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The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Oct. 15, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Sponsored by Welcome to The Node.
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–Daniel Kuhn
Today’s must-reads Top Shelf TETHER FINED: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) fined Bitfinex and Tether more than $42 million on allegations the USDT stablecoin was not fully backed at all times and that Bitfinex violated a previous agency order. The federal commodities regulator settled charges with the sibling crypto companies on Friday, barring both firms from “any further violations of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and CFTC regulations.” RANSOM EVERYWHERE? Payments tied to ransomware attacks in 2021 are already exceeding 2020′s total, the U.S. government’s financial crimes watchdog said Friday. Exchanges and other financial institutions reported more than $590 million in payments tied to ransomware attacks, including cryptocurrency payments, to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) in the first half of 2021, outstripping a 2020 total of just $416 million. MINING UPS & DOWNS: Belarus has classified crypto miners in the same electricity tariff grouping as data centers, according to a directive jointly issued by the Ministry of Energy and Ministry of Anti-Monopoly. Meanwhile, D.A. Davidson, the Wall Street investment banking and research firm, launched research coverage of bitcoin mining companies Core Scientific, Marathon Digital, Riot Blockchain and Hut 8 Mining with buy ratings for all the stocks – saying U.S. miners are “literally printing money.”
CRYPTO GETS TRADITIONAL? Bitcoin jumped above $60,000 for the first time in almost six months following a Bloomberg report a bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund (ETF) will clear the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Separately, MSCI warned of “creeping” exposure to cryptocurrency in equity markets. About 50 companies with a combined market capitalization of $7.1 trillion have taken on some degree of crypto exposure.
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What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals Meet the DeFi Delegate Knocking on the Doors of Congress (CoinDesk) Tax officials tighten their grip on crypto (Financial Times) Kazakhstan Government Regulations Threaten Bitcoin Mining Hotspot (Blockworks) US Treasury publishes new sanctions guidance for crypto businesses (The Block) Mark Camilleri is blowing the whistle on events surrounding murder and alleged corruption in Malta – and publishing his claims as NFTs (Decrypt) Ben Munster argues crypto journalists should not hold fiat (Decrypt)
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Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway $2T and Counting: Some Friday Perspective Nic Carter, prominent industry venture capitalist and shyguy, had an insightful comment yesterday about how it’s easy to lose sight of reality when you're logged on, heads down focused on building the digital tomorrow. It was in an article about tungsten – the latest obsession among many on Crypto Twitter.
“Focusing on metals is funny because, like, we’re dealing with synthetic stuff all day, right? So, like, why not just recenter on some analog physical goods every now and again. That’s the joke,” he said. Of course, crypto isn’t the only online community to realize the importance of stepping back now and again. Before there was touching tungsten, there was touching “grass.” The internet, with its enclaves, pseudo-anonymity and torrent of information has its psychological effects. It’s reshaping our memory, changing the quality of our friendships and, in what’s called the “disinhibition effect,” may be making us meaner. Getting a little perspective on that is important. This is especially true in crypto, where digital pet rock NFTs (non-fungible tokens) sell for millions of dollars and governments call stablecoins “systemic risks.” It’s surreal, but it’s happening.
Some of this weirdness stems from the sheer amount of capital in the industry – now valued well above $2 trillion. Maybe it’s because we’ve seen it before, or maybe it’s that the human mind is just bad at conceptualizing large numbers, but that number means almost nothing to me. I can’t be the only one that has become so desensitized.
Sometimes it helps to put crypto in context. I’ve tried to find analogies so we can tie back to reality just for a moment.
The current market cap of all crypto assets tracked by CoinGecko sits at $2,520,948,299,351. That would have paid for two decades of war in Afghanistan, according to researchers at Brown University’s Costs of War Project. America’s longest conflict is estimated conservatively to have cost $2.3 trillion. Bitcoin cash (BCH), the unit of account for the payments-focused fork of the Bitcoin blockchain, is currently trading at or around $600. That’s the price for one pound of the world’s most expensive cheese, Pule donkey cheese, which is produced by a single farm in Serbia’s Zasavica Special Nature Reserve. Last month, community members that sprung up around the text-based non-fungible token (NFT) game Loot, developed by Vine co-creator Dom Hofmann, issued 10,000 adventure gold (AGLD) tokens to NFT holders. Those airdropped tokens are now worth $35,900 at today’s price level, which can no longer buy you an entry-level Tesla. Bitcoin trotted above $60,000 today following news an exchange-traded fund (ETF) could hit markets next week, before dropping back down, then back up. No matter, BTC is still in the ballpark of costs associated with feeding an elephant for a year. On May 22, 2010, early bitcoin miner Laszlo Hanyecz bought two Papa Johns pizzas for 10,000 BTC. Had Hanyecz held onto those bitcoins instead, today the coins would have been worth $598,311,000. That was the projected cost to build the original Prince George Hotel in New York City in 1917.
Uniswap, the largest decentralized exchange, expended some 1,500 ETH in gas fees (the price paid to run transactions on the Ethereum blockchain) over the past 30 days, according to data site Gas Station. Depending on price fluctuations, that’s somewhere between the $4 million allocated to fund full scholarships for Black and low-income residents who attend the City University of New York and the $6.5 million meant for a retraining program in the current New York City government budget.
–Daniel Kuhn
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