Bitcoin hits lowest since early March before retaking $50,000, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Joanna Ossinger

Bitcoin fell to the lowest in seven weeks on Monday as it continued to struggle with the $50,000 level and nearby technicals.

The largest cryptocurrency dropped as low as $47,079 in early Asia trading before rebounding. It was up 5.3% at $50,666 as of 9:01 a.m. in Hong Kong. That comes after it fell below the 100-day moving average late last week for the first time since early October after JPMorgan Chase & Co. cautioned that its upward momentum could be at risk.

“Bitcoin created a large gap down last week that could stick around far longer than bulls would want to see,” said Rick Bensignor, president of Bensignor Investment Strategies, in a note Monday.

The digital asset has stumbled since reaching a record $64,870 on April 14, buoyed by enthusiasm from the Coinbase Global Inc. listing. The collapse of two crypto exchanges in Turkey at the end of last week also may have depressed sentiment amid debate about whether cryptocurrencies could be in a bubble.

The lack of momentum over the weekend continued despite another potential reference to cryptocurrencies from Elon Musk on Twitter on Saturday. “What does the future hodl?” He asked, using a term often seen as meaning “hold on for dear life” that crypto supporters use to refer to buying and holding their digital assets.

Bitcoin hits lowest since early March before retaking $50,000Still, Bitcoin has done well over the medium term, retaining a gain of about 70% year-to-date as big-name investors endorse it and institutions from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Bank of New York Mellon advance their offerings around cryptocurrencies. JPMorgan’s John Normand reiterated in a note Friday that Bitcoin’s ascent has been steeper than any other financial innovation or bubble of the past 50 years.



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Visa moves to allow payment settlements using cryptocurrency

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Visa has said it will allow the use of the cryptocurrency USD Coin to settle transactions on its payment network, the latest sign of growing acceptance of digital currencies by the mainstream financial industry.

The company told Reuters it had launched the pilot programme with payment and crypto platform Crypto.com and plans to offer the option to more partners later this year.

Bitcoin, the most popular crypto coin, jumped to a one-week high on the news on Monday, rising as much as 4.5 per cent to $58,300 and heading back toward a record-high above $61,000 hit earlier this month.

Visa subsequently confirmed the news in a statement.

The USD Coin (USDC) is a stable coin cryptocurrency whose value is pegged directly to the US dollar.

Visa’s move comes as finance firms including BNY Mellon, BlackRock and Mastercard take steps to make more use of cryptocurrencies for investment and payment purposes.

Tesla boss Elon Musk, a major proponent of cryptocurrencies, said last week that customers can buy its electric vehicles with bitcoin, hoping to encourage more day-to-day use of the digital currency.

“We see increasing demand from consumers across the world to be able to access, hold and use digital currencies and we’re seeing demand from our clients to be able to build products that provide that access for consumers,” said Cuy Sheffield, head of crypto at Visa.

Traditionally, if a customer chooses to use a Crypto.com Visa card to pay for a coffee, the digital currency held in a cryptocurrency wallet needs to be converted into traditional money.

The cryptocurrency wallet will deposit traditional fiat currency in a bank account, to be wired to Visa at the end of the day to settle any transactions, adding cost and complexity for businesses.

Visa’s latest step, which will use the ethereum blockchain, strips out the need to convert digital coin into traditional money in order for the transaction to be settled.

Visa said it has partnered with digital asset bank Anchorage and completed the first transaction this month — with Crypto.com sending USDC to Visa’s Ethereum address at Anchorage.

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To capitalise on India, you must be entrenched, says Piyush Gupta of DBS Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Many managers of Indian origin occupy the corner rooms of global companies but few match the leadership style of Piyush Gupta, CEO of Singapore’s DBS Bank. How did he manage to shake up a government-owned bank? What are the key principles of his management strategy? Why did DBS choose to take over Lakshmi Vilas Bank? What did he learn from the streets of Delhi where he grew up? Gupta shares his value systems and strategies in an interview with ET. Edited excerpts:

The ET jury has chosen you, the CEO of DBS, as the Global Indian of the year. Twenty-six years ago you decided not to join HDFC Bank and instead pursue your own goals. How do you feel when you juxtapose the two?
I have thought about it often. I continue to be very close to Aditya Puri, so we have compared notes and the journey. With the kind of franchise he built, I sometimes wonder whether it was a smart decision at that time and it would have been interesting to be part of that great building journey. On the other hand, given that he stayed in his job for 26 years, what it would mean is that I would have been number two and never the number one. The reality is that at some stage it is always helpful to execute your own strategies. On balance I can’t complain. Not taking that step at that time actually helped me through a different journey, which was quite fulfilling in its own way–multiple countries, roles, including a failed entrepreneurial stint which I would not have seen either.Last year was extraordinary for you – the acquisition of Lakshmi Vilas Bank. You dared to do what no international bank has. Why?
When we raised our hands to subsidiarise in India, a lot of people asked how come you want to subsidiarise when nobody has done. And, I have maintained all along that we want to subsidiarise because we are genuinely bullish about the future of India and to capitalise on that you must be entrenched. You cannot be a niche player that operates in the top 10% of the market–you got to go down deep. If you see all the growth in India in the last 20 years, it is the consumer financing space, SME space and if you really want to benefit from it you have to be in that part of the market, and for us the only way was to subsidiarise. We were already thinking about these opportunities –what would make sense and had a strategic road map. We were mentally prepared and had done some homework around a range of possibilities and that allowed us to respond very quickly.

Does the role of white knight remain valid?
One of our basic things in doing inorganic deals is we must have the bandwidth. It’s got to be strategically aligned with what we want to do, it has to make economic sense and you must have the management bandwidth to go ahead. And therefore, if it’s a much bigger deal, we may not have the management bandwidth to do justice to it. If it was a much bigger challenge, I don’t think we would have been able to handle. For the next couple of years we have our hands full in integrating LVB. We are going to focus on aligning the culture, technology and build on what they have for now.

Cryptocurrencies are being called the 21st century gold or tulip depending on whom you talk to. Where are you in this debate?
We launched the first bank-sponsored digital exchange in December, which lets you tokenise assets and securities. It also helps you custodise digital services. It also helps us buy and sell cryptocurrency. So by our action we are creating capabilities for crypto, digital currencies and tokenisation for the future. But Bitcoin as a replacement for money is still challenging. Money is a medium of exchange, a unit of account and store of value.

Bitcoin seems to be all the rage…
Bitcoin is not a good medium of exchange because even though Elon Musk says he will take it for Tesla, it is very hard to do transactions because you can only do nine transactions per second while Visa and Mastercard can do hundreds of thousands. It’s also difficult to make it a unit of account because it is so volatile. When the value changes 60% to 70% every two three days, how do you take it as a unit of account? However, as a store of value it can work because if you think of gold, which has no intrinsic value, but we collectively as humanity have decided it is a good for jewels and a good asset. So we can collectively build a story that this limited supply asset is a store of value and that might happen. You could get to a stage when Bitcoins serve the nature of digital gold as opposed to digital money.

You have had a leadership role for decades. What did it mean when you started and what is it now?
A couple of things about leadership don’t change — to set a true norm, a sense of direction, build a culture in a company, to create a team — these things don’t change. Hallmarks of leadership are willingness to take accountability, to come up with ideas and have initiative, to question the status quo and most importantly to inspire people to go down a path they don’t even know exists. What does happen is the ways you express leadership tend to change over time. In the three and half decades I have been there, it’s quite clear, as generations and technology change, the manner and method you lead needs to evolve. You move from more top-down vertical leadership to horizontal leadership and learning to lead people through influence and being participative in your leadership format and ideas. But the fundamental is having a clear sense of purpose, focusing on building culture and getting the right empowered team , which don’t change very much.

You talk about culture and change. Aren’t they conflicting – isn’t one stationary while the other is not?
I am a big believer in shaping culture by design. Often you will find that there is a culture of a country and then you go to a company, which has completely different culture. Why is it that the company culture trumps the country culture? It happens because you can shape culture in a way. In DBS for example there is a sense of camaraderie, a family spirit and Asian values, which I kept. But there was another part of the culture which I shook up and that was (being an) offshoot of the government. A lot of decision making was quite bureaucratic. We went through committee structures. People were scared to take decisions. It was quite sarkari in many ways. I had come from an orientation where entrepreneurship, risk taking, individual accountability were important. So to me the big question was—how do I marry the culture of individual enterprise with the culture of harmony and collective operations that DBS has?

While institutions require change, there is resistance. How do you handle it?
In our case we stumbled on it. It was not a well-thought-through thing. We drafted a programme of change which had three basic pillars — becoming customer centric, changing the technology architecture and the culture change. As I reflect back, the first pillar of putting customer at the centre liberated everything else. We hired people for customer design, we taught people customer journey but underlying that was the belief that if it makes sense for the customer the bank will support the activity with what needs to be done. The main thing that changed the culture and overcame resistance was the people’s belief that they had a simple rubric—“If it makes sense for the customer, it’s okay to do.”

But there are various stakeholders pulling in different directions…
But if you want to drive change like this, it has to come right from the top, the board. I was quite blessed because my board and the chairman right at the top bought into this culture change and driving a transformation of DBS very early. So much so, that they were willing to take short-term pain for long-term gain. Early in our journey, I remember they gave me an X amount and said you spend it to drive the change I wanted and they will deal with the shareholders and the market because it was the right thing to do. So I think you need to make the investments for the long-term and for that you need the commitment not only from the senior management but all the way to the board. Once you see that the message goes down to the troops, that helps overcome resistance. As adults we are also anchored by the way we do things, so you’ve got to create an atmosphere for people to experiment and learn by doing and you’ve got to reduce the premium on risk so it’s okay to make mistakes. Because if people are scared of making mistakes, they won’t take a chance.

Where did you learn the lessons of management?
Most of the things I learnt about banking come from Citibank. I spent more than 25 years there and many of these things — getting your hands dirty, entrepreneurship, leadership — I learnt at Citibank. But a large part of leadership skills I learnt fundamentally do go back to being in India. I grew up in India in the 70s and many of the traits that I have acquired come from high school and college — the capacity to have a world view, to put things together coherently, to be able to communicate, and taking people along, to look for solutions. All these predate Citibank.



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Piyush Gupta, CEO, DBS, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digital currencies and tokenisation of assets are a reality and may be a dominant factor in the future, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that Bitcoin could replace fiat currency as a medium of exchange, said Piyush Gupta, CEO of DBS. “We launched the first bank-sponsored digital exchange in December, which lets you tokenise assets and securities,” said Gupta, ET’s Global Indian of the Year.

“So by our action we are creating capabilities for crypto, digital currencies and tokenisation for the future. But Bitcoin as a replacement for money is still challenging. Money is a medium of exchange, a unit of account and store of value.’’ The world is divided on the future of cryptocurrencies with regulators like the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) opposing them as a medium of exchange, while billionaire entrepreneurs like Elon Musk are backing them.

While cryptocurrencies have become a craze, the volatility of Bitcoin has made administrations nervous.

“Bitcoin is not a good medium of exchange because even though Elon Musk says he will take it for Tesla, it is very hard to do transactions because you can only do nine transactions per second while Visa and Mastercard can do hundreds of thousands,” said Gupta.

Gupta of DBS, which became the first international bank to acquire a domestic, troubled lender in recent memory, said that Lakshmi Vilas Bank fits into our strategy. He visualised the growth path a few years ago through the subsidiarisation of DBS in India to gain equal footing with domestic banks. “We were mentally prepared and had done some homework around a range of possibilities and that allowed us to respond very quickly,” he said. DBS India took over Lakshmi Vilas Bank last year



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Bitcoin Climbs Past $50,000 After Backing From Ark’s Cathie Wood

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Bitcoin rallied back above $50,000 on Wednesday, aided by supportive comments from Ark Investment Management’s Cathie Wood.

The largest cryptocurrency advanced as much as 5.4 per cent to about $50,557 in Asian trading. The rebound follows a tough week for the token, including a drop to $45,000 yesterday that revived doubts about the durability of a breathtaking and volatile fivefold surge over the past year.

Overall investor sentiment has also been boosted by comments Tuesday from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who signaled the central bank is nowhere close to unwinding its easy policy. Cryptocurrencies have been buoyed by a tide of monetary and fiscal stimulus to fight the impact of the pandemic.

Also read: Indian millennials drawn to Bitcoin’s charms

Wood, the superstar head of Ark, said in a Bloomberg interview she’s “very positive on Bitcoin, very happy to see a healthy correction here.”

Bitcoin remains lower than its recent record of about $58,350, but the pullback so far has been “relatively modest,” Bespoke Investment Group wrote in a blog post.

The cryptocurrency rally is at the center of one of the hottest debates in financial markets. Believers see an emerging asset class being embraced by long-term investors, not just speculators. Critics fear Bitcoin is in a bubble that will inevitably burst.

Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk in recent tweets said Bitcoin prices “seem high,” having earlier called it a “less dumb” version of cash. Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates cautioned about how investors can be swept up in manias. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Bitcoin is an “extremely inefficient way of conducting transactions.”

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Mastercard to open up network to select cryptocurrencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mastercard Inc said on Wednesday it was planning to offer support for some cryptocurrencies on its network this year, joining a string of big-ticket firms that have pledged similar support.

The credit-card giant’s announcement comes days after Elon Musk‘s Tesla Inc revealed it had purchased $1.5 billion of bitcoin and would soon accept it as a form of payment.

Asset manager BlackRock Inc and payments companies Square and PayPal have also recently backed cryptocurrencies.

Mastercard already offers customers cards that allow people to transact using their cryptocurrencies, although without going through its network.

“Doing this work will create a lot more possibilities for shoppers and merchants, allowing them to transact in an entirely new form of payment. This change may open merchants up to new customers who are already flocking to digital assets,” Mastercard said.

Mastercard specified that not all cryptocurrencies will be supported on its network, adding that many of the hundreds of digital assets in circulation still need to tighten their compliance measures.

Many cryptocurrencies have struggled to win the trust of mainstream investors and the general public due to their speculative nature and potential for money laundering.



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How Elon Musk teased cryptocurrencies over the years, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Elon Musk-led Tesla Inc announced on Monday it had invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin and said it may start accepting the cryptocurrency as a form of payment soon for orders. The move sent Bitcoin up more than 10% to a record high.

Musk, one of the richest people in the world, has displayed more than just a passing interest in Bitcoin over the years and has used his candid Twitter feed, where he has over 46 million followers, to convey his opinion on cryptocurrencies, most times impacting its price.

Last month, the multi-billionaire, who also heads SpaceX and the underground tunneling enterprise The Boring Company, added to the retail-driven frenzy in a handful of heavily shorted stocks like GameStop Corp when he tweeted “Gamestonk!!” along with a link to Reddit’s Wallstreetbets stock trading discussion group.

Here is a timeline of Musk’s comments on cryptocurrencies over the years:

– 2021 –

* Jan. 29: Musk adds “#bitcoin” to his Twitter bio, leading to a 14% surge in the price of the largest cryptocurrency. The billionaire has since taken the tag off.

In January, total market value of all cryptocurrencies reached more than $1 trillion for the first time.

* Feb. 1: In a chat on social media app Clubhouse, Musk says, “I am a supporter of bitcoin.” He said bitcoin was “on the verge of getting broad acceptance” by conventional finance people. Musk added that he was “a little slow on the uptake” and should have bought it years ago.

* Feb. 4: Musk tweets “Doge”, in reference to a cryptocurrency based on a popular internet meme. He later tweeted, “Dogecoin is the people’s crypto.” and “I am become meme, Destroyer of shorts.” Dogecoin surged more than 60%.

With a market value of around $10 billion, Dogecoin becomes the eight-biggest cryptocurrency.

– 2020 –

* Jan. 10: Musk tweets, “Bitcoin is *not* my safe word.” (https://bit.ly/3oTVmmI)

* Dec. 20: Musk tweets, “Bitcoin is my safe word.” The Tesla chief later tweeted, “Just kidding, who needs a safe word anyway!?”

* Dec. 20: On a Twitter exchange with Michael Saylor, chief executive officer of MicroStrategy Inc, who is also an advocate of digital currency, Musk asks about the possibility of converting “large transactions” of Tesla Inc balance sheet into bitcoin.

– 2019 –

* Feb. 19: Musk says Tesla would stay away from cryptocurrencies, despite calling Bitcoin’s structure “brilliant”. “I don’t think it would be a good use of Tesla’s resources to get involved in crypto,” he said in a podcast.

* Feb. 20: In a podcast, Musk says paper money is “going away” and cryptocurrencies would be a better way to transfer value.

* Feb. 21: Musk tweets, “I still only own 0.25 BTC, which a friend sent me several years ago. Don’t have any crypto holdings.”

– 2018 –

* Feb 22: When asked about spamming by one of Musk’s Twitter followers, he says “I literally own zero cryptocurrency, apart from .25 BTC that a friend sent me many years ago.”

* Oct 23: Musk comments on the cryptocurrency scam in which hackers stole about $180,000, posing as him on the micro-blogging site, “Twitter thought I got hacked & locked my account haha.”

* Oct 20: News reports reveal The Boring Company, Musk’s underground tunneling enterprise, was not accepting payments in bitcoin for its popular flamethrowers, contrary to what was reported by several news websites a day earlier.

– 2017 –

* Nov 27: A former intern at SpaceX claims Musk was Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. Musk in response says it was not true and “a friend sent me part of a BTC a few years, but I don’t know where it is.”



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