEST INTEREST. Leading crypto lender Nexo treats you, your crypto and your fiat to industry-best Crypto & Fiat services, featuring: * Up to 12% interest on digital assets, paid out daily! * Yields available on BTC, ETH, LTC, BCH, XRP, XLM, EOS, TRX, LINK, BNB, PAXG, USDT, USDC, TUSD, PAX, DAI, HUSD, GBP and EUR. * No minimum or maximum limits on funds deposited, offering infinite opportunities to earn. * #ZeroFees on all transactions. * Military-grade wallet security and top-tier insurance on all custodial assets with SOC 2 Type 2 certified crypto custodian BitGo. Get started at nexo.io "There will be superior competitors [to bitcoin] and those competitors will literally evaporate the demand." –Steve Hanke, Professor of Economics at Johns Hopkins University, on CoinDesk's "First Mover." CoinDesk's new reward token soft-launched at Consensus 2021, but $DESK lives on. Attendees can still cash in at the $DESK store, or hodl and accumulate. Join the Telegram group for announcements and airdrops. What others are writing... -
Gen Z prefers crypto over traditional investments because it is "the future of finance," (CNBC), while a JPMorgan survey found a third of mainstream investment firms see crypto as "rat poison." (Reuters) -
The Block reports that the bitcoin hashrate has dropped nearly 50% following China's mining crackdown, though secondhand miners are a hot commodity. -
London-based fragrance house Rook Perfumes is spinning up a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) to create a "Scent of the Metaverse" non-ffungible token. (Decrypt) - Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of this little thing called the world wide web, defends his Sotheby's auction of an NFT. representing the source code of the web. "This is totally aligned with the values of the web," Berners-Lee told the Guardian.
–H.B. & D.K. Titan is excited to launch Titan Crypto, the first actively managed crypto strategy available to all U.S. investors (both accredited and non-accredited)* The investment team at Titan conducts deep fundamental and quantitative research to identify what they believe are the highest-quality crypto assets, and actively manages a portfolio with the goal of generating outstanding returns. Join the waitlist to get Titan Crypto for - $0 commissions, 0% advisory fee — only valid for those on the waitlist. Join the waitlist *At launch, Titan Crypto will be available to all U.S. residents except those with home addresses in New York. Sponsored Content Ledger: Ledger Presents School of Block: Part 2 - School's back for the summer. For all the latest developments in crypto, DeFi and Web 3.0, check out Ledger's weekly video series, School of Block. With so much innovation in the world of crypto happening so quickly, it's important to understand the basics. If you're a crypto newbie – or even a crypto skeptic – School of Block can help you understand what's really going on.
Putting the news in perspective Transitory Inflation Is Transitory Fed Chairman Jerome Powell yesterday admitted to Congress that inflation effects in the U.S. economy "have been larger than we expected and they may turn out to be more persistent than we have expected." The U.S. Consumer Price Index rose 5% year-over-year in May, the highest level in 13 years. Inflation excluding food and energy was at 3.8%, the highest level for that number in 30 years. That's all worrying stuff, and inflation has rightly been a focus of discussion as the pandemic ends and stimulus checks keep going out. Continued 5% inflation or higher would be, among other things, a vindication of the anti-Fed, hard-money thesis that fuels many bitcoiners and a real chance to test whether the digital currency is an anti-inflationary hedge. But Powell didn't sound any major alarms on Tuesday, holding to the line that inflation effects in the economy were largely transitory, the product of "reopening" demand as the pandemic fades. Powell cited demand for airline tickets, for instance, as more people vaccinated and decide to travel. He might also have cited the price of rental cars, or used vehicles, or graphics cards, or Uber rides, or housing-grade lumber. There are certainly other examples, but these may be the most representative of what you could roughly call supply-driven inflation. In short, rising overall prices in the U.S. have been substantially driven, not by a surplus of money above pre-pandemic levels, but in many cases by supplies of goods and services that are below pre-pandemic levels.
Your mental model for inflation may be someone taking a wheelbarrow full of money to the grocery store to buy a loaf of bread, but maybe add this image, too – a near-empty used car lot in a nation full of people going absolutely insane with the desire to go somewhere, anywhere. The complexity of the used car story is representative of the broader supply-constraint story. Used car prices are surging because many car manufacturers cancelled their orders for crucial chips way back in early 2020, betting the pandemic meant car sales would crater long-term. They were incredibly wrong, but by the time they decided they needed more chips, fabricators had taken on other, more valuable clients. So now, the original equipment manufacturers can't make as many new cars, and people are turning to used vehicles en masse. The chips that displaced the automakers' contracts probably sometimes included graphics cards, or GPUs, which have also surged in price for reasons unrelated to what we consider "inflation." The skyrocketing price of Ethereum in particular during the pandemic juiced GPU demand from miners, leaving gamers absolutely forlorn. The prices of computer peripherals like GPUs are part of the CPI calculation (though CPI measures retail prices, not the huge markups for GPUs on eBay in recent months). The other stories are similar. Lumber prices went bananas in April and May because the people wanted new houses at prices well above pre-pandemic levels. Recent months have seen more new housing starts than at any time since roughly 2005. Some of this demand is enabled by pandemic relief, of course. But even that doesn't make it inflation as commonly understood. The key issue here, as Nobel-prize winning progressive economist Paul Krugman laid out yesterday, is the difference between transitory inflation and core inflation. And many of the current big inflation drivers have clear solutions that don't involve constraining the money supply. Partly, we're already seeing a drop-off in demand as those who needed their houses/plane tickets/new cars YESTERDAY get their needs met. Lumber is already cratering, down 5% today as I write this. Growth in used vehicle prices has slowed to about 0.6% per month so far in June, down from rollicking 4.65% month-over-month growth in May. That's extremely significant because used car prices made up a large portion of the May inflation numbers, and they look like they'll be effectively gone for June CPI calculations. But other solutions will be on the supply side, as disrupted supply chains reconstitute themselves to meet demand. Carmakers will eventually get their chip suppliers back (especially if Ethereum keeps dumping), and those used-car lots will fill up again. Spread across sectors, that would mean the last few months weren't about long-term inflation, but short-term recovery, as dollars chase scarce goods and motivate producers to make more goods. Inflation happens when a growing supply of money hits a fixed supply of products. It seems pretty clear that's not what we're dealing with here when it comes to manufactured goods. (The story is significantly different and more complicated when it comes to labor and wages, and I'll point you to Joe Wiesenthal for a deeper dive on that side.) We'll have a pretty definitive answer to these questions within the next couple of weeks - more inflation data will be trickling in until we get updated CPI in the second week of July. My bet is that as the economy smooths out its last few pandemic wrinkles, inflation will retreat, if not to near-zero prepandemic levels, at least to the 2% to 3% that the Fed, and most economists, consider manageable. –David Z. Morris The cryptocurrency movement has never been so sprawling, reaching every corner of the planet. Crypto State by CoinDesk aims to connect with local communities to explore this movement of financial disruption and how it trickles down to every corner of the globe, from DeFi investment opportunities to alternative ways to transact and store wealth. We're making virtual stops with audiences in Nigeria, the Middle East and Southeast Asia this year. Register for the Crypto State virtual tour. ATTENTION: Scammers have been sending fraudulent emails with links to sites disguised to look like coindesk.com. If you are in doubt about a link, type https://www.coindesk.com directly into your browser; do not copy and paste. Remember, if something seems too good to be true, it probably is. Copyright © 2021 CoinDesk, All rights reserved. 250 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10003, USA |