ALSO: FTX's $7 billion, CFTC's DeFi crackdown, metaverse funding and more |

Sept. 11, 2023

The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day 

Were you forwarded this newsletter? Sign up here.

Don't want this newsletter? Unsubscribe

 

Supported By

 

Welcome to The Node! This is Daniel Kuhn here to take you through the latest in crypto news and why it matters.

 

In today's news: FTX holds about $7 billion in assets. . Metaverse funding isn't dead. And hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of NFTs stolen after Vitalik Buterin's "X" account was hacked

 

The takeaway: The CFTC cracked down on three legit DeFi projects. Is there a path forward for DeFi in the U.S.?

 

FTX Funds

According to the latest accounting, FTX has been able to marshal back around $7 billion in assets, including $1.16 billion in solana (SOL) tokens and $560 million in bitcoin (BTC). The presentation also shed light on FTX’s real estate portfolio that includes 38 condos, penthouses and other properties in the Bahamas with an estimated value of around $200 million as well as property received by ex-CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and other executives in the months leading up to the bankruptcy. 

 

X Hack

Vitalik Buterin's X account was compromised. Hackers were able to send out a malicious phishing link to steal more than $691,000 in crypto (mostly NFTs) by gaining access to people's wallets, according to researcher ZachXBT. The cause of the hack is unknown though some have speculated Buterin – who has about 4.9 million followers on the platform formerly known as Twitter – was a victim of a SIM swap, a common technique to overtake user’s accounts in crypto. It's not uncommon for investors to loss millions of dollars worth of crypto in rug pulls, scams and hacks.

 

A message from Simpluris

If you purchased FEI or TRIBE tokens in the Genesis Event between March 31 and April 3, 2021, a class action settlement may affect your rights.

An NFT legal notice has been issued to wallets with instructions on how to file a claim. 

 

You can learn more about the settlement and file a claim here:  www.feitribesecuritiessettlement.com

 

Still Rippling

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is looking to appeal a decision in its multi-year lawsuit of Ripple Laps – specifically whether Ripple violated securities law in making XRP available to retail investors via crypto exchanges. The agency filed a response to a Ripple memo, which argued the SEC has no grounds to appeal Judge Analisa Torres' ruling in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

 

Meta Metaverse

Metaverse-focused venture capital firm Animoca Brands raised $20 million for its “Mocaverse” project, an effort to standardize some aspects of Web3 gaming to make development easier. The funding came mostly from other prominent crypto investors including round leader CMCC Global with contributions from Kingsway Capital, Liberty City Ventures and GameFi Ventures. Animoca co-founder Yat Siu also participated in a personal capacity.

 

The Takeaway: DeFi Sweep

(CoinDesk)

Is DeFi done for in the U.S.? Last week, in one fell swoop, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) sued three separate companies building some of the most respectable decentralized finance protocols. Deridex, Opyn and ZeroEx were all accused of illegally offering financial products to U.S. persons without the proper registration. 

 

What’s not clear is whether those financial products would have been otherwise legal, had the protocols’ developers played by the rules and registered. 

 

Is there actually a path forward for DeFi in the U.S.?

 

In its press release, the CFTC was specific about the labels it would have applied to the DeFi apps. Opyn, for instance, a type of decentralized insurance provider, should have had licenses for a “swap execution facility” (SEF) and “designated contract market” (DCM) as well as a “futures commission merchant” (FCM), the agency wrote. 

 

If Opyn had had those certifications, and added a standard know your customer (KYC) setup to meet the requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) would things be different? Or, is there something fundamental about the way DeFi operates that will always cut against U.S. law?

 

Some industry experts like lawyer Gabriel Shapiro have been saying for months that DeFi is a dead-end in the U.S. Ever since the CFTC sued Ooki DAO, Shapiro has been recommending DeFi protocols find ways to block U.S. users. 

 

As it turns out, Opyn was trying to geo-fence U.S. users from the front end website that interacts with the protocol’s underlying smart contract. It wasn’t enough – at least for the CFTC, which noted “those steps were not sufficient to actually block U.S. users from accessing the Opyn Protocol.”

 

That’s at least because DeFi itself can’t be ring fenced, only the gangways and apps used to access it’s protocols. By nature blockchain-based tools are global and incapable of discriminating against any potential use – as long as you can pay the gas fees, you can transact (that’s the beauty of blockchain).

 

And yet, despite the fact that DeFi was built expressly to gut the world’s financial regulation and surveillance, there are still a number of regulators who think regulating DeFi could work. On the same day as the CFTC’s triple whammy enforcement, CFTC Commissioner Caroline Pham proposed a regulatory sandbox for the sector.

 

“Staying ahead of the curve requires being ready to look to the future and preparing to embrace change,” said Pham, who also runs the agency’s Global Markets Advisory Committee. 

 

Pham’s comments aren’t far off from what CFTC Commissioner Summer Mersinger said in her dissenting opinion to the crackdown on Deridex, Opyn and ZeroEx. Apart from the usual line about the CFTC regulating through enforcement, Mersinger also raised the point that the CFTC failed to demonstrate what the protocol’s actually did wrong.

 

“The Commission’s Orders in these cases give no indication that customer funds have been misappropriated or that any market participants have been victimized by the DeFi protocols on which the Commission has unleashed its enforcement powers,” she wrote. In other words, where is the liability or the justification for sanctioning them? 

 

This to me seems like the nut of the issue. Although the CFTC hasn’t been expressly tasked with overseeing decentralized service providers, it can still shut them down simply for not filing the right paperwork. Forget whether DeFi is provably more transparent than traditional financial operators, or that it levels the playing field and forces everyone to play by the same rules. 

 

This isn’t to say DeFi doesn’t have its issues. Applications are routinely hacked, token allocations are deeply inequitable and DAOs have proven harder to govern than expected. 

 

As CFTC Director of Enforcement Ian McGinley put it: “Somewhere along the way, DeFi operators got the idea that unlawful transactions become lawful when facilitated by smart contracts. They do not.” 

 

The law being broken? Say it with me now: they failed to register. 

 

Read this article on the web.

 

– D.K.

@danielgkuhn

daniel@coindesk.com

 

Off-Chain Signals 

  • Major US Crypto Markets Bill is Facing a Congressional Gauntlet – Unchained
  • UK-registered crypto scam stole $76M from Thai investors – Protos
  • Ex-Algorand CEO Steve Kokinos tapped to lead Celsius 2.0 – Blockworks
  • Squid unveils direct swaps across Cosmos and EVM blockchains – The Block
  • What it's like in Europe's popular crypto haven Portugal as the U.S. cracks down – CNBC
 

SOL Invictus?

 
FacebookTwitterInstagram LinkedInTelegramTikTok

The Node: A newsletter from CoinDesk

Were you forwarded this newsletter? Sign up here. 

Don't want this newsletter? Unsubscribe.

Copyright © 2023 CoinDesk, All rights reserved. 

250 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10003, USA

See all of CoinDesk’s newsletters | Manage subscriptions | Opt out