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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WazirX finds cryptocurrency Shiba Inu too hot to handle

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A record-breaking rally and frantic trading in meme-themed cryptocurrency Shiba Inu disrupted crypto exchange WazirX as its systems could not keep up with the volumes. Listed exclusively on WazirX in India, Shiba Inu is the 11th largest cryptocurrency with a market cap of $32 billion.

According to traders on WazirX, though the money was transferred from the bank, the orders could not get executed or once placed, they could not get cancelled. Also, those who traded on Wednesday did not get details of their transactions till Thursday morning.

“We are investigating the delays in the WazirX app and website. The team is working on scaling up the systems and will update as soon as it is fixed. Sorry for the inconvenience,” WazirX told its clients in a communication without giving any reason for the tech disruption.

When contacted, Nischal Shetty, CEO, WazirX said, “In the last 24 hours, WazirX clocked a trading volume of over $566 million. This is the highest volume recorded by any crypto exchange in India ever. We also witnessed an all-time high in terms of sign-ups, active traders and concurrent users. It’s over 40X of what we had seen before.”

Dream run

Shiba Inu has been on a dream run ever since Vitalik Buterin, the founder of the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency Ethereum, donated around $1 billion (₹7,324 crore) worth of Shiba Inu coins to India’s Covid Crypto Relief Fund. Buterin is a Russian-Canadian programmer and writer, known to be close to Elon Musk.

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.

The rally in Shiba Inu can be attributed to the petition on Change.org urging Robinhood, a trading platform, to list the meme-inspired currency. The petition has received more than three lakh signatures.

With inputs from

Debangana Ghosh

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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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More than 2 lakh crypto accounts blocked in India over 6 months

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The past year or so has seen decentralised cryptocurrency slowly becoming part of the mainstream narrative. On the seamy side, the digital currency has also provided an avenue for online criminal activities involving tax evasion and other kinds of serious frauds.

In the past six months, between April-September 2021, the top three cryptocurrency exchanges – WazirX, CoinSwitch Kuber and CoinDCX – have blocked over two lakh accounts citing malicious activities.

Malicious activities

CoinSwitch Kuber alone has suspended 180,000 accounts in the past six months, while it is currently monitoring the daily activities of around 200,000 accounts that can possibly be malicious, Sharan Nair, CBO, CoinSwitch Kuber, told BusinessLine.

WazirX has blocked 14,469 accounts after receiving requests from Indian and foreign law enforcement agencies. Foreign law enforcement agencies raised 38 requests. These came from countries including the US, UK, France, Austria, Switzerland and Germany. But over 90 per cent of the accounts were blocked after complaints from other users and the company’s internal tracking mechanism.

Nischal Shetty, Founder, WazirX, told BusinessLine, “WazirX is part of Blockchain and Crypto assets Council (BACC) along with other crypto exchanges. Our exchange is able to trace all users on the platform with official identity information. We already have a robust KYC and AML enabled policy that we follow to self-regulate in the absence of regulatory guidelines. All the necessary information to track malicious activities that are “facilitated” by blockchains are publicly available.”

He added, “Additionally, WazirX has collaborated with TRM Labs, a cryptocurrency compliance platform, for transaction monitoring and investigation, wallet screening and risk management. It has helped bolster the security of the platform and scale compliance initiatives.”

Notice to WazirX

WazirX was recently issued a show-cause notice by Enforcement Directorate for alleged violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act on transactions involving crypto-currencies worth ₹2,790 crore. The ED then said it has initiated a probe on the basis of its ongoing money-laundering investigation into Chinese-owned illegal betting applications.

According to Nair, the pandora’s box opens when one is able to send cryptocurrency outside the exchange. “The biggest problem the regulators have is with people buying bitcoins on one platform and sending it to unknown addresses. Nobody is able to track who these addresses belong to and what is the intent of these addresses. Even the crypto exchanges won’t be able to track it,” Nair said.

To curb this issue, CoinSwitch Kuber doesn’t let its users withdraw or move their funds in cryptocurrency. To withdraw their money, they have to first sell the crypto asset on the exchange and get their money deposited directly into their bank accounts in INR.

Lack of regulation

Policy experts said that though the exchanges are themselves blocking suspicious accounts, the real issue is the lack of regulation.

“The crypto world is largely unregulated. While the Reserve Bank of India has already expressed its reservation in allowing cryptocurrency, the government is yet to announce its stance on the issue,” said an industry expert.

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Indian crypto exchanges locking accounts on suspicious money laundering trades, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian cryptocurrency exchanges are blocking and reporting suspicious trades on their won following concerns raised by the government agencies that the virtual currencies were used for money laundering.

The industry is looking to self-regulate at a time when the government is yet to come out with any regulations around cryptocurrencies or the way to tax them.

WazirX, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the country, recently declared the numbers in what it calls a “transparency report”.

Between April and September this year, the exchange got 377 requests from legal enforcement agencies, out of which 38 requests were from foreign law enforcement agencies.

The crypto exchange locked about 1,500 accounts.

In all, the exchange locked 14,469 accounts, although most of them were after customers asked them to stop services or there were some other payment issues.

The exchanges have always claimed that if the cryptocurrency is based on a blockchain technology, all the records are permanent and, in fact, it would be easier to discover the exact nature of the transactions.

Enforcement Directorate notice

IN July, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) in its recent notice to WazirX, has asked the crypto exchange to explain why ‘withdrawal from crypto wallets’ is not a violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

The ED notice had put a question mark on the very essence of cryptos and fundamental structure of the underlying digital ledger, blockchain, that allow holders of cryptos to freely transfer coins from their wallets to another wallet and to anyone, anywhere in the world. The agency had asked WazirX to explain transactions worth 2,790.74 crore. A trader buying Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, on WazirX stores the coin in her wallet with the exchange.

However, she can move the crypto purchased on WazirX platform to another wallet with another exchange in India or abroad, or to her private wallet which is not linked to any exchange, or directly move coins to the wallet of another person who may be located anywhere.

WazirX and a few exchanges have also received notices from the income tax department which is trying to figure out the source of earnings of the bourses and whether parts have escaped tax.

In 2019, the Financial Action Task Force — an intergovernmental organisation to combat money-laundering — had come out with the ‘Travel Rule’ that prescribes exchanges, custodians as well as wallet providers to share information on senders and recipients of cryptos.



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Crypto adoption goes up in tier-2 and tier-3 cities in India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: According to the data from crypto exchanges including CoinDCX and Wazir X, tier-2 and tier-3 cities are adopting and acclimatizing to cryptocurrency trading faster than others, Economic Times reports.

The rise in cryptocurrency adoption is partly attributed to the work-from-home culture brought about by the pandemic as also to the positive response from the government, the report says The diverse profile of the Indian cryptocurrency users has caught as much attention.

Data from the crypto exchanges reveals the following findings:

* Majority of the new signups were reported from tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Wazir X had 55 percent users in 2021 from these small cities.

* Among small cities, Bhopal reported the highest growth at 100 percent, according to BuyUcoin exchange.

* Other leading exchanges also witnessed similar sign-up growth patterns from Ahmedabad, Lucknow, Patna, Vadodara, Kolkata and Bhopal.

* WazirX reported a 2,375 percent increase in sign-ups in 2021, from tier-2 and tier-3 cities.

* The following information came up about the profile of crypto users :

– The new crypto users are mostly under 35 years and possess some kind of degree.

– 90 per cent of these investors are IT professionals, MBA graduates, engineers and start-up owners.

– The local exchanges unanimously reported a remarkable rise in women investors at 30-40 per cent from last year’s 15 per cent.

– The young Indian investors are not only banking on Bitcoin, but are also interested in other forms of cryptocurrency assets like DeFi assets and NFTs.

The new cohort of young cryptocurrency investors who are keen towards all forms of virtual assets. This has led to diversification of the investment patterns in the Indian crypto markets.



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Indian banks facilitate cryptocurrency transactions amid a fresh boom, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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As Indians flock to the cryptocurrency market with renewed enthusiasm, banks are joining the party.

They are again allowing the purchase of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies through their channels, easing curbs that they had imposed on such services.

Lenders including HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and Axis Bank are allowing transactions in virtual currencies through the UPI platform.

Crypto exchange WazirX has listed the net banking facilities of Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, IDBI, IDFC First Bank, Federal Bank and Deutsche Bank to make payments for crypto purchases.

According to crypto exchanges, more banks are now warming up to them and several channels are available for customers to buy crypto assets.

The change in stance happened after the Reserve Bank of India told banks that they no longer can use the regulator’s 2018 circular prohibiting dealings in virtual currencies, as the direction has been struck down by the Supreme Court, said people in the know.

Banks have also reopened accounts with crypto exchanges after conducting due diligence, in absence of any specific regulation. This comes at a time when Indians are flocking back to cryptocurrencies.

Reluctant banks

As early as June banks were sending official notices to many customers warning them of curbs, including permanent closure of accounts.

Lenders were asking customers to clarify the nature of transactions and warning credit card users that transactions of virtual currency will lead to suspension/cancellation of card.

While trading in cryptocurrency is not illegal as per existing Indian laws, individual institutions can enforce their terms based on their risk assessment.

A grey area

Despite the boom, cryptocurrencies are in a grey area in India, with the Reserve Bank hostile towards it and the government unsure about its prospects.

There is no legislation or regulatory code yet to govern the crypto ecosystem, leading to confusion among customers, businesses and financial institutions providing banking services.

In 2018, the Reserve Bank of India barred financial institutions from supporting crypto transactions, which the Supreme Court overturned in 2020. The government has circulated a draft bill outlawing all cryptocurrency activities, which has been under discussion since 2019.

Last month, the RBI asked banks not to cite its 2018 circular and clarified that banks can do their own KYC for crypto clients. With this, banks are now reassessing the situation, but several banks currently lack the technical expertise to make a supervisory assessment on these transactions.



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ED stance strikes at the heart of cryptocurrency in India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: The stand taken by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) on cryptocurrencies can unsettle crypto trading and all bourses in India. The agency, in its recent notice to WazirX, has asked the country’s largest crypto exchange to explain why ‘withdrawal from crypto wallets’ is not a violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), a person familiar with the issue told ET.

The ED notice puts a question mark on the very essence of cryptos and fundamental structure of the underlying digital ledger, blockchain, that allow holders of cryptos to freely transfer coins from their wallets to another wallet and to anyone, anywhere in the world.The agency had asked WazirX to explain transactions worth 2,790.74 crore. “These were carried out in violation of forex rules. WazirX’s platform allowed clients to transfer cryptocurrencies without proper documentation, making it a route for laundering,” said an official.

“Since money has crossed borders, the law of the land applies and one needs to be sure that this money isn’t cheap money (cheap money is low-interest loan) or dirty money (used for illegal activities),” said an ED official.

A trader buying Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, on WazirX stores the coin in her wallet with the exchange. However, she can move the crypto purchased on WazirX platform to another wallet with another exchange in India or abroad, or to her private wallet which is not linked to any exchange, or directly move coins to the wallet of another person who may be located anywhere.

“WazirX, like other exchanges, may be doing the KYC of traders and investors who have accounts and wallets with it. If any of these traders withdraws a few Bitcoins, WazirX would also know the ‘address’ of the external wallet where the Bitcoins are sent. But it can never know the identity of the person or the entity owning the other wallet which receives the Bitcoin. Knowing the address of the wallet is not the same as knowing the people behind the wallet. This is the very nature of cryptos,” said an industry person.

“The exchange has claimed they have done KYC, but that isn’t enough to ensure that the digital currency isn’t misused. In the absence of any official digital currency and regulation, there have been instances of Bitcoins being used to buy drugs on the dark net as well as for money laundering,” the ED official added.

WazirX and a few exchanges have also received notices from the income tax department which is trying to figure out the source of earnings of the bourses and whether parts have escaped tax.

WazirX CEO and founder Nischal Shetty declined to comment on the matter. The exchange, it is believed, is yet to respond to the ED notice.

The central agency had served the notice to WazirX in June after it stumbled upon information on crypto withdrawals and receipts in the course of an ongoing investigation into Chinese-owned online illegal betting applications. ED, in a June 11 press release had said the Rs 800-crore crypto inflow and Rs 1400-crore crypto outflow were not available on the blockchain.

“While the present investigation is linked to WazirX, ED’s approach and line of questioning could eventually involve other exchanges. Traders on all exchanges are free to transfer cryptos to other wallets… However, we have not received queries or asked to share data on outflow-inflow into wallets,” said an official with another exchange.

Many in the fintech world may argue that ED is wrongly comparing crypto transactions with banking transactions. “A bank or the regulator can find out the details of suspicious accounts. But the essence of cryptos, which aims to bypass the banking system, is anonymity and privacy,” said another person.

However, the concern over fund movements in the garb of cryptos is being voiced by regulators world over. In 2019, the Financial Action Task Force — an intergovernmental organization to combat money-laundering — had come out with the ‘Travel Rule’ that prescribes exchanges, custodians as well as wallet providers to share information on senders and recipients of cryptos.

“It may be easy to implement this among exchanges within a country even if they are competitors. But to enforce this across the world among exchanges and service providers with servers located in different jurisdictions can be a big challenge. Also, it’s difficult to track debits and credits in private wallets which are available on mobile phones and other devices,” said a fintech official.



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Indian crypto exchanges flounder as banks cut ties after RBI frown

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Indian cryptocurrency exchanges are scrambling to secure viable, permanent payment solutions to ensure seamless transactions after banks and payment gateways started cutting ties with them, six industry insiders said.

The exchanges are struggling to cope after the Central bank, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which has said it does not favour digital currencies, out of concern over their impact on financial stability, informally asked banks to steer clear.

Customer complaints have inundated all India’s key exchanges as the pull out by major payment gateways has hit transactions, according to social media and users.

Also read: Cryptocurrency-related cyberattacks are on the rise: Report

“Banks are reluctant to do business,” said Avinash Shekhar,a co-chief executive of ZebPay, one of India’s oldest crypto exchanges that is not offering immediate settlement. “We have been talking to several payment partners but the progress has been slow.”

Options being resorted to include tying up with smaller payment gateways, building their own payment processors, holding back on immediate settlements or offering only peer-to-peer transactions, the heads of five crypto exchanges said.

At least two exchanges have tied up with smaller payment processing firm, Airpay, as its larger peers have cut ties.

There is no official data, but India has nearly 15 million crypto investors, who hold more than ₹100 billion ($1.34 billion), according to industry estimates.

The alternative

Some crypto exchanges, such as WazirX, are forced to stick only to peer-to-peer transactions on certain days, while others, such as Vauld, allow bank transfers with manual settlement as they hunt for a payment processor, backing up settlements.

Also read: Even gold-obsessed Indians are now pouring billions into crypto

Even major payment gateways, such as Razorpay, PayU and BillDesk have severed ties, as they too are dependent on banks to process transactions and the pull out by large banks has left them reeling.

The three payment processors did not respond to a request for comment.

Some others, such as Coinswitch and WazirX, have signed up with a smaller Mumbai-payment processor, Airpay, for instant transfers.

The payment gateway is backed by venture capital fund Kalaari Capital and billionaire stock investor, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, who has been vociferous in his opposition to cryptocurrencies.

Jhunjhunwala did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment.

Also read: Cryptocurrency: Investors can wait till clarity emerges

Smaller payment gateways have not proved very successful in executing high volumes of transactions, leading to failures that have resulted in a flood of user complaints.

The lack of support from banks means that smaller firms, like larger counterparts, are also backing off from crypto activities.

“Partnership with the smaller payment processors has not emerged as stable yet, and is more of a temporary solution,”said the founder of an Indian crypto exchange, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Others, such as Bitbns, have built their own basic payment processor, allowing some essential transactions since the systems does not require prior approval from the Reserve Bank of India, the central bank.

Also read: ED issues show cause notice to WazirX, directors under FEMA

“These are only stop-gap arrangements and not a solution to the problem the industry is facing,” said Gaurav Dahake, chief executive of domestic exchange Bitbns.

Prohibition has not augured well, as it has forced customers to opt for peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions that allow buyers and sellers to engage directly.

“Predictably, alternate transaction methods such as P2P have increased, which makes the market more inefficient and also exposes customers to the risk of fraud,” said the chiefexecutive of another crypto exchange.

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