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The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Sept. 20, 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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Today's must-reads Top Shelf HEATING UP: On Friday, three U.S. states issued cease-and-desist orders or otherwise took aim at crypto lender Celsius for violating state securities laws. Alabama, Texas and New Jersey are zeroing in on Celsius’s “Earn Rewards” program. In an AMA Friday, Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky said the crypto lender was ready to work with and “educate” regulators. Meanwhile, federal investigators have added allegations of “insider trading” to an ongoing Binance probe. STOCK EXCHANGE: TRON, the cryptocurrency created by Chinese entrepreneur Justin Sun, has made its way onto Deutsche Börse, Europe’s largest stock exchange, in the form of a VanEck-issued exchange-traded note (ETN), the companies announced Monday. VanEck also launched SOL and DOT ETNs, which are listed on Deutsche Börse Xetra. Trading begins tomorrow. RANSOM THREAT: The U.S. government plans to issue guidance and impose sanctions in an ongoing effort to tamp down on ransomware attacks – with particular, though unknown, implications for the crypto. The Biden administration will “single out specific targets” in its attempt to preempt ransomware payments, and may impose additional anti-money laundering regulations. PRIME OFFERING: Coinbase said Monday it’s opening its Prime crypto brokerage to all institutional investors. The suite of trading tools for professional investment firms already boasts a roster of 9,000 institutions, including hedge funds and family offices, according to data shared during Coinbase’s most recent earnings call.
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Overheard on CoinDesk TV... Sound Bites “This statue imposes serious new burdens on people who would use digital assets.”
–Proof of Stake Alliance Advisor Abraham Sutherland on the provision in the infrastructure bill, on CoinDesk's “First Mover".
What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals Why Washington Worries About Stablecoins (Jeanna Smialek/NYTimes) An ancient stash of 616 BTC worth $30 million moved for the first time in nine years. It was worth $8,195 when it was first deposited. (Tim Hakki/Decrypt) Hacker steals $12 million in wrapped bitcoin from DeFi platform pNetwork (Yogita Khatri/The Block) Nice overview of Solana's DeFi: grapes, flippies and parrots (David Feld/Decrypt)
A message from ADALend Cardano native DeFi protocol ADALend sells out seed round in 1 hour ADALend protocol based on Cardano will power flexible finance markets by providing for a larger instant loan approval, automated collateral, trustless custody and liquidity.
ADALend seed round was 400% oversubscribed. Those who did not make it into the seed stage have been white listed for the private sale.
Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway OpenSea Scandal Shows Need for More NFT Regulation There’s a lot you can do with a non-fungible token. Digital collectibles can work as passports to online communities, or ways for artists to interact with their fans. Bands have turned NFTs into backstage passes, and the writer Emily Segal used an NFT as a fundraising mechanism for an upcoming novel.
But an insider trading scandal at OpenSea, now one of the most important marketplaces for NFTs, serves as a reminder that – for all their potential – NFTs are still very much a speculative asset. In a world where everything becomes an NFT, casual collectors will need to be assured that the system isn’t rigged in favor of insiders.
Last week, Nate Chastain, OpenSea’s head of product, resigned after being accused of front-running NFTs in the way a broker might front-run a stock.
If front-running doesn’t immediately feel like a useful rubric for understanding an NFT trade, consider what Chastain is accused of doing: in a Twitter thread, an account called @ZuwuTV explained how a group of Ethereum addresses would buy up NFTs just before they appeared on OpenSea’s homepage and then sell them once the prices went up.
Receipts from Etherscan.io – a record of transactions on Ethereum – appeared to connect these addresses to Chastain.
Collectors are constantly on the hunt for what they call “alpha” – any sort of special insight that might make them early to the next hot NFT project. And OpenSea, with a daily trading volume of around $77 million and big-name backing, is at the heart of the NFT ecosystem.
When an NFT is featured on the site’s homepage, there’s a good chance it’s about to get more valuable. Chastain, @ZuwuTV inferred, was using non-public information about the platform’s curatorial strategy to make a profit flipping NFTs. Think of these trades as capitalizing on a non-public form of “alpha,” over and over again.
After a swift “third-party review” early last week, Chastain was out at OpenSea.
It’s somewhat disingenuous to argue, as one prominent influencer did this weekend, that NFTs are a “non-speculative on-ramp to get started” in crypto. An NFT is very clearly an asset with a resale value that rises and falls. It can be many things – an artwork, a fundraising vehicle, a digital VIP pass – but more often than not, it’s something you can resell. Whatever an NFT is, it’s also a trading card. To buy one is to buy into the crypto market, which is to engage with those whiplash ups and downs.
The inherently speculative aspect of crypto is something that tends to get lost in the rhetoric surrounding digital assets. NFTs and decentralized applications built on Ethereum are always going to involve an element of risk. It’s something that’s built into the technology itself – the double-edged sword of blockchain tech, a blessing and a curse.
And as long as investments go up and down, there will be insiders trying to get ahead. The Securities and Exchange Commission requires publicly traded companies to disclose executives’ stock trades for exactly this reason.
NFTs aren’t considered securities in the U.S., and regulators aren’t nearly as aggressive toward crypto as they are toward equities (at least not yet). @ZuwuTV has said he’s against further oversight, and that Chastain’s resignation is “the best we can ask for” in an unregulated market.
OpenSea has said it now explicitly prohibits employees from “using confidential information to purchase or sell any NFTs, whether available on the OpenSea platform or not.”
Community-backed enforcement is a tricky prospect – although Twitter has become a hub for self-appointed blockchain watch dogs, things can still fall through the cracks.
Crypto purists may bristle at the idea, but the path to establishing more trust in the market may involve ceding some ground to regulators. Say Instagram suddenly turned “likes” into NFTs and the first “like” on an iconic image came with the promise of monetary value down the line. It’s not hard to see how company employees could abuse inside information to get in early on, say, the first post from a celebrity new to the platform.
How would it look for companies to fight this on their own? Would it involve dedicated enforcement teams and periodic surveillance of employee wallets?
The crypto industry has a notoriously antagonistic relationship with regulation, but if NFTs are going to take off in a more mainstream way, buyers need to know they’ve got a fair shot. To help build that trust, oversight may be a price companies are willing to pay.
–Will Gottsegen
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