Cryptocurrencies yet to recover from last week’s crash

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Bitcoin and other top crypto tokens, which are yet to completely recover from the crash last week, continue to see fluctuating price movements. Last week, the prices across tokens dropped around 15-20 per cent overnight amid panic sale by investors.

As of Monday 2:10 pm, Bitcoin was trading in green up by 3.36 per cent at ₹43.69 lakh, still down from last week’s peak of ₹47.58 lakh as seen on WazirX. Tether’s price dropped by 1.83 per cent, Sandbox gained 15.67 per cent, Shiba Inu was gained 1.63 per cent, Ethereum gained 5.02 per cent and Dogecoin was trading up by 1.72 per cent. All of them are far from last week’s peak rates.

On Monday afternoon, responding to a query in the ongoing Winter parliamentary session, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman reiterated the Ministry’s stand on regulating Bitcoin, saying that the government has no proposal to recognise Bitcoin as a currency and it has not been collecting any data on any such transactions.

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Crypto prices stable in India as investors await details of new Bill

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Cryptocurrency prices continued to be stable on Indian exchanges 48-hours after major crash of 15-20 per cent across tokens; though with the exception of Sandbox token. It was the highest gainer yesterday but today it is trading below at 12.29 per cent of its peak price from yesterday.

At 10:57 am on WazirX, Bitcoin’s price had slightly gone up by 0.21 per cent, Shiba Inu’s price increased by 4.2 per cent, Tether was up by 2.45 per cent, Ethereum was up by 6.1 per cent and Basic Attention Token (BAT) jumped by 32.6 per cent.

Also read: Only a handful of cryptocurrencies that exist today likely to survive: Raghuram Rajan

Clearing some of the air around uncertainty and confusion on the draft Crypto bill, Finance Secretary TV Somanathan on Thursday in an interview with CNBC-TV18 said that people had just overreacted to the development of the crypto bill which will be tabled in the parliament’s winter session.

“However, one thing I can say very clearly is that crypto will not be legal tender by any means. Gold is not a legal tender, silver is not a legal tender and alcohol is also not a legal tender, beyond that I will not be in a position to say anything more,” he said.

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Crypto currencies recover, back in the green on Indian exchanges

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More than 24-hours after a blood bath and almost a fourth of its value wiped out on the exchanges, cryptocurrencies are back in the game. Top tokens have recovered nearly 10 per cent or more from yesterday’s plunge of 15-20 per cent.

As of 1:30 pm, bitcoin was trading in green, up by 5.03 per cent. USDT or Tether’s price jumped by 3.68 per cent, Shiba Inu by 4.83 per cent and Ethereum by 3.32 per cent. Sandbox topped this list on WazirX which was up by 23.76 per cent.

Also read: Only a handful of cryptocurrencies that exist today likely to survive: Raghuram Rajan

The massive cryptocurrency crash on Indian exchanges on Wednesday was a result of a Lok Sabha notice released on Tuesday evening summarising bills to be discussed in the upcoming winter parliamentary session.

The description next to The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021 read that the government was seeking to prohibit private cryptocurrencies while allowing certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology. This created confusion and unexpected panic sale among investors leading to temporary crashing of several exchange platforms.

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Only a handful of cryptocurrencies that exist today likely to survive: Raghuram Rajan

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Out of the 6,000-odd cryptocurrencies currently in existence, only a few are likely to survive, according to the former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan.

Rajan, in a recent interview with CNBC TV-18 said that only one or two, or at most, only a handful of the cryptocurrencies that exist today would survive in the future.

“If things have value only because they will be pricier down the line, that’s a bubble,” Rajan said.

The former RBI governor compared the current mania in cryptocurrencies to the tulip mania in the Netherlands in the 17th century.

Also Read: Explainer: Digital currency vs cryptos – how are they different?

He added that the issue was that most cryptocurrencies did not have permanent value. Additionally, some of them would survive to facilitate payments, especially cross border payments.

“In the US, crypto is a $2.5 trillion problem that nobody really wants to regulate,” he said.

According to Rajan, part of the problem was the lack of understanding of the space and how to regulate it, among regulators.

He added that the government can examine these crypto entities more closely when they get too big to make sure that there isn’t fraud.

Rajan’s remark come as the bill to ban all private cryptocurrencies and facilitate introduction of the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) topped the government’s busy agenda for the Winter Session of Parliament.

Also read: Exchanges on tenterhooks as they await details of proposed cryptocurrencies Bill

Top cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, Shiba Inu, Dogecoin, Sandbox among others crashed overnight on Indian crypto exchanges on Wednesday as investors panicked following the government’s plans on the bill seeking to prohibit private cryptocurrencies while allowing certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology.

Additionally, the former RBI Governor said that the government must focus on the underlying blockchain technology, letting it flourish adding that blockchain ways of transacting were much cheaper, especially across borders.

There has been a fair share of regulatory concerns when it comes to cryptocurrencies.

However, despite regulatory uncertainty and the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) concerns, India now has close to 400 cryptocurrency-based start-ups offering various services to the crypto ecosystem.

According to data sourced by BusinessLine from Tracxn, there are 380 crypto start-ups and 12 Non-fungible Tokens-based (NFT) start-ups currently operating in the country, as per previous reports.

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Exchanges on tenterhooks as they await details of proposed cryptocurrencies Bill

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Cryptocurtency exchanges in India are on a wait and watch mode before they plan their next steps as a consequence of the Government’s move to introduce legislation to regulate the crypto industry. While the draft Bill proposes to ban all private cryptocurrencies, the exchanges wait for the details of the proposed law.

Cryptocurrencies prices drop in India after Centre moves bill

Nischal Shetty, Founder, WazirX, said, “While the description of the draft Bill appears to be the same as in January 2021, several noteworthy events have occurred since January. First, the Parliamentary Standing Committee invited a public consultation, and then our Prime Minister himself came forward to call for crypto regulations in India. That being said, let’s respectfully wait to find out more about the draft Bill to be tabled in Parliament.”

Crypto boom in India: Despite regulatory concerns, over 400 start-ups jump onto crypto ecosystem

Wednesday morning, Bitcoin’s price dropped 16.75 per cent on WazirX, Ethereum plunged 12.1 per cent, Shiba Inu dropped over 20 per cent, Dogecoin was down by over 16 per cent, Sandbox by 4 per cent and USDT or Tether by over 14 per cent.

This happened after the Lok Sabha’s summary of Bills to be tabled in the winter parliamentary session released the evening before mentioned that the government is seeking to prohibit private cryptocurrencies in the description of The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021.

Will inputs be included?

Avinash Shekhar, Co-CEO, ZebPay, said, “We’re awaiting further details on the Bill that is going to be presented in the winter session of Parliament. There have been many positive steps taken by the government to learn and understand crypto and its impact on all stakeholders — investors, exchanges, policymakers. So, we’re looking forward to a crypto Bill that takes into consideration all the inputs from those discussions.”

“We welcome the move from the government. A well-assessed and thought-through regulation will pave the way for greater adoption of the technology and will help millions of Indians embrace this new-age asset class. We are looking forward to the next steps on this,” a CoinDCX spokesperson said.

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Shiba Inu, Dogecoin most-traded cryptos in India

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Meme coins ruled the roost when it comes to the most-traded cryptocurrencies on Indian crypto exchanges over the past six months. Elon Musk-backed Dogecoin and its trending rival Shiba Inu surpassed the likes of Bitcoin, Ethereum and MATIC, in terms of trading volume in India between April and October.

Overall trading volume

CoinSwitch Kuber told BusinessLine that over the past six months, Dogecoin contributed 13.76 per cent to its overall trading volume, followed by Ethereum at 6.06 per cent, Bitcoin at 6.04 per cent, Internet Computer at 5.08 per cent and Polygon’s MATIC at 4.52 per cent.

The cryptocurrency exchange has not listed Shiba Inu yet.

‘Most-popular coin’

Sharan Nair, Chief Business Officer, CoinSwitch Kuber, told BusinessLine: “Interestingly, Dogecoin, a popular cryptocurrency born out of a meme, has been on an uptrend, rallying in the last six months, even surpassing widely used cryptos, Bitcoin and Ethereum.

“A flurry of tweets by global leaders, including Elon Musk, have helped strengthen Doge’s popularity. People are now starting to look at real-world utility of Dogecoin, leading to it becoming the most-popular coin in the last few months.”

Another top cryptocurrency exchange, WazirX, saw nearly 50 per cent of its trading volume coming in from ‘Dogecoin Killer’ Shiba Inu over the past one week.

On a Change.org petition demanding Shiba Inu to get listed on Robinhood, the cryptocurrency rallied on WazirX, clocking in transactions worth over $320 million over the last few days.

The meme coin founded in August 2020 by pseudonymous Ryoshi started seeing an uptick in global trading volumes when Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin burned nearly 90 per cent of his Shiba Inu holding worth over $6 billion, creating a dearth of supply in May. Apart from this, the other highest traded cryptocurrencies on WazirX included Bitcoin, Dogecoin, WRX (WazirX’s own token), MATIC and Ethereum. Between April and October, WazirX reported $27.12 billion worth of transactions. Shiba Inu started gaining momentum only in the past three to four months.

‘Great investment option’

Speaking on the popularity of Ethereum and Bitcoins, Nair added: “Along with hosting the Ether token, Ethereum is also leading innovation by being a foundation for a variety of applications such as decentralised finance (DeFi) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), making it a great investment.

“Third in this list is Bitcoin, which, of course, continues to witness high volumes from investors due to it being the biggest and the most trusted crypto asset. Ethereum and Bitcoin’s technological superiority has been a key driver in its ever-growing popularity.”

Nischal Shetty, founder and CEO, WazirX, said: “The growth of Shiba Inu shows the power of being a community-driven project. In recent months, SHIB has been in the news for being listed on more exchanges, thereby increasing liquidity and access to the token.

“Adding to it, Vitalik Buterin also burned over $6 billion worth of SHIB tokens. Even though SHIB has been rallying for the past month, it has reached a new all-time-high price. On WazirX, SHIB has overtaken Bitcoin’s position as the top-traded token in the Indian rupee market this week. In the past 24 hours, over $320 million worth of SHIB has been traded on WazirX. This market movement has also caused WazirX to record an all-time-high 24-hour trading volume of over $560 million.”

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Shiba Inu passes Dogecoin as top “dog” in cryptocurrency, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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SILVER SPRING, Md. – Cryptocurrency has officially gone to the dogs.

The recent trading frenzy over a digital token called Shiba Inu – commonly billed as a “meme” or joke coin – has vaulted the canine-themed cryptocurrency into the top ten most valuable digital assets by market value, hitting $40 billion and surpassing its cousin and apparent inspiration, Dogecoin.

Shiba was up another 10% at midday on Monday and has doubled in value in the past week. Most of that gain came in a flurry of trading last Wednesday, when it gained a whopping 66%.

Even with its recent meteoric rise – it’s up about 900% in the past month – each Shiba coin costs just a tiny fraction of one cent. If you bought $1,000 worth of Shiba in late September, your 20 million coins would now be worth around $9,000.

Like most cryptocurrencies, Shiba is not commonly used for commercial transactions and is considered by most experts and investors to be a high-risk, speculative bet due to the broader volatility of the crypto market. Experts warn that investors need to be cautious about putting money into something with anonymous leadership that appears to have little functional use.

Lee Reiners, an outspoken crypto skeptic, teaches fintech and cryptocurrency courses at Duke University School of Law. Reiners said he’s not surprised by Shiba’s recent spike.

“This is what happens when you have massive speculation in assets with no intrinsic value,” Reiners said.

Investors might be thinking this story sounds familiar. Bitcoin has doubled in value twice this year – with a rapid plunge in between – and now sells for more than $60,000 per coin. Among stocks, GameStop had a surge that rivals Shiba’s, rocketing from about $17 per share in early January to $483 later that month. Lately, it’s consistently traded around $180.

While Shiba is the current white-hot cryptocurrency, you can’t trade it through more traditional brokers – yet. A petition with more than 450,000 signatures on Change.org is pushing for the mobile trading app Robinhood to start allowing Shiba trades. Robinhood currently allows trading of Dogecoin and other cryptocurrencies. Its CEO Vladimir Tenev told investors last week that the company would “carefully evaluate whether we can add new coins in a way that’s safe for customers and in line with regulatory requirements.”

Stronger regulation of the crypto markets seems inevitable, but it’s unclear when it might happen. The chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Gary Gensler, said in August that the world of crypto doesn’t have enough investor protection and compared it to “the Wild West.”

Whether that lack of regulation is driving the recent spikes in Shiba and other digital assets is not clear. What seems apparent though, is that retail investors – the little guys – are leading the way.

Kyle Waters, a research analyst at the blockchain data and analytics firm Coin Metrics, said the median trade size of Shiba on that busy Wednesday was $115. That’s “highly suggestive” that the typical Shiba trader on Coinbase is a small retail trader, Water said.

Shiba’s rise is similar to Dogecoin’s ascent in the spring, when it caught fire and rose jumped from around 5 cents to 57 cents between April 7 and May 7.

Like many other crypto currencies, Shiba is shrouded in mystery. According to its white paper – or “Woof Paper,” in this case – the token was started in 2020 by an anonymous person or group named “Ryoshi.” The paper, which describes how Shiba and its progeny works, is also peppered with soaring-but-vague platitudes about community, freedom, revolution and destroying traditional paradigms.

A person with limited background knowledge of technology and blockchain vernacular would be hard pressed to decipher much of the technical wording in the white paper.



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Crypto exchange WazirX disrupted by the rush to buy Shiba Inu coins

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A record-breaking rally and frantic trading in meme-themed crypto currency Shiba Inu has disrupted crypto exchange WazirX, which is headquartered in Mumbai.

Shiba Inu has rallied more than 100 per cent in the past 24 hours on the back of a petition to get it listed on global stock trading brokerage platform Robinhood. Disruption hurts many people as WazirX has more than 9 million users, sources told BusinessLine.

Shiba Inu has been on a dream run since Vitalik Buterin, the founder of the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency Ethererum, donated around $1 billion (₹7,324 crore) worth of Shiba Inu coins to India’s Covid Crypto Relief Fund. This fund was set up by Indian cryptocurrency entrepreneur Sandeep Nailwal on April 24. Buterin is a Russian-Canadian programmer and writer who is known to be close to maverick businessman and Tesla promoter Elon Musk.

Last month, Shiba Inu witnessed a rally as Musk tweeted a photo of his puppy dog that resembles the meme coin. Shiba Inu was founded in 2020 by an anonymous person going by the Japanese name Ryoshi who put it on the blockchain network to decentralise its operations.

Indian cryptocurrency market likely to reach up to $241 million by 2030: Nasscom

In the last 24 hours, the rally in Shiba Inu was due to three lakh people signing petitions on Change.org to get it listed on Robinhood. This led to disruption on WazirX on Wednesday. Crypto exchanges trade for 24 hours 365 days. Little known individual Tristan Luke had started the petition to list Shiba Inu on Robinhood and has received more than lakh signatures. The Dogecoin inspired meme coin Shiba Inu is the 11th largest cryptocurrency with a market cap of $32 billion. It is listed exclusively on WazirX in India.

“We are investigating the delays in the WazirX app and website. Team is working on scaling the systems and will update you as soon as it is fixed. Sorry for the inconvenience,” WazirX told its clients in a communication. It also lists scores of other crypto currencies on its platform but has not given any reason for the tech disruption.

NFTs gaining traction in India as celebrities lead the way

Opaque process

According to traders on WazirX, even though the money was transferred from the bank, their orders could not get executed or the orders once placed could not get cancelled. Also, those who traded on Wednesday had no way to know details of their transactions till Thursday morning. Those buying and selling on WazirX platform have to mainly use Mobikwik pay wallets to transfer their money from bank accounts to and fro. Since Wednesday, Mobikwik, too, had been witnessing payment issues, clients told Business Line.

Crypto exchanges are yet to prove themselves on the technology front and clients say that sometimes buying and selling on them and money transfers are tedious. Yet, due to the hype of crypto trading these exchanges now claim to have more traders registered with them than the mainline stock exchanges like the BSE.

Experts say that WazirX and scores of other crypto exchanges should detail their technology and various other details like inventor profile and checks and balances followed by them in handling client money. The total market capitalisation of the global crypto market is nearly $2.6 trillion, which is the same as India’s gross domestic production.

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Shiba Inu crypto falls from record after Musk damps speculation

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Elon Musk helped Shiba Inu vault up the ranks of the largest cryptocurrencies by market value by tweeting a photo of his puppy. Now the meme token is down after he said he doesn’t own any.

Musk, who has repeatedly touted Dogecoin on social media and frequently commented on cryptocurrencies more broadly, responded to a query from a Twitter user asking how much Shiba Inu he holds with, “None.” In a follow-up tweet, he said he has bought Bitcoin, Ether and Dogecoin, and “that’s it.”

As of 9.30 a.m. on Monday, SHIB, as the crypto is known, was down 15 per cent from its all-time high reached on Sunday Hong Kong time, according to pricing from CoinGecko.com. The token – centered around a breed of Japanese hunting dogs – has risen more than 400 per cent in the past 30 days to be the 11th-largest by value.

Also read: Bitcoin and why its value has rocketed once again

Dogecoin has climbed about 10 per cent in the past 24 hours, according to CoinGecko. Shiba Inu has rallied amid factors including a push to get it listed on Robinhood, its ecosystem’s foray into non-fungible tokens and general enthusiasm for meme assets.

However, many market observers say there’s often little reason for its movements and caution that the token may struggle to maintain its current momentum. It was founded in 2020 by an anonymous person going by the name Ryoshi.

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