January 15, 2021 Exploring the transformation of value in the digital age By Michael J. Casey Chief Content Officer
Bitcoin Is Too Big for Central Banks To Ignore Illustration: Moe Na/CoinDesk Another week, another lifetime lived:
The U.S. President impeached, again. Worldwide COVID-19 deaths close in on 2 million. Bitcoin surges to a record high above $42,000, promptly plunges to almost below $30,000 and then begins a late-week rally above $36,000.
That's the topic of this week's Money Reimagined podcast episode. We talk to Christopher Giancarlo, the former chairman of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, and Marvin Ammori, a famed digital civil rights lawyer who's now chief legal counsel at Uniswap, about how the crypto industry and regulators can better collaborate on rules that enable constructive innovation.
Have a listen after reading this week's newsletter.
What does it mean when the most powerful woman in finance scolds you?
Speculative? It's All Relative Shuai Hao/CoinDesk Last week, we brought you a chart showing how data from the Bitcoin blockchain described how the current bull market has been driven by large investors, unlike the "Mom and Pop" rally of December 2017. (The number showed a recent rise in the number of large addresses that hold more than 1,000 BTC, whereas that measure was falling three years ago.)
This week, we use exchange data to suggest another difference in investor type, this time between the new, incoming large investors – thought to be large, sophisticated institutions such as hedge funds – and the more established crypto-native players. While the latter are more sophisticated than the naive retail newbies of 2017, they tend to be individuals or crypto startups.
We looked at open interest in bitcoin derivatives on six of the biggest exchanges, which reflects the amount of money invested in options, futures and other such instruments that hasn't been converted into the underlying asset, in this case bitcoin itself. Then we compared that to the volumes traded in the underlying spot market for bitcoin, creating a percentage that we treat as an admittedly imperfect proxy for how much leveraged speculation is going on.
Then we split these results between the four online crypto exchanges that are outside U.S. regulation and which allow for significantly higher leveraged bets – OKEx, Huobi, BitMex and Binance – and two long-established U.S.-regulated exchanges that follow the more traditional, low-leverage models on which they were founded: the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Bakkt, which belongs to the Intercontinental Exchange, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange. The idea is that the crypto natives typically play in the first and the institutions in the second.
Of course, the whales of 2017 weren't exactly Wall Streeters. Many were also retail investors. In that case, the "smart money" were those who grokked crypto and blockchain early on and knew that mania of that time was going too fast too early.
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The Conversation: Washington's Game Plan Illustration: Moe Na/CoinDesk Perhaps the biggest immediate fallout from last week's insurgence of Donald Trump's supporters into the Capitol came from Twitter's and Facebook's moves to suspend the outgoing president's accounts and those of some of those supporters in what some have dubbed Silicon Valley's own impeachment process. Inevitably, they drew support from many who saw Trump as an instigator of violence but also sweeping criticism from others, who complained of these platforms' unique power to curtail speech.
It's a complicated debate, one that animates the call for decentralization within the crypto and blockchain community, where people are trying to build a new, censorship-resistant architecture for the internet and for digital money. Twitter and Facebook – and Amazon, which joined in by kicking right-wing-friendly social media site Paler of Amazon Web Services' servers – are private companies. They aren't subject to the government's First Amendment free speech standards. Yet, because of their massive size and the dependency of their users, and because they have proprietary control over users' data and an algorithmic capacity to curate what they view, these de facto public forums have a monopoly power that can shape society.
Ironically, some of the best discussion occurred on Twitter.
If Q1 2020 was the quarter of market turmoil, Q2 the bitcoin halving and Q3 the explosion of stablecoins and decentralized finance applications, Q4 was the quarter of institutional FOMO for bitcoin and of Ethereum launching the first phase of its ambitious migration to a proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain. The latest CoinDesk Quarterly Review looks at the performance of bitcoin and ether compared to macro assets and other crypto assets, and at their progress, milestones and value drivers over the past three months. Download the free report.
Relevant Reads: A Crypto-Savvy SEC Reports emerged this week that President-elect Joe Biden would nominate former Commodities Futures Trading Commission Chairman Gary Gensler to head the Securities Exchange Commission. This news that someone with such deep knowledge of this industry (Gensler has taught courses on cryptocurrency and blockchain at MIT for several years) was widely welcomed by a crypto community, which has been whipsawed of late by big shifts in the regulatory environment. Our coverage reflected that.
(Disclosure: I worked with Gensler at MIT before joining CoinDesk, including co-authoring an economic paper with him and other colleagues from MIT Sloan School of Management and the MIT Media Lab's Digital Currency Initiative. It's true what they say: Gary gets it.)
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