Desi startup starts taking Bitcoin in payments despite govt warnings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Till now, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are seen largely as an asset class to invest in to gain from price appreciation.

In the US, some businesses have also started accepting them as currencies for payments. Tesla famously started accepting it and then stopped it a few months back, citing environmental concerns. But CEO Elon Musk now says they may accept it again soon.

Microsoft, Coca Cola and AXA Insurance have also shown willingness to accept cryptocurrency as payment for select services and products in some territories.

In India, amid heavy resistance from the government and the Reserve Bank of India, cryptocurrencies are yet to gain a broader acceptance.

But one Indian startup has ventured out to start accepting cryptocurrencies for payments. The Rug Republic – a homegrown décor brand – is one. The Okhla, Delhi-based firm said it would accept top 20 cryptocurrencies for payments, but only from Indian customers.

Cryptocurrencies are neither legal, nor illegal in India. Lately, banks, likely on the insistence of RBI, have started disassociating from cryptocurrency exchanges. Other government agencies have also started tightening their noose against these tokens.

Their major concern is the anonymity that the blockchain network — the technology on which cryptocurrencies are based on — will lead to tax evasion, terror funding or any other nefarious activity. However, businesses are taking additional measures to track where the money is coming from.

“It is a misconception that crypto transactions cannot be tracked. It is easily verifiable on the blockchain, as opposed to the incredibly difficult ways money can be hidden in the real world. As we have seen with so many people during the Panama Papers episodes. Our invoices clearly mention that money was taken in certain currency on this date and at this price. Everything is absolutely above board,” said Raghav Gupta, Director at The Rug Republic.

Some sovereign countries such as Nicaragua and El Salvador have embraced cryptocurrencies, with the latter becoming the first country in the world to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender.

Gupta, who exports his products outside India as well, said his firm will not accept crypto payments outside India, as such transactions could be in violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), as they constitute cross-border payments in a currency not recognised by RBI.

Is it a publicity stunt? Why else is he taking such a risk when the rules regarding cryptocurrencies are not clear? The promoter says he believes these tokens will eventually gain prominence in India. And, it will form a good asset base for him in some years.

“It is clear that not even 5 per cent of my revenue will come from it. I am extremely bullish on it in a 5-10 year scale. I am very happy to take this risk. Ethereum will be much more valuable by then,” said Gupta.



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Former top US consumer regulator joins crypto risk monitoring firm, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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WASHINGTON: Cryptocurrency startup Solidus Labs has hired the former director of the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) as its top regulatory official, she told Reuters.

Kathy Kraninger is the latest former Trump administration official to land in the booming digital currency industry as it beefs up on legal expertise and Washington connections amid increasing regulatory scrutiny.

Founded in 2017 by former Goldman Sachs employees, New York-based Solidus Labs provides cryptocurrency trading surveillance and risk monitoring tools. Its backers include private equity firms Evolution Equity Partners and Hanaco Ventures.

Kraninger will lead and build out Solidus Labs’ regulatory team, spending most of her time working with regulators, US lawmakers and traditional institutions to explain how digital markets can be effectively policed, she said in an interview.

Her career in government, including helping to set up the Department of Homeland Security and leading the CFPB from 2018 to 2021, positions her to contribute to a growing debate in Washington over how to regulate cryptocurrencies, she said.

“Bringing the expertise that I have from how federal regulators think, state regulators think … it just seemed to be a fantastic fit,” said Kraninger.

Solidus Labs has built software to monitor crypto markets and help investment firms and other clients screen for manipulation, bad actors and meet compliance obligations. Its clients include crypto exchange Bittrex and Rialto Markets.

The ability to monitor cryptocurrencies has become a major worry for regulators as the ballooning market, which reached a record $2 trillion capitalization in April, has experienced wild volatility.

In June, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) again delayed approving a bitcoin exchange traded fund and sought feedback on the risks of market manipulation.

This month, Senator Elizabeth Warren called for increased cryptocurrency oversight, while Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told regulators they must quickly establish rules for digital coins linked to fiat currencies, known as stablecoins.

Regulators worry the cryptocurrency market is unstable, opaque and systemically risky.

“We’ve had overwhelming interest from regulatory entities globally,” said Solidus Labs Chief Executive Asaf Meir. “We needed someone who brings in the right experience.”

Crypto and fintech companies have been snapping up former Trump regulators. Former bank regulator Brian Brooks was appointed Binance’s US CEO in May, while Chris Giancarlo, former chair of the US derivatives regulator, is an investor in Solidus and founded the Digital Dollar Project which advocates for US policymakers to develop a digital dollar.



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Bitcoin slides below $30,000 level for the first time in a month, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Eric Lam

A selloff in Bitcoin accelerated Tuesday, pushing it below $30,000 for the first time in about a month.

The largest digital coin fell as much as 4.1% and was trading at about $29,700 as of 7 a.m. in London. Other virtual currencies also retreated, including second-ranked Ether. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index was down about 4%.

Some traders had viewed $30,000 as a key support that might open the way to more losses if breached. Further big declines from here could rattle the cryptocurrency market and even exacerbate a wider flight from risk assets such as stocks. Global equities are falling due to fears of slowing economic growth and the relentless spread of the delta variant of Covid-19.

“We’re going to need to form another base first before resuming another bull trend,” said Vijay Ayyar, head of Asia Pacific with cryptocurrency exchange Luno in Singapore. “We are going to be ranging between $20,000 and $40,000 for the rest of the year.”

Narratives that had propelled Bitcoin to a mid-April record of almost $65,000 are now being questioned. Some had argued the digital asset could act as a hedge against inflation due to its limited supply. But Bitcoin’s 2% advance this year lags behind the S&P 500’s 13% advance.

“Investors who are allocating to crypto know that volatility is going to be part of it,” Grayscale Investments CEO Michael Sonnenshein said in an interview on Bloomberg TV.

Bitcoin has been hit by many setbacks of late, including China’s regulatory crackdown — partly over concerns about high energy consumption — and progress in central bank digital-currency projects that could squeeze private coins.

The creator of meme-token Dogecoin recently lambasted crypto as basically a sham, and the appetite for speculation is generally in retreat.

Officials around the world are also intensifying scrutiny of cryptocurrencies. On Monday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pushed top U.S. financial regulators to accelerate their consideration of new rules to police so-called stablecoins.



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Ethereum Co-Founder says safety concern has him quitting crypto

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Anthony Di Iorio, a Co-Founder of the Ethereum network, says he’s done with the cryptocurrency world, partially because of personal safety concerns.

Di Iorio, 48, has had a security team since 2017, with someone traveling with or meeting him wherever he goes. In coming weeks, he plans to sell Decentral Inc., and refocus on philanthropy and other ventures not related to crypto. The Canadian expects to sever ties in time with other startups he is involved with, and doesn’t plan on funding any more blockchain projects.

“It’s got a risk profile that I am not too enthused about,” said Di Iorio, who declined to disclose his cryptocurrency holdings or net worth. “I don’t feel necessarily safe in this space. If I was focused on larger problems, I think I’d be safer.”

Background

Back in 2013, Di Iorio co-founded Ethereum, which has become the home of many of the hottest crypto projects, particularly in decentralized finance — which lets people borrow, lend and trade with each other without intermediaries like banks. Ether, the native token of the network, has a market value of about $225 billion.

He made a splash in 2018 when buying the largest and one of the most expensive condos in Canada, paying for it partly with digital money. Di Iorio purchased the three-story penthouse for C$28 million ($22 million) at the St. Regis Residences Toronto, the former Trump International Hotel & Tower in the downtown business district.

In recent years, Di Iorio jumped into venture-capital investing and start-up advising. He was also for a time chief digital officer of the Toronto Stock Exchange. In February 2018, Forbes estimated his net worth was as high as $1 billion. Ether’s price has more than doubled since then.

Decentral is a Toronto-based innovation hub and software development company focused on decentralised technologies, and the maker of Jaxx, a digital asset wallet that garnered about 1 million customers this year.

Di Iorio said he has talked with a couple of potential investors, and believes the startup will be valued at “hundreds of millions.” He expects to sell the company for fiat, or equity in another company — not crypto.

“I want to diversify to not being a crypto guy, but being a guy tackling complex problems,” Di Iorio said. He is involved in Project Arrow, run by a high-school friend that’s building a zero-emission vehicle. He is also consulting a senator from Paraguay.

“I will incorporate crypto when needed, but a lot of times, it’s not,” he said. “It’s really a small percentage of what the world needs.”

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Crypto startup CoinSwitch Kuber appoints Sarmad Nazki as CFO, to expand hiring, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Cryptocurrency startup CoinSwitch Kuber has appointed Sarmad Nazki as its chief financial officer (CFO). The company’s chief executive officer (CEO) Ashish Singhal said that the company planned to add about a hundred and fifty new staff to its rolls in another six months’ time.

Nazki, the new CFO, was previously with mobility startup Bounce. He has also worked at Ola, Ernst & Young (EY) and KPMG earlier.

CoinSwitch Kuber is a cryptocurrency investment platform that lets users buy, sell and trade crypto coins like Bitcoin, Ethereum and Litecoin. The company claims to have 7.5 million users.

Singhal said that the company was also looking to fill in key senior leadership roles such as chief information security officer, chief legal officer and vice-presidents in data science, product and tech.

Singhal said that he would want staff to come to work for at least six months once things normalise so that they could build a better rapport with each other. “We have grown from a team of 20 to 120 in the pandemic.” he said. Once the team got to know each other, Singhal said that the employees could work remotely.

CoinSwitch Kuber in April this year raised $25mn from Tiger Global Management at a valuation of over $500mn, according to reports.

The company in May this year had hired Zeeshan Ramlan as director and head of human resources.

Singhal said that the company has grown at a rapid clip during the pandemic as more people, especially millennials and Gen Z, are now interested in investing in cryptocurrencies.



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Visa says spending on crypto-linked cards topped $1 bn in first half this year, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Visa Inc said on Wednesday its customers spent more than $1 billion on its crypto-linked cards in the first half of this year, as the payments processor takes steps to make crypto transactions smoother.

The company said it was partnering with 50 cryptocurrency platforms to make it easier for customers to convert and spend digital currencies at 70 million merchants worldwide.

The move is in line with Visa‘s broader acceptance of digital currencies. In March, the company announced it will allow the use of the USD Coin to settle transactions on its payment network.

Investor sentiment on cryptocurrencies has somewhat soured recently, with regulatory crackdowns in China and elsewhere. Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurrency, has seen a punishing slide following the euphoria earlier this year which took it to record highs.

However, a clutch of high profile names are continuing to strengthen their involvement with the digital assets. Last week, Japan’s investment giant SoftBank Group Corp invested $200 million in Mercado Bitcoin, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in Latin America.

Wells Fargo & Co said in May it would onboard an actively managed cryptocurrency strategy for its wealthy clients, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc launched a crypto trading team the same month.



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The New Giant in Crypto Investments, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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To launch Europe‘s largest and award winning cryptocurrency trading platform in India, Coinsbit India, had announced India’s biggest ever airdrop on 9th April 2021. The airdrop has been a massive success with 665,550 KYC verified users receiving CIN worth $200 each in the first round. The campaign is still live with the second and third round starting on 20th June and 10th July respectively. Coinsbit India to launch INR Trading Pairs Soon.

Along with the airdrop, Coinsbit India has also launched its own 5-level referral program along with staking opportunities. Staking cryptocurrency is one of the most appreciated ways to invest in the new age. It is a less resource-intensive alternative to mining which involves holding funds in a wallet to support the security and operations of a blockchain network. So basically, staking is the act of locking cryptocurrencies to receive rewards. Coinsbit India Staking lets you earn rewards in a very simple way – all you have to do is hold and ‘stake’ coins on the exchange to enjoy 3% monthly rewards.

In order to avoid token price crash upon CIN token listing, a vesting schedule will be implemented and there will be a gradual monthly release in the CIN tokens earned from airdrop and referrals. This will help in preserving the token value and prevent price drop. Benefits from holding CIN tokens will start as soon as the airdrop ends on 31st July. Users will have an opportunity to buy CIN tokens and start earning on staking pools at a 3% monthly rate. Holders can avail a 25% discount on trading fees by paying in CIN. Along with interest incentive and discount purchases, in future, users will also be able access the Coinsbit Vault, Marketplace and Blockchain Games, apart from other benefits.

Staking is an excellent way to earn rewards when the market is volatile or showing ‘bear-ish’ sentiment or just to earn extra rewards and do more with cryptocurrencies. Crypto coins staking has several advantages that have helped it gain popularity. Apart from being a passive income for users, it doesn’t require much specialized skills. A small investment by purchasing cryptocurrency is enough to get you started, hence making the threshold for entering quite low.

What’s next for Coinsbit India?

According to Chainalysis, investments in crypto grew from about $200 million to nearly $40 billion in India alone, in just one year. With the constantly growing crypto market in India, Coinsbit India has massive plans for expansions. They will soon go live with crypto trading while engaging more blockchain developers for both building CIN Smart Chain Ecosystem and to develop NFT, DEXs and DeFi apps. CEO of Coinsbit India, Ravneet Kaur, talked about revolutionizing the Indian cryptocurrency and blockchain space. She said, “We believe that there can be a new economy based on decentralization and trust. If anything, these uncertain times have taught us, it is that we need to be prepared to confront them. To avoid what is happening in Lebanon right now, Africa and Latin American Economies. we need to explore alternative methods of investment. Cryptocurrency can be a hedge against such interferences where people have no control and their currency suddenly devalues. Recently, El Salvador legalized bitcoin to attract investments and crypto talent while boosting their economy. India needs to keep up with the constantly changing times and needs cryptocurrency to revitalize its economy.”

Akshit Khanna, CMO Coinsbit India, gave Business Wire India a little sneak peek into what’s next. “Cryptocurrency is still a relatively new concept for the masses which has shown great potential. We want to help educate people and build an informed crypto community in India. Very soon, we will be running campaigns to specifically explain buying and the storage process of cryptos and much more at Coinsbit Academy.



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Bitcoin becoming the new gold as Indians pour billions into crypto, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The cryptocurrency aficionados’ mantra that Bitcoin is equivalent to digital gold is winning converts among the world’s biggest holders of the precious metal.

In India, where households own more than 25,000 tonnes of gold, investments in crypto grew from about $200 million to nearly $40 billion in the past year, according to Chainalysis. That’s despite outright hostility toward the asset class from the central bank and a proposed trading ban.

Richi Sood, a 32-year-old entrepreneur is one of those who swerved from gold to crypto. Since December, she’s put in just over 1 million rupees ($13,400) – some of it borrowed from her father – into Bitcoin, Dogecoin and Ether.

And she’s been fortunate with her timing. She cashed out part of her position when Bitcoin smashed through $50,000 in February and bought back in after the recent tumble, allowing her to fund the overseas expansion of her education startup Study Mate India.

“I’d rather put my money in crypto than gold,” Sood said. “Crypto is more transparent than gold or property and returns are more in a short period of time.”

She’s part of a growing number of Indians — now totalling more than 15 million — buying and selling digital coins. That’s catching up with the 23 million traders of these assets in the U.S. and compares with just 2.3 million in the U.K.

The growth in India is coming from the 18-35 year old cohort, says the co-founder of India’s first cryptocurrency exchange. Latest World Gold Council data indicated Indian adults under age 34 have less appetite for gold than older consumers.

“They find it far easier to invest in crypto than gold because the process is very simple,” said Sandeep Goenka, who co-founded ZebPay and spent years representing the industry in discussions with the government on regulation. “You go online, you can buy crypto, you don’t have to verify it, unlike gold.”
One of the biggest barriers preventing wider adoption is the regulatory uncertainty. Last year, the Supreme Court quashed a 2018 rule banning crypto trading by banking entities, resulting in a trading surge.

However, authorities show no signs of embracing cryptocurrencies. The nation’s central bank says it has “major concerns” about the asset class and six months ago the Indian government proposed a ban on trading in digital coins – though it has been silent on the topic since.

“I am flying blind,” said Sood. “I have a risk-taking appetite, so I’m willing to take a risk of a ban.”

The official hostility though means many bigger individual investors are reluctant to speak openly about their holdings. One banker Bloomberg spoke to who invested more than $1 million into crypto assets said with no clear income tax rules at present he was concerned about the possibility of retrospective tax raids if he was publicly known to be a big-ticket crypto investor.

He’s already got contingency plans in place to move his trading to an offshore Singapore bank account if a ban was to be introduced.

To be sure, the value of Indian digital asset holdings remain a sliver of its gold market. Still, the growth is clear, especially in trading — the four biggest crypto exchanges saw daily trading jump to $102 million from $10.6 million a year ago, according to CoinGecko. The country’s $40 billion market significantly trails China’s $161 billion, according to Chainalysis.

For now, the increasing adoption is another sign of Indians’ willingness to take risk within a consumer finance sector that’s plagued with examples of regulatory short falls.

“I think over time everyone is going to adopt it in every country,“ said Keneth Alvares, 22, an independent digital marketer who has invested more than $1,300 in crypto so far. “Right now the whole thing is scary with regulation but it doesn’t worry me because I’m not planning to remove anything for now.”



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Bitcoin drops as hashrate declines with China mining crackdown, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bitcoin dropped over the weekend amid a focus on Chinese mine closures and potential regulatory scrutiny.

The largest cryptocurrency fell 5.5% to $34,142 as of 10:50 a.m. Sunday in New York, dropping for a fourth time in the past five sessions. Ether, the second-biggest, declined 5.9% to $2,095.

The hashrate in China is dropping significantly as Bitcoin mines are being closed, Jonathan Cheesman, head of over-the-counter and institutional sales at crypto-derivatives exchange FTX wrote in an email Saturday, citing reports on Twitter from handle @bigmagicdao.

“Longer term most see hashrate moving out of China as positive but in the near term may have/has already resulted in inventory sales,” Cheesman said.

Cheesman also mentioned the death cross, which occurs when the 50-day moving average drops below the 200-day, but noted that “backtesting isn’t statistically significant” on the signal for Bitcoin. When the coin experienced a death cross in March 2020, for instance, that was at the start of a yearlong rally.

Cryptocurrencies have been enduring a lull recently. Bitcoin is trading at about half its record high of nearly $65,000 reached in mid-April. The market value of all cryptocurrencies is about $1.45 trillion, as measured by CoinGecko, versus a high around $2.6 trillion last month.

One of the factors cited has been concern about China clamping down on mining amid concerns about energy usage, and in the wake of deadly coal accidents.

The city of Ya’an in the southwestern region of Sichuan has promised the provincial authorities to root out all Bitcoin and Ether mining operations within one year, said a person with knowledge of the situation. According to a report in the Communist Party-backed Global Times, the closure of many Bitcoin mines in the province has resulted in more than 90% of China’s Bitcoin mining capacity being shuttered.

About 65% of the world’s Bitcoin mining took place in China as of April 2020, according to an estimate by the University of Cambridge.

In addition, Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda Corp., said Bitcoin was being pressured by the sudden drop by the Titan token to nearly zero — a stablecoin that had drawn even billionaire Mark Cuban. Regulators had already been expressing concern about stablecoins, and Cuban himself encouraged further regulation of the space after the episode.

“Bitcoin tumbled as the demise over the Titan token raised the pressure of regulators to deliver more protections for the public,” Moya said in an email Friday. “Titan’s crypto crash was a surprise to many as it is a partially collateralized stablecoin. Given the risk-off environment that is hitting Wall Street, cryptocurrencies are under pressure.”



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Goldman expands in crypto trading with plans for Ether options, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Anchalee Worrachate

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is moving beyond the world of Bitcoin and expanding into Ether.

The bank plans to offer options and futures trading in Ether, the coin that fuels the Ethereum network, in the coming months, according to Mathew McDermott, head of digital assets at Goldman.

It’s the latest step in the Wall Street giant’s crypto ambitions after Goldman restarted a trading desk this year to help clients deal in publicly traded futures tied to Bitcoin. McDermott said the bank also plans to facilitate trades via exchange-traded notes tracking Bitcoin.

Despite all the warnings from regulators about the risks posed by crypto’s extreme volatility and role in money laundering, investment banks are stepping up to offer Bitcoin services to their big clients. Even after prices plummeted in May, falling from about $60,000 to $33,000 in a matter of days, hedge funds are still enthusiastic to trade Bitcoin.

“We’ve actually seen a lot of interest from clients who are eager to trade as they find these levels as a slightly more palatable entry point,” McDermott said in a phone interview on Thursday. “We see it as a cleansing exercise to reduce some of the leverage and the excess in the system, especially from a retail perspective.”

Goldman tapped McDermott, 47, to head its digital currency efforts last year. Under his watch, the business has grown to 17 people from four.

The bank has also invested in crypto start-ups. It put $5 million into a fundraising round by Blockdaemon, a firm that creates and hosts the computer nodes that make up blockchain networks.

In May, Goldman led the $15 million investment into Coin Metrics, a cryptocurrency and blockchain data provider to institutional clients, and McDermott joined the company’s board.

“We are looking at a number of different companies that fit into our strategic direction,” he said.

Other banks have also expanded their crypto operations. Cowen Inc. plans to offer “institutional-grade” custody services for cryptocurrencies. Standard Chartered Plc is setting up a joint venture to buy and sell virtual currencies, though HSBC Holdings Plc is avoiding Bitcoin for now.

McDermott said his conversations with clients show that digital currencies aren’t just a passing fad. In a survey of 850 institutions last week, Goldman found that close to one in 10 are trading crypto, and 20% are interested in it.

“Institutional adoption will continue,” he said. “Despite the material price correction, we continue to see a significant amount of interest in this space.”



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