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Stocks Close Little Changed; Crypto Rally Moderates as Bitcoin ETFs Debut

Financial Block Staff

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Stocks Close Little Changed; Crypto Rally Moderates as Bitcoin ETFs Debut

Equity Indexes Wrap: Telecoms Tumble; Netflix Spared Streamer Carnage by Ad-Plan Growth

January 11, 2024 04:13 PM EST

The Dow

Salesforce (CRM) shares rose 2.8% after Baird upgraded the stock to “outperform” from “neutral,” citing its historically low valuation and potential for upside from price hikes. 

Chevron (CVX) rose 0.6% as oil ticked up after Iran seized an oil tanker in the Red Sea, raising concerns about Middle East tensions and their threat to supply.

Microsoft (MSFT) shares edged up 0.5%, putting its market value just shy of Apple’s (AAPL), which fell 0.3% Thursday.

Verizon (VZ) stock sank 3% after the EPA called on telecoms executives to meet with the agency about lead-sheathed cables. Competitor AT&T (T) dropped 3.8%.

Boeing (BA) shares fell 2.3% after the Federal Aviation Administration said it was investigating whether Boeing failed to confirm the 737 Max 9 that lost a part of its fuselage last week was manufactured according to approved designs. 

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) shares slid 0.4% ahead of its quarterly earnings report tomorrow morning. 

The S&P 500

Netflix (NFLX) added 2.9% after its president of advertising said the company’s ad-supported plan, which it launched less than a year and a half ago, had surpassed 32 million monthly active users.

Oil refiners Valero Energy (VLO) and Marathon Petroleum (MPC) rose 2.6% and 1.7%, respectively, after getting a boost from rising oil prices. 

Paramount Global (PARA) led the index’s losers, falling 5.5% after Redburn downgraded the stock to “sell.” Redburn also downgraded peer Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), which slipped 3.9%.

Alliant Energy (LNT) lost 3.5% after analysts at BMO Capital Markets expressed confidence in the company’s fundamentals, but downgraded its stock to “market perform” due to better risk-adjusted opportunities elsewhere. It was joined by fellow utilities AES Corp. (AES), down 4.5%, and WEC Energy Group (WEC), down 4.1%. 

Lithium miner Albermarle (ALB) lost 3.2% after Deutsche Bank downgraded its stock to “hold” and expressed concern about the lithium industry’s near-term prospects. 

The Nasdaq 100

Cybersecurity stocks outperformed for a second consecutive day. Palo Alto Networks (PANW) rose 2.3%, while ZScaler (ZS) and Fortinet (FTNT) both gained 1.4%.

Nvidia (NVDA) rose 0.9% to close at a record high for the fourth straight session.

Amazon (AMZN) shares inched up 0.9% despite the company missing a deadline to offer concessions to EU regulators concerned about its $1.4 billion acquisition of Roomba-maker iRobot (IRBT).

Tesla (TSLA) lost 2.9% amid reports it would raise wages for its factory workers across the U.S. as it seeks to fend off unionization efforts spurred by last year’s autoworkers strike. 

Shares of Biogen (BIIB) fell 2.8% after European regulators said they would consult outside experts before deciding whether to approve Leqembi, the drugmaker’s Alzheimer’s treatment developed with Japan’s Eisai. 

Alphabet (GOOGL) dipped 0.1% after it said it would lay off hundreds of employees in its Assistant and hardware units. 

KB Home Stock Falls Following Earnings But Says Demand Rising as Mortgage Rates Fall

January 11, 2024 03:24 PM EST

KB Home (KB) on Thursday reported a decline in sales and profits in its fiscal fourth quarter as high mortgage rates cut into demand while lower selling prices, along with added concessions to buyers, cut into profit margins. However, the company said it’s optimistic about a recovery in the new year.

KB Home posted net income of $150.3 million, or $1.85 per share, in the three months ended Nov. 30, a 31% decline from the same period in 2022. Revenue slid 14% to $1.67 billion, the company said in a press release.

Home deliveries dropped 10% to 3,407 in the latest quarter, while the average selling price went from $510,400 to $487,300 as the company had to lower prices to attract buyers.

CEO Jeffrey Mezger said KB Home is experiencing “a meaningful sequential increase in our net orders for the first five weeks of our 2024 first quarter, as consumers are responding favorably to the recent decline in mortgage rates.” 

KB Home shares were down 0.9% at $61.75 at about 1:40 p.m. ET Thursday. Even with today’s losses, shares of KB Home have added 74% over the past year.

Bill McColl

Netflix Shares Gain on Strong Ad-Tier Plan Take-up

January 11, 2024 02:34 PM EST

Netflix (NFLX) was the best-performing stock in the S&P 500 Thursday after an executive said the company’s ad-supported plan had attracted 23 million monthly users. 

President of Advertising Amy Reinhard said during the Variety Entertainment Summit at the 2024 Consumer Electronics Show that the streaming service had increased its ad-tier user base by more than 50% since November when the company reported having 15 million monthly active users.

Netflix first introduced its ad-supported tier in November 2022, when it launched at a monthly price of $6.99. Since then, the company has cracked down on password sharing and eliminated its Basic ad-free plan, sending millions of old and new users to its cheapest offering.

The ad-supported plan’s subscription growth has repeatedly exceeded expectations, helping boost Netflix’s stock by more than 60% since the plan was introduced.

Netflix shares were up 2.8% at $491.75 late Thursday afternoon.

Midday Movers

January 11, 2024 02:03 PM EST

Netflix (NFLX) shares gained as the biggest streaming provider reported it has more than 23 million monthly active users (MAU) for its ad-supported plan. Shares of rivals Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) and Paramount Global (PARA) dropped.

Chesapeake Energy (CHK) shares advanced with the firm set to become the biggest U.S. natural gas producer by purchasing rival Southwestern Energy (SWN) for $7.4 billion. Southwestern Energy shares were up slightly.

Tensions in the Middle East sent oil futures higher, lifting shares of Valero Energy (VLO) and other energy companies.

Tesla (TSLA) shares slid following a report it was increasing pay for production workers in the U.S. as union organizers target the electric vehicle maker.

Shares of Citigroup (C) sank as the bank warned of higher fourth-quarter charges than expected linked to its exposure to Argentina and Russia, as well as its restructuring.

Bill McColl

Tesla Stock Falls After Reports Company Raising Pay Amid Mounting Union Pressure

January 11, 2024 01:20 PM EST

Tesla (TSLA) shares tumbled during intraday trading Thursday after reports that the electric vehicle pioneer would increase wages amid a wave of automaker pay raises following the United Auto Workers (UAW) union’s efforts to organize non-union employees.

Flyers posted at a California Tesla facility said that U.S. production workers were to receive a “market adjustment pay increase” in the new year, according to a report by Bloomberg on Thursday.

Following the UAW’s deals with the Big Three, the union launched a campaign to organize non-union workers at other automakers, including Tesla.

Since then, some automakers increased employees’ wages, which could stave off union organization action. Hyundai said that it would start raising pay for workers in 2024 so that hourly wages would increase by 25% by 2028. Volkswagen also offered an 11% raise to some of its production workers.

Tesla shares were down nearly 3% in early afternoon trading Thursday. The stock has gained 83% over the past year.

Naomi Buchanan

Hertz Stock Tumbles on EV Resales

January 11, 2024 12:44 PM EST

Shares of Hertz Global (HTZ) fell more than 3% in intraday trading Thursday after the car rental company said it would sell 20,000 electric vehicles from its fleet. 

The company expects to recognize about $245 million in depreciation expenses in the fourth quarter. It will also use a portion of the proceeds to acquire new internal combustion engine vehicles. The company expects the benefits from the sale to entirely offset depreciation expenses by the end of 2025. 

The sale, which represents about a third of the company’s EV fleet, comes as Hertz confronts muted demand for electric rentals and high costs associated with repairing EVs. “Expenses related to collision and damage, primarily associated with EVs, remained high in the quarter, thereby supporting the Company’s decision to initiate the material reduction in the EV fleet,” Hertz said in a regulatory filing Thursday. 

Downsizing its electric fleets is also expected to “better balance supply against expected demand of EVs.”

Hertz made headlines in 2021 when it said it would purchase 100,000 Teslas in a push to electrify its fleet. The deal sent Tesla shares soaring, pushing its market capitalization past $1 trillion. 

Citigroup Stock Falls as Restructuring, Argentina Exposure Prove Expensive

January 11, 2024 12:05 PM EST

Citigroup (C) shares fell more than 2% in early trading Thursday after it reported higher fourth-quarter charges than it previously disclosed linked to its exposure to Argentina and Russia, as well as its own overhaul.

Citi, which reports its fourth-quarter results Friday morning, said in a regulatory filing Wednesday that it had set aside a total of $1.3 billion in reserves for the fourth quarter tied to currency exposures in Argentina and Russia’s ongoing political and economic instability. It also announced $780 million of charges related to CEO Jane Fraser’s restructuring of the bank.

The New York bank lender said it expects to take a $1.7 billion charge to replenish the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s (FDIC’s) deposit insurance fund after last March’s regional banking crisis.

Citi shares were down 2.6% midday Thursday. They have gained around 6% over the past year.

Fatima Attarwala

Microsoft Briefly Overtakes Apple as Most Valuable U.S. Company

January 11, 2024 10:54 AM EST

Microsoft (MSFT) on Thursday briefly retook its title as the most valuable company in the United States from Apple (AAPL), which claimed the superlative from Microsoft in November 2021. 

Microsoft stock jumped as much as 2% Thursday morning, bringing its market capitalization to more than $2.87 billion. Meanwhile, Apple shares slipped, pushing its valuation below that threshold. 

The reversal may have been short-lived as Microsoft stock retreated from its intraday highs, but the company’s AI-fueled rally has helped it close a more than $200 billion gap in the last year, and analysts remain bullish. Of the 52 analysts covering Microsoft, 41 rate the stock a “buy,” the highest possible rating. Six assign it a positive “overweight” rating, while five are neutral on the stock.

Meanwhile, Apple has been hit by several analyst downgrades this year amid concern about demand for the iPhone, its best-selling product. Just 25 of the 54 analysts covering Apple assign it a rating of “overweight” or better, while 15 are neutral, and four rate the stock “underweight” or “sell.”

Bitcoin Surges as Spot ETFs Debut

January 11, 2024 10:18 AM EST

Bitcoin (BTCUSD) soared Thursday morning before paring gains as long-awaited spot Bitcoin ETFs hit exchanges, opening the door for billions of dollars to flow into the crypto asset. 

The price of Bitcoin jumped to nearly $49,000, its highest since December 2021, as eleven Bitcoin ETFs from providers including BlackRock, Fidelity, and Invesco, began trading on the NYSE Arca, Cboe BZX, and Nasdaq. They are the first exchange-traded funds to directly track the price of Bitcoin rather than Bitcoin futures contracts.

With nearly a dozen funds premiering today, providers have temporarily lowered or waived fees in bids to attract inflows and gain a lead in the highly competitive space.

The funds are widely expected to open the cryptocurrency up to billions of dollars of retail and institutional investors’ money that has sat on the sidelines due to concerns about securely holding cryptocurrencies and trading on exchanges not overseen by the SEC. 

With Thursday’s gains, Bitcoin’s total market capitalization briefly stood at about $960 billion, making the cryptocurrency more valuable than all but five U.S. companies. 

Stocks Making the Biggest Moves Premarket

January 11, 2024 09:19 AM EST

Gains:

  • Coinbase Global (COIN): Shares of the crypto exchange rose 3% after the Securities and Exchange Commission approved eleven spot Bitcoin ETFs, for several of which Bitcoin will be the asset custodian.
  • Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK): Shares of the oil and natural gas producer rose more than 2% after the company said it would merge with Southwestern Energy (SWN) in an all-stock $7.4 billion transaction. Southwestern shares dipped about 2%.
  • Infosys Ltd. (INFY): Shares of the Indian tech company rose nearly 2% after it reported quarterly earnings that were mostly in line with expectations. It also narrowed and lowered the high end of its full-year revenue guidance amid a slowdown in client spending. 

Losses: 

  • Hertz Global Holdings Inc. (HTZ): Shares of the car rental company fell 4% after saying it would sell a third of its electric vehicle fleet due to weak demand and the cost of repairs.
  • KB Home (KBH): The homebuilder’s shares fell more than 3% after it said home sales and average prices fell in the fourth quarter from last year.
  • Citigroup Inc. (C): Shares of the bank fell more than 1% after the company said previously disclosed charges tied to restructuring and a drop in the Argentine peso would far exceed prior forecasts.

Inflation Ticked Up in December

January 11, 2024 08:47 AM EST

U.S. consumer prices rose 0.3% in December, an acceleration from last month when prices rose 0.1% and a bigger increase than economists were expecting. Shelter costs contributed more than half of the Consumer Price Index’s (CPI) increase last month.

The core index, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.3%, putting the annual core inflation rate at 3.9%. That’s a slowdown from November, but a smaller one than economists predicted.

Futures Gain Ahead of December Inflation Report

January 11, 2024 08:22 AM EST

Futures contracts connected to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were unchanged a little over an hour before markets opened after giving up earlier gains.

S&P 500 futures traded 0.1% higher.

Nasdaq 100 futures were up about 0.4%.

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We are the editorial team of Financial Block, where seriousness meets clarity in cryptocurrency analysis. With a robust team of finance and blockchain technology experts, we are dedicated to meticulously exploring complex crypto markets with detailed assessments and an unbiased approach. Our mission is to democratize access to knowledge of emerging financial technologies, ensuring they are understandable and accessible to all. In every article on Financial Block, we strive to provide content that not only educates, but also empowers our readers, facilitating their integration into the financial digital age.

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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

Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple And Android.



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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.

The story continues

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

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com



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