Coinbase Customers Claim Accounts Were Locked, Demand Refunds

December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

Coinbase users are unhappy with the company after a technical problem had some accounts frozen for weeks, which could’ve led to large losses, CNBC writes.

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    Coinbase blamed the incident — a glitch in trading two cryptos — on “technical reasons,” but users are angry now because they allege the company improperly took their funds.

    The issue started in mid-November when Coinbase customers became able to buy the stablecoin GYEN, which is pegged to the value of one Japanese yen. POWR, a crypto used in energy trading, was involved too.

    Around Nov. 17, GYEN somehow became unhinged from the yen price it was supposed to be matched with, jumping to a high of around 7.5 times higher than the fiat equivalent. Trader activity on Coinbase began going up on Nov. 18, and ended up peaking at $122 million.

    The CNBC report says it’s unknown how many customers were involved and how many suffered losses. But the coin has been back at its intended yen peg level.

    Because of the trouble, Coinbase ended up temporarily disabling buys, sell, trades, sends and receives of GYEN and POWR.

    CNBC writes that the dispute is an example of what happens when investors pour money into lightly regulated crypto markets without solid relations between exchanges and customers or defined rules.

    Stablecoins, in addition, are also marketed as pegged to outside assets to do away with the volatility in other cryptos – but they might not be as stable as the name implies.

    The company, asked by reporters what happened, said it would be releasing more info. But as of Tuesday evening, CNBC reported that several customers still had frozen holdings.

    PYMNTS writes that stablecoin regulations have been a hot topic as of late, with Japan saying it planned to regulate them so that only licensed banks could issue stablecoins. The intent was to cut down on risk for users.

    See more: Japan to Propose Limiting Stablecoin Issuance

    OpenSea Only Thinking of IPO That May Include NFT Community, CFO Says

    December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

    OpenSea, blockchain, NFTs, IPO, CFO

    Newly hired OpenSea CFO Brian Roberts has clarified that the company isn’t necessarily going public yet, but is looking at “what an IPO will look like,” a Crypto Economy report said Wednesday (Dec. 8).

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      The rumors of the non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace going public had resulted in critiques that an initial public offering (IPO) could have adverse effects for the crypto market overall.

      OpenSea is one of the larger NFT companies, and many users don’t want it to go public. In response, CFO Brian Roberts tweeted on Tuesday (Dec. 7) that the reporting had been “inaccurate” about the company’s plans.

      “Let me set the record straight: there is a big gap between thinking about what an IPO might eventually look like [and] actively planning one,” he wrote. “We are not planning an IPO, and if we ever did, we would look to involve the community.”

      The rumors were initially published on Tuesday (Dec. 7) as Roberts was hired. As Roberts was influential in the IPO for Lyft in 2019, users speculated that he might be brought on for OpenSea for a similar reason.

      In some interviews, he had also hinted about the possibility of IPOs, with Roberts saying the company was growing fast and that going public was “very rational,” the report says.

      Some of the critiques around the potential IPO are focused on the fact that if OpenSea did go public, the platform wouldn’t have a token. However, Roberts said the company might launch a token after all – nothing is set in stone.

      PYMNTS writes that OpenSea saw less activity in September, with the sales volume early that month falling almost 50% from high numbers in August. The value hit $792 million from 156,811 traders, according to Cointelegraph data.

      See also: NFT Marketplace OpenSea Sees Sales Volume Drop 50% in First Week of September

      Despite the drop, OpenSea was still the biggest NFT site, with DappRadar data showing that it didn’t have any close competition in terms of active traders and the value of the trades.

      According to that data, OpenSea had 398,638 traders in the late summer this year, doing $4.03 billion in trades.

      Australia Announces Regulatory Reform to Take Crypto ‘Out of the Shadows’

      December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

      Crypto - Australia

      Australia is set to announce plans for far-reaching reforms of its payments system’s regulation on Wednesday (Dec. 8), including the creation of a “considered regulatory framework” for cryptocurrencies.

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        Calling plans for such a framework “world-leading” in a local interview, Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said, “We’re taking this area out of the shadows. We want those businesses that are buying and selling cryptocurrencies to be properly licensed.”

        The goal, he added, is to “provide a greater certainty and security to those people who are transacting” in cryptocurrencies.

        The number of those people seemed to be less certain, as Frydenberg put the number of Australians who own or have owned cryptocurrency at 800,000. That’s far below the numbers reported by a recent online survey, which found that almost 18% of Australians own crypto — more than 4.5 million people.

        Future-proofing

        The broader reform plans will see the biggest changes to the country’s payments system in 25 years, Frydenberg noted. “We’re modernizing the payment system,” he said. “We’re broadening the definition of the services and the products that can be regulated.”

        The government is also planning to future-proof its regulatory framework by giving the treasurer and the Reserve Bank of Australia greater authority to direct policy over the broader payments systems industry, so it can deal more effectively with new and emerging gaps in the regulatory regime.

        “There is a digital revolution occurring in our payments system,” Frydenberg said, noting that checks are on the way out and the use of cash is declining in Australia just like it is everywhere. Pointing to the growing use of digital wallets, Frydenberg noted that “digital currencies are fast becoming the new norm — and our regulatory system has not stayed up to date.”

        Without these changes, he added, “Australian businesses and consumers could increasingly transact in environments that are largely unregulated from an Australian perspective.”

        Not only would that put them at a competitive disadvantage, but Frydenberg also said that “any rules in play” for the country’s crypto industry would “instead be determined by foreign governments and large multinationals, including tech giants.”

        However, nothing is likely to be enacted before the federal elections due by May 2022, according to the opposition’s shadow treasurer.

        Centralizing

        Frydenberg also said that the government was “going to be working with the reserve bank to look into the feasibility of introducing a central bank digital currency” — something that would be a “world-leading initiative.”

        Central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, are government-issued forms of the national fiat currency that would be legal tender, just like paper cash.

        Also see: To Fight Crypto Competitors, More Central Banks Eye Digital Currencies

        Likely blockchain-based, CBDCs are a big issue in the Asia-Pacific region, as China is on the verge of issuing a digital yuan, putting it far ahead of any large economy in the world. The extensively tested CBDC is scheduled to be put into circulation before the Beijing Winter Olympics in February.

        Learn more: China’s Central Bank: 10M Businesses, 140M People Using Digital Yuan

        China’s digital yuan project has lit a fire under governments around the world, with some concerns that it could be used more effectively across borders, increasing China’s economic and political clout.

        One of those is the Asia-Pacific region’s other giant, India, which is getting serious about creating its own CBDC, with a pilot planned as soon as early 2022.

        More details: India Central Bank Eyes Digital Currency Trial Run in 2022

        Six Crypto Execs Warn Congress Not to Overregulate Crypto

        December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

        Congress

        Call it crypto on the Hill.

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          Wednesday (Dec. 8) promises to shine a spotlight on the opportunities and challenges confronting cryptocurrency firms, including stablecoin issuers and exchanges.

          The hearing before the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services is titled “Digital Assets and the Future of Finance: Understanding the Challenges and Benefits of Financial Innovation in the United States.”

          And from last week’s announcement of the hearing, we can get a sense of what to expect today.

          “Given the digital asset sector’s growth and evolution, several questions have arisen as to how regulators can ensure investor protections, ensure consumer protections, and maintain market integrity. The House Committee on Financial Services has explored the emergence of cryptocurrencies as an asset class for investors. implications for consumer privacy and financial inclusion, and the promises and perils of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs),” the announcement said.

          But the same notice advises that “currently, cryptocurrency markets have no overarching and centralized regulatory framework, leaving investments in the digital assets space vulnerable to fraud, manipulation, and abuse.”

          Initial testimony provided by witnesses seem focused on how U.S. policy should be approached. Witnesses on the docket include: Jeremy Allaire, co-founder, chairman and CEO, Circle; Samuel Bankman-Fried, founder and CEO, FTX; Brian P. Brooks, CEO, Bitfury Group; Charles Cascarilla, CEO and co-founder, Paxos Trust Company; Denelle Dixon, CEO and executive director, Stellar Development Foundation; and Alesia Jeanne Haas, CEO, Coinbase Inc. and CFO, Coinbase Global Inc.

          Jeremy Allaire, co-founder and CEO of Circle, said in his remarks that as many as  20 million people in the U.S. and 200 million around the world participate in the digital asset market.

          “Today, we are at a pivotal moment in the development of the next major infrastructure layer of the internet, extending from an internet of data, content and communications, to an internet of value exchange and economic coordination,” he said. “The impact of this development on the future of U.S. economic competitiveness cannot be overstated.” He said the U.S. should aggressively promote the use of the dollar as the “primary currency of the internet.”

          He cautioned that, as findings of the President’s Working Group report on stablecoins highlighted, “not all of these [digital] payment instruments are created equal — but, by the same token, not all of them are part of an unregulated Wild West as has been often portrayed.”

          He said stablecoins, and in the case of USDC, those with liquid asset and dollar-denominated backing, are “held conservatively in the care, custody and control of the U.S. regulated banking system.” Circle, he noted, is also pursuing a full national banking charter from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and added that “we continue prioritizing bilateral and inter-agency engagement with all of the relevant Federal and state financial regulatory stakeholders.” Policy frameworks, he said, need to support an “open and competitive playing field, and allow new technologies to flourish.

          Separately, Brian P. Brooks, CEO of Bitfury Group, said in his own testimony that “a national policy agenda that takes crypto compliance seriously should assess whether it makes more sense to continue to keep crypto activities largely out of the regulated financial system, or to bring them inside the system precisely so they can be supervised and operated with appropriate levels of risk management.”

          He questioned whether it would be consistent to take the position that only banks should be allowed to issue stablecoins, but then fail to grant bank charters to the largest issuers of stablecoins.

          Treating “crypto” as a “single unitary activity,” said Brooks, “whose main feature is a need for financial regulation would be like treating the original Internet in the 1990s as primarily a tax policy issue. We did not do that then.” A successful policy, he said, should be predicated on a “do no harm” strategy.

          “It would be worthwhile for the elected branches of government to grapple with the bigger questions,” he said, including, “Do we believe a user-controlled decentralized Internet is better than an Internet largely controlled by five big companies? Do we believe that the financial services sector is any less subject to network effects than information and commerce were in earlier iterations of the Internet? Do we trust big banks more, or open-source software more, as a tool for maintaining ledgers of account and allocating credit and capital?”

          Alesia Haas, CFO of Coinbase and CEO of Coinbase’s U.S. subsidiary, said that it is important for the IRS and Congress to ensure individuals and businesses pay the taxes they owe.

          “Central to achieving this goal is recognizing the unique nature of crypto technology — and creating parity with other asset classes,” said Haas, who added, “holders of digital assets want to pay their taxes, and centralized crypto intermediaries like Coinbase want clear rules and guidance to help them do that.  Digital asset platforms should be subject to the same third-party reporting rules on our customers’ gains and losses that brokerage firms, like Fidelity and Charles Schwab, operate under today.”

          Haas warned: “Without tailored legislative solutions that are openly debated with public participation, the United States risks unnecessarily onerous and chilling laws and regulations.”

          Crypto Companies Warn Congress Against Imposing ‘Chilling’ Regulations 

          December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

          Cryptocurrency regulations

          Six cryptocurrency executives told the U.S. House Financial Services Committee Wednesday (Dec. 8) that it could send cryptocurrency activity underground or outside the U.S. if the new rules it imposes on the industry are too strict, according to a Reuters report. 

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            “Without tailored legislative solutions that are openly debated with public participation, the United States risks unnecessarily onerous and chilling laws and regulations,” said Alesia Haas, chief executive of Coinbase Inc, in her testimony released Tuesday (Dec. 7). 

            “This could effectively push crypto activity underground or to offshore exchanges that have little or no compliance programs,” she said. 

            Congress is expected to push crypto execs to defend the industry and help them with ideas to regulate the space during the hearing. 

            “To us, it would be productive if executives present a pro-active agenda for what Congress can do to ensure consumer and investors are protected, the government gets its taxes and criminals and terrorists are blocked from using crypto,” said Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at Cowen Washington Research Group, in a note to clients. 

            Several executives who are expected to testify will push Congress to tread lightly on its oversight and regulation of the digital currency world. 

            “There are a number of examples of U.S. regulatory decisions that have driven legitimate activity offshore, in ways that harm U.S. investors, innovators, and workers,” said Bitfury CEO Brian Brooks in the Reuters report. “There is a reason why crypto talent is no longer concentrated in Silicon Valley, the birthplace of the original commercial internet.” 

            Related: Regulators Focus on Crypto, Hoping to Avoid Another Post-Crisis Reckoning 

            The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)’s Semiannual Risk Perspective report named digital assets in the banking sector as one of four key operational risks facing the banks it oversees. 

            Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu is hoping that being proactive in regulating digital currency will keep another financial crisis from crippling the sector. The EU has been aggressive in enacting preemptive regulation, while India is discussing it after China’s lead in banning crypto outright. 

            The agencies are working to craft rules related to crypto custody, helping customers buy and sell digital assets, crypto asset-backed loans, issuing and using stablecoins and banks holding crypto assets on their balance sheets. 

            Metaverse Company Nextech AR Accepts Cryptocurrencies as Payment Method  

            December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

            cryptocurrencies

            Augmented reality (AR) experience technology and services company Nextech AR Solutions Corp. is accepting Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and USD Coin as a form of payment and is exploring the possibility of adding additional crypto payments in the future, the company announced Wednesday (Dec. 8) in a press release 

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              The cryptocurrency addition is made possible through an integration with Coinbase Commerce. Nextech AR is looking into integrating cryptocurrency payment at self-serve checkout to allow for a streamlined and flexible payment process for recurring software-as-a-service (SaaS) customers.

              In addition, the company is working on integrating cryptocurrency payment at self-serve checkout, allowing for a seamless, flexible payment process for all recurring SaaS customers as well. 

              “Cryptocurrency has emerged as a critical part of the evolution of finance, just as the Metaverse is the evolution of the internet from 2.0 to 3.0,” said Nextech AR CEO Evan Gappelberg. “With this Coinbase integration Nextech is positioning not only as a metaverse technology company that offers metaverse solutions to its customers but also as an end-to-end metaverse company that accepts crypto, keeping us ahead of the curve in everything we do.” 

              The implementation of cryptocurrency payments via the Nextech AR platform comes on the heels of the company’s ARitize 3D SaaS platform, a self-service AR platform that lets users create 3D/AR models using artificial intelligence (AI), according to PYMNTS. 

              Immersive experiences allow customers to “try before they buy,” a notion can up conversions by more than 90% and reduce returns by 40%, according to Shopify data. 

              Read more: Nextech AR Debuts 3D Model Creation Platform  

              Underlining the growing popularity of crypto, Coinbase saw its third quarter revenue surpass $1.6 billion (significantly higher than 2020 third quarter sales of $287 million) and its earnings exceed $1.57 billion, according to PYMNTS. In the second quarter trading volume surged to $462 billion, an increase of nearly 38%, marking an almost 10-fold increase as compared to last year. 

              Related: Coinbase Earnings Expected to Spotlight Monthly Transacting Users, Cross-Platform Use  

              A Deloitte study found that more than 2,300 U.S. companies accept Bitcoin, including Microsoft, PayPal, Starbucks and Etsy. 

              CFTC Commissioner: Stop Crypto Fines Without Clear Guidance

              December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

              CFTC

              One of the U.S.’s top regulators criticized her own agency for fining crypto companies for violating rules without making clear what those rules are.

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                Commissioner Dawn Stump of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) said in an interview published in the Financial Times Wednesday (Dec. 8) that her agency should stop “bringing enforcement actions without giving [their targets] the tools they need to be compliant.”

                More broadly, the Trump appointee criticized U.S. regulatory agencies for “regulating through enforcement,” saying, “I think there’s a lot of that happening now.”

                Those criticisms extend to Congress for failing to enact legislation setting those rules rather than forcing the agencies and companies to twist to fit regulations designed many decades before cryptocurrencies existed.

                Republicans Like Pennsylvania Rep. Pat Toomey have been saying much the same thing. In a September hearing by the House Financial Services Committee, said that “we need to have clarity on this,” adding we certainly shouldn’t be taking enforcement action against somebody without having first provided that clarity.”

                The cryptocurrency industry has long criticized regulators including the CFTC and especially the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for failing to provide clear guidance to firms issuing or trading in digital assets. That is expected to be an important topic when six top crypto executives testify before the House Financial Services Committee Wednesday.

                See: Crypto Experts Next Congressional Close-Up Is Coming; Here’s What to Expect

                Kraked Unfairly

                Stump singled out a $1.25 million fine levied on the San Francisco-based Kraken exchange in September for failing to register as a futures broker.

                Read: Bitcoin Exchange Kraken Pays $1.25M to Settle CFTC Illegal Trading Charges

                The agency said when Kraken offered “margined, leveraged or financed digital asset trading to U.S. customers” between June 2020 and July 2021, it broke the law because it was not a designated contract market, and had failed to register as a futures commission merchant (FCM).

                “We’ve never designed a regulation that explains to these entities how they could achieve that registration,” Stump told the Financial Times. “I would have preferred that we would not have brought those types of cases until we had better defined how they might achieve compliance.”

                At the time, she noted that it was not clear how Kraken could have registered as an FCM. “Many of the Commission’s rules governing its regulation of traditional FCMs do not fit Kraken’s role as an exchange,” she said.

                Noting that it had “sought clarity” from the CFTC when launching its margined trading products, Kraken said that the “enforcement action comes in the absence of a clearly articulated path to offering margin spot products to retail investors.”

                An Aggressive SEC

                For years, the SEC has taken a leading role in going after crypto firms. Under Trump appointee Jay Clayton it cracked down aggressively on initial coin offerings (ICOs), effectively arguing that all cryptocurrencies (except bitcoin and ether) are securities and firms creating and selling them must register with the agency.

                Learn more: For SEC, Subpoenas No Mere ‘Token Interest’ In ICOs

                The SEC has been aggressive under Clayton’s successor, Gary Gensler, appointed by President Joe Biden. A former cryptocurrency and blockchain professor at MIT, Gensler has continued the policy of labeling all cryptocurrencies, pursuing a $1.8 billion lawsuit against International payments firm Ripple over its sale of XRP.

                Read more: Ripple CEO Confident SEC Lawsuit Moving in Right Direction

                More recently, the agency announced an investigation into cryptocurrency exchange BlockFi for offering interest to customers who lend out their crypto, and pressured Coinbase into cancelling plans to create a lending arm, Crypto Lend.

                Also read: Coinbase Kills Lend Product Amid SEC Ire

                That led Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong to call for the creation of a new agency to oversee the cryptocurrency industry, complaining that the SEC was the only regulatory agency that refused to meet with it.

                Related news: Coinbase Asks Congress to Create Crypto-Regulator

                Visa’s Global Crypto Advisory Practice to Help Banks Shape Their Crypto Road Maps

                December 8, 2021 - 4 years ago

                Knowledge is power.

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                  Conventional wisdom holds that banks and traditional financial institutions (FIs) have much to fear from cryptocurrencies, that bitcoin and other digital offerings will disintermediate incumbents and upend the financial services landscape.

                  In an interview with PYMNTS’ Karen Webster, Visa VP of Crypto AJ Shanley and UMB Bank Executive Vice President, Chief Information and Product Officer Uma Wilson said a measured, systematic approach to crafting crypto strategies can help FIs turn friction into momentum.

                  Visa, said Shanley, has been fielding growing interest from clients covering some of the most basic existential questions about cryptocurrencies: how the digital assets can and will impact an FI’s business — and how to get started.

                  There may be the inclination to do something “massive,” said Shanley, but an optimal crypto strategy can take shape only with insight — gleaned from Visa’s own experience within the crypto realm.

                  To that end, Visa announced Wednesday (Dec. 8) that it is launching a Global Crypto Advisory Practice, an offering within Visa Consulting and Analytics (VCA) designed to help clients and partners advance their own crypto projects.

                  Interest is growing. In its announcement, Visa pointed to its own research that indicates that nearly 94% of consumers have awareness about cryptos.

                  Crypto’s Early Innings

                  Although the headlines may make it look as if cryptos are in a mature stage of development, Wilson said it’s early innings yet. FIs are starting to understand that cryptos present more of an opportunity for core businesses than a threat.

                  She likened the movement toward cryptos to the transition from checks to electronic payments — a journey, not a sprint (although it should be noted that while past innovations in payments have taken place over regulated rails, crypto has a whole host of regulatory issues taking shape). Similarly, the progression within the crypto space started with crypto-native companies and moved to FinTechs. Now, banks and credit unions (CUs) are starting to grasp the potential of bitcoin and its brethren.

                  The advisory practice, according to Shanley, will help FIs looking to expand their customer bases with crypto-related offerings, retailers seeking to offer nonfungible tokens (NFTs) and central banks seeking paths to their own digital currencies (known as CBDCs). In the U.S., the companies said Wednesday, Visa’s team is working with UMB Financial Corp.

                  Incumbent FIs would do well to start thinking seriously about crypto if they haven’t yet. Shanley said 40% of crypto owners have said they would be “very likely” to switch their primary bank to an FI that offers crypto-related products within the next 12 months.

                  The findings dovetail with PYMNTS’ own research that shows that 58% of multinational firms are using cryptocurrencies, but only a sliver of FIs offer crypto-related services (although 73% of those FIs that do so plan to add more).

                  Read more: 58% of Multinational Firms Use Cryptocurrencies

                  Leveraging Insights and Expertise

                  As Shanley noted, Visa has been building its crypto expertise for several years and has built cross functional, crypto-focused teams that number in the hundreds of Visa employees. He pointed to Visa’s announcement earlier this year that users of its cryptocurrency-backed card had spent more than $1 billion worth of crypto globally on goods and services in the first six months of 2021.

                  See more: Visa’s Crypto-Backed Cards Count $1B in Spending

                  The company also said in its most recent earnings announcement that, as of the quarter that ended in September, it had 60 crypto platform partners with the capability to issue Visa credentials and had captured $3.5 billion of payment volume so far this year.

                  Along the way, said Shanley, “we’ve developed deep experience across functionalities from engineering to product to strategy to risk and compliance.”

                  Establishing the advisory practice comes as inbound interest from the payment giant’s corporate clients has been increasing, across the spectrum of its 15,000 FI partners, said Shanley.

                  “All of our clients should have a crypto strategy,” he said, adding that “every merchant should have an NFT strategy” as well.

                  To get there, it’s necessary to have a consulting framework in place, offering clients an overview of crypto that starts with the basics and moves on from there, adopting and adapting to bitcoin or stablecoins or NFTs, depending on the use case. Shanley said being better informed may also lead to another strategy: doing nothing. Some clients may decide to sit back for a bit and wait for a more opportune time to delve into cryptos.

                  A Three-Pronged Strategy — and Where Things Stand

                  Perhaps it’s no surprise that any crypto strategy starts with education, encompassing everything from understanding the key technical components of cryptos to testing out use cases.

                  UMB Bank’s Wilson stated that with the combined efforts with Visa, for enterprises (especially FIs) developing their road maps in a three-pronged strategy, there’s a learning curve involved in getting up and running with various crypto projects.

                  More on Cryptocurrency