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SEC ends crypto drama by greenlighting 11 Bitcoin ETFs

Financial Block Staff

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SEC ends crypto drama by greenlighting 11 Bitcoin ETFs

The moment the crypto world was hoping for finally happened on Wednesday. And this time it was real.

Regulators on Wednesday gave fund managers the green light to launch 11 Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds, allowing ordinary investors to gain exposure to the world’s largest cryptocurrency without having to own it.

The ETFs, which begin trading Thursday, could make bitcoin a potential staple of 401(k), IRAs and retirement plans and give it mainstream acceptance.

The Securities and Exchange Commission made the announcement about 24 hours after a false social media post claimed those approvals had already been granted.

The chaos sparked by that unauthorized post on of the main players in cryptography.

Bitcoin’s price lurched Tuesday and Wednesday as investors tried to make sense of the incident, which wiped out tens of billions of market value in just a few minutes.

SEC Chairman Gary Gensler made clear in a statement Wednesday that his agency “did not approve or endorse bitcoin” when approving the new products and called Wednesday’s announcement “the path to follow the most lasting” after a key legal defeat on this issue last. summer.

“Investors should remain cautious of the myriad risks associated with bitcoin and products whose value is tied to crypto,” he said in his statement.

Gary Gensler, Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), testifies before an oversight hearing of the House Financial Services Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 27, 2023 . REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Gary Gensler, Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. (Jonathan Ernst/REUTERS) (REUTERS / Reuters)

An SEC commissioner, Caroline Crenshaw, issued a dissenting opinion calling the agency’s actions “unsound and ahistorical.”

“I fear that these products will flood the markets and land squarely in the retirement accounts of American households who can least afford to lose their savings to the fraud and manipulation that appears to be prevalent in the markets in the counting bitcoin,” she said in her statement.

The SEC has rejected such requests in the past, arguing that the products were vulnerable to market manipulation.

The list of candidates approved by the SEC on Wednesday included some of the biggest names on Wall Street, from BlackRock (BLACK) to Franklin Templeton (BEN), as well as a number of more well-known companies in the crypto world.

These issuers competed before launch to offer the lowest fees, hoping to attract as many investors as possible once the ETFs begin trading.

Other big Wall Street players also plan to get in on the action. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) are among the giant banks that have offered to help some of these fund managers create and redeem shares in their new funds.

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Optimism about these approvals helped Bitcoin jump of 164% in 2023 And start 2024 by surpassing $47,000, its highest level in almost two years.

A decade in the making

The crypto industry has been waiting for this moment for over a decade.

The first application to create a spot bitcoin ETF came in 2013 from crypto entrepreneurs and twins Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, famous for their early role in the creation of Facebook.

Entrepreneurs Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss arrive at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute Gala (Met Gala) to celebrate the opening of Entrepreneurs Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss arrive at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute Gala (Met Gala) to celebrate the opening of

Entrepreneurs Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss. (Lucas Jackson/REUTERS) (REUTERS / Reuters)

Since then, the SEC has denied more than 30 similar requests.

A key turnaround moment occurred last year in June when the world’s largest fund manager, BlackRock, filed for a spot Bitcoin ETF. Interest from one of Wall Street’s biggest names has prompted other asset managers to follow suit.

Another significant development occurred last August when one of the ETF applicants, Grayscale Investments, won a key legal victory against the SEC. Grayscale had sued the SEC in 2022 after it was not allowed to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) into a spot Bitcoin offer.

His main argument was that the agency had already approved exchange-traded products containing Bitcoin futures and had therefore “acted arbitrarily and capriciously.”

A three-judge panel of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in Washington sided with Grayscale, saying the company had “advanced substantial evidence” that its product was similar to Bitcoin futures ETFs previously approved by the SEC.

This forced the SEC to reconsider Grayscale’s spot Bitcoin ETF application, as well as others filed by rival fund managers.

“We are now faced with a new set of cases similar to those we have disapproved of in the past,” Gensler said in his statement Wednesday. “But circumstances have changed.”

One of the candidates, Cathie Wood, CEO of Ark Investment Management, told Yahoo Finance that the dominant spot Bitcoin ETF providers will be those who receive the most money from investors up front.

The winners “will be a few and they will be the most liquid,” she said.

Cathie Wood, founder, CEO and CIO of ARK Invest, speaks during the Milken Institute's 2022 Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 2, 2022. REUTERS/David SwansonCathie Wood, founder, CEO and CIO of ARK Invest, speaks during the Milken Institute's 2022 Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 2, 2022. REUTERS/David Swanson

Cathie Wood, CEO of ARK Investment Management. (David Swanson/REUTERS) (REUTERS / Reuters)

Historically, launches of other Bitcoin products have driven up the price of Bitcoin.

This happened in 2017 with the launch of the country’s first Bitcoin futures contracts, and then in 2021 with the SEC’s approval of the first Bitcoin futures ETFs. Prices skyrocketed and then fell significantly in the year following the launches.

In recent weeks, much debate has raged over whether bitcoin would rise or fall once the vaunted moment of approval passes.

Gautam Chhugani, managing director of Bernstein’s research arm, said his team estimates these financial products will generate $10 billion or more in investment flows through the end of 2024 and “hundreds of billions of dollars” over a period of two years.

This, he added, will help drive the price of Bitcoin even higher.

“We believe bitcoin will reach $150,000 by 2025,” Chhugani added.

David Hollerith is a senior reporter for Yahoo Finance covering banking, crypto and other areas of finance.

Click here for the latest crypto news, updates and more regarding ethereum And Bitcoin price, crypto ETF and implications on the cryptocurrency market

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Bitcoin soars above $63,000 as money flows into new US investment products

Financial Block Staff

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Bitcoin Surpasses $63,000 as Money Flows into New US Investment Products

Bitcoin has surpassed the $63,000 mark for the first time since November 2021. (Chesnot via Getty Images)

Bitcoin has broken above the $63,000 (£49,745) mark for the first time since November 2021, when the digital asset hit its all-time high of over $68,000.

Over the past 24 hours, the value of the largest digital asset by market capitalization has increased by more than 8% to trade at $63,108, at the time of writing.

Learn more: Live Cryptocurrency Prices

The price appreciation was fueled by record inflows into several U.S.-based bitcoin cash exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which were approved in January this year.

A Bitcoin spot ETF is a financial product that investors believe will pave the way for an influx of traditional capital into the cryptocurrency market. Currently, indications are favorable, with fund managers such as BlackRock (BLK) and Franklin Templeton (BEN), after allocating a record $673 million into spot Bitcoin ETFs on Wednesday.

Learn more: Bitcoin’s Success With SEC Fuels Expectations for an Ether Spot ETF

The record allocation surpassed the funds’ first day of launch, when inflows totaled $655 million. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (I BITE) alone attracted a record $612 million yesterday.

Bitcoin Price Prediction

Earlier this week, veteran investor Peter Brandt said that bitcoin could peak at $200,000 by September 2025. “With the push above the upper boundary of the 15-month channel, the target for the current market bull cycle, which is expected to end in August/September 2025, is raised from $120,000 to $200,000,” Brandt said. published on X.

The influx of capital from the traditional financial sphere into Bitcoin spot ETFs is acting as a major price catalyst for the digital asset, but it is not the only one. The consensus among analysts is that the upcoming “bitcoin halving” could continue to drive flows into the bitcoin market.

The Bitcoin halving is an event that occurs roughly every four years and is expected to happen again next April. The halving will reduce the bitcoin reward that miners receive for validating blocks on the blockchain from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. This could lead to a supply crunch for the digital asset, which could lead to price appreciation.

The story continues

Watch: Bitcoin ETFs set to attract funds from US pension plans, says Standard Chartered analyst | Future Focus

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FRA Strengthens Cryptocurrency Practice with New Director Thomas Hyun

Financial Block Staff

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International Accounting Bulletin

Forensic Risk Alliance (FRA), an independent consultancy specializing in regulatory investigations, compliance and litigation, has welcomed U.S.-based cryptocurrency specialist Thomas Hyun as a director of the firm’s global cryptocurrency investigations and compliance practice. Hyun brings to the firm years of experience building and leading anti-money laundering (AML) compliance programs, including emerging payment technologies in the blockchain and digital asset ecosystem.

Hyun has nearly 15 years of experience as a compliance officer. Prior to joining FRA, he served as Director of AML and Blockchain Strategy at PayPal for four years. He established PayPal’s financial crime policy and control framework for its cryptocurrency-related products, including PayPal’s first consumer-facing cryptocurrency offering on PayPal and Venmo, as well as PayPal’s branded stablecoin.

At PayPal, Hyun oversaw the second-line AML program for the cryptocurrency business. His responsibilities included drafting financial crime policies supporting the cryptocurrency business, establishing governance and escalation processes for high-risk partners, providing credible challenge and oversight of front-line program areas, and reporting to the Board and associated authorized committees on program performance.

Prior to joining PayPal, Hyun served as Chief Compliance Officer and Bank Secrecy Officer (BSA) at Paxos, a global blockchain infrastructure company. At Paxos, he was responsible for implementing the compliance program, including anti-money laundering and sanctions, around the company’s digital asset exchange and its asset-backed tokens and stablecoins. He also supported the company’s regulatory engagement efforts, securing regulatory approvals, supporting regulatory reviews, and ensuring compliance with relevant digital asset requirements and guidelines.

Thomas brings additional experience in payments and financial crime compliance (FCC), having previously served as Vice President of Compliance at Mastercard, where he was responsible for compliance for its consumer products portfolio. He also spent more than seven years in EY’s forensics practice, working on various FCC investigations for U.S. and foreign financial institutions.

Hyun is a Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialist (CAMS) and a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE). He is a graduate of New York University’s Stern School of Business, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in finance and accounting. Additionally, he serves on the board of directors for the Central Ohio Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists (ACAMS) chapter.

Commenting on his appointment, Hyun said, “With my experience overseeing and implementing effective compliance programs at various levels of maturity and growth, whether in a startup environment or large enterprises, I am excited to help our clients overcome similar obstacles and challenges to improve their financial crime compliance programs. I am excited to join FRA and leverage my experience to help clients navigate the complexities of AML compliance and financial crime prevention in this dynamic space.”

FRA Partner, Roy Pollittadded: “As the FRA’s sponsor partner for our growing Cryptocurrency Investigations and Compliance practice, I am thrilled to have Thomas join our ever-expanding team. The rapid evolution of blockchain and digital asset technologies presents both exciting opportunities and significant compliance challenges. Hiring Thomas in a leadership role underscores our commitment to staying at the forefront of the industry by enhancing our expertise in anti-money laundering and blockchain strategy.”

“Thomas’ extensive background in financial crime compliance and proven track record of building risk-based FCC programs in the blockchain and digital asset space will be invaluable as we continue to provide our clients with the highest level of service and innovative solutions.”

“FRA strengthens cryptocurrency practice with new director Thomas Hyun” was originally created and published by International Accounting Bulletina brand owned by GlobalData.


The information on this website has been included in good faith for general information purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we make no representations, warranties or assurances, express or implied, as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our website.

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Bitcoin trades around $57,000, crypto market drops 6% ahead of Fed decision

Financial Block Staff

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Bitcoin trades around $57,000, crypto market drops 6% ahead of Fed decision
  • Bitcoin fell in line with the broader cryptocurrency market, with ether and other altcoins also falling.

  • Financial markets were weighed down by risk-off sentiment ahead of the Fed’s interest rate decision and press conference later in the day.

  • 10x Research said it is targeting a price target of $52,000 to $55,000, anticipating further selling pressure.

Bitcoin {{BTC}} was trading around $57,700 during European morning trading on Wednesday after falling to its lowest level since late February, as the world’s largest cryptocurrency recorded its worst month since November 2022.

BTC has fallen about 6.3% over the past 24 hours, after breaking below the $60,000 support level late Tuesday, according to data from CoinDesk. The broader crypto market, as measured by the CoinDesk 20 Index (CD20), lost nearly 9% before recovering part of its decline.

Cryptocurrencies have been hurt by risk-off sentiment in broader financial markets amid stagflation in the United States, following indications of slowing growth and persistent inflation that have dampened hopes of an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve. The Federal Open Market Committee is due to deliver its latest rate decision later in the day.

Ether {{ETH}} fell about 5%, dropping below $3,000, while dogecoin {{DOGE}} led the decline among other major altcoins with a 9% drop. Solana {{SOL}} and Avalanche {{AVAX}} both lost about 6%.

Bitcoin plunged in April, posting its first monthly loss since August. The 16% drop is the worst since November 2022, when cryptocurrency exchange FTX imploded, but some analysts are warning of further declines in the immediate future.

10x Research, a digital asset research firm, said it sees selling pressure toward the $52,000 level due to outflows from U.S. cash exchange-traded funds, which have totaled $540 million since the Bitcoin halving on April 20. It estimates that the average entry price for U.S. Bitcoin ETF holders is $57,300, so this could prove to be a key support level.

The closer the bitcoin spot price is to this average entry price, the greater the likelihood of a new ETF unwind, 10x CEO Markus Thielen wrote Wednesday.

“There may have been a lot of ‘TradeFi’ tourists in crypto – pushing longs all the way to the halving – that period is now over,” he wrote. “We expect more unwinding as the average Bitcoin ETF buyer will be underwater when Bitcoin trades below $57,300. This will likely push prices down to our target levels and cause a -25% to -29% correction from the $73,000 high – hence our $52,000/$55,000 price target over the past three weeks.”

The story continues

UPDATE (May 1, 8:56 UTC): Price updates throughout the process.

UPDATE (May 1, 9:57 UTC): Price updates throughout the process.

UPDATE (May 1, 11:05 UTC): Adds analysis from 10x.

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The Cryptocurrency Industry Is Getting Back on Its Feet, for Better or Worse

Financial Block Staff

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The Cryptocurrency Industry Is Getting Back on Its Feet, for Better or Worse

Hello from Austin, where thousands of crypto enthusiasts braved storms and scorching heat to attend Consensus. The industry’s largest and longest-running conference, which can sometimes feel like a religious revival, offers opportunities to chat and listen to leading names in crypto. And for the casual observer, Consensus offers a useful glimpse into the mood of an industry prone to wild swings in fortune.

Unsurprisingly, the mood is noticeably more positive than it was a year ago, when crowds were sparse and many attendees were quietly confiding that they were considering switching to AI. In practice, that means some of the more obnoxious elements are back, but not to the level of Consensus 2018 in New York, when charlatans parked Lamborghinis outside the event and the hallways were lined with booth girls and scammers pitching “ICOs in a box.”

This time around, Elon Musk’s Cybertrucks have replaced Lamborghinis as the vehicle of choice for marketers. One of the most notable publicity stunts was a startup that paid a poor guy to parade around in the Texas sun in a Jamie Dimon costume, wig, and mask, and then staged a mock assault on him by memecoin characters.

Outside the event was a giant “RFK for President” truck, while campaign staffers manned a booth instead — a reflection of both the election year and crypto’s willingness to latch onto any candidate, no matter how outlandish, who will talk about the industry. RFK himself is scheduled to address the conference on Thursday.

Excesses aside, the general sense of optimism was understandable. The cryptocurrency market has not only recovered from the wave of fraud that nearly sank it in 2022, it is riding a new wave of political legitimacy. This month, cryptocurrencies scored once-unthinkable political victories in Washington, D.C., and there is a sense that the industry has not only withstood the relentless regulatory assaults of SEC Chairman Gary Gensler and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, but is poised to defeat them.

And while cryptocurrency is still searching for its flagship application, the optimists I spoke with pointed to signs that it is (once again) upon us. Those signs include the rapid advancement of zero-knowledge proofs as well as the popularity of Coinbase’s Base blockchain and, perhaps most importantly, the large-scale arrival of traditional finance into the world of cryptocurrencies – a development that not only provides a major financial boost, but also a new element of stability and maturity that will, perhaps, tame the worst of crypto’s wilder side. Finally, this consensus marked the end of the Austin era as the conference, under new leadership, will be held in Toronto and Hong Kong in 2025.

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Jeff John Roberts
jeff.roberts@fortune.com
@jeffjohnroberts

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com



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