The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day |
|
|
Hello and welcome to The Node. This is Daniel Kuhn and Xinyi Luo, here to take you through the latest in crypto news and why it matters. In today’s newsletter: |
|
|
Bankrupt BlockFi Sues Bankman-Fried for His Robinhood Shares: On the same day BlockFi declared bankruptcy, the crypto lender also filed suit against Sam Bankman-Fried to reclaim stock shares in Robinhood that the FTX founder pledged as a backstop. SBF was accused of trying to sell these shares (held in a holding company called Emergent Fidelity Technologies) during the run on FTX this month. - Meanwhile, Silvergate Capital, the principal bank for the U.S. crypto industry, responded to rumors it had great exposure to BlockFi.
MakerDAO Voting on Hiking DAI Stablecoin Rewards: MakerDAO is voting to increase the annual reward for its DAI dollar-pegged stablecoin to those who pledge crypto collateral as yields dry up across crypto. The voting period closes Dec. 1, and could see rates raised up to 1% from 0.01% today. - “Banks are offering 4%+ in risk-free yield. We should do the same,” Maker’s Sam MacPherson said. The increased fees would be paid out from lending revenues, not a marketing budget.
- Separately, DeFi protocol Aave is sunseting trading on 17 assets (including curve, 1inch, yearn finance and several stablecoins) in its largest liquidity pool. The decision was made by a community vote to mitigate risk of acquiring “bad debt” ahead of a protocol upgrade.
Kraken Settles Iran Sanctions Case With US Treasury: U.S.-based crypto exchange Kraken agreed to pay more than $360,000 to the Treasury Department over claims it violated sanctions by serving customers in Iran. Kraken also agreed to invest $100,000 in implementing additional sanctions compliance controls. - The Treasury said a series of allegedly illicit transactions totaling $1.68 million took place between Oct. 14, 2015, and June 29, 2019, and were “non-egregious and voluntarily self-disclosed.”
|
|
|
Putting the news into perspective |
(Mathieu Stern/unsplash) Why Do Crypto Lenders Keep Failing? BlockFi is the latest crypto lender to file bankruptcy this year, following liquidity issues at Celsius, Genesis and many others, D.K. writes. What are crypto lenders, why do they keep blowing up and what is the future of this once-promising sector of growth in crypto? Read the full article here. |
|
|
Crypto winter is bearing down and your cold wallet isn’t getting any warmer, even though you’ve stacked up a bunch of coins. At DeFiChain, we’re building your decentralized future on the world’s most secure blockchain, Bitcoin. We make use of your sitting crypto with rewards for liquidity mining and staking, and even offer decentralized options for real-world assets, like stocks and precious metals. Strengthen your hold on your investments and get through crypto winter by joining DeFiChain at choose.defichain.ac.
|
|
|
Overheard on CoinDesk TV... |
"The [Securities and Exchange Commission] will get paid before the retail people they are mandated to help and protect." – Hodder Law founder Sasha Hodder, discussing BlockFi's bankruptcy filing, on CoinDesk TV's "First Mover" |
|
|
GoodCrypto Closes Pre-Seed Round to Build the Ultimate Trading Terminal for Decentralized Exchanges GoodCrypto was developed as one of the most advanced trading platforms for centralized exchanges. Despite the market downturn, trading activity on GoodCrypto has continued to grow, a testament to its constant development. GoodCrypto has over 300,000 mobile app downloads, and although it originates from Ukraine, it has a global presence across 93 countries. What’s driving users to GoodCrypto is its ability to provide advanced trading tools that work consistently across all spot and derivatives exchanges. *This is sponsored content from GoodCrypto. |
|
|
|