Autor Cointelegraph By David Attlee

October sees owest-ever daily trading volume for crypto products: Report

As the crypto market shows signs of a gradual recovery, with Bitcoin (BTC) holding above the psychologically important $20,000 level after its initial crash to $17,600 in June, this month still sets a record low for an average daily aggregate product volume across all digital asset investment products. According to the report from CryptoCompare, published on Oct. 27, the average daily trading volume of institutional crypto products had fallen 34.1% — to $61.3 million in October. Almost all the products covered in the report recorded a large decline in average daily volumes, ranging from -24.3% to -77.5%.The downward trend in daily trading is not limited to the recent market turmoil but dates back to November 2021, with a slight exception for May 2022. This October became the second month since September 2020 in which average daily volumes have fallen under $100 million.However, the report traces some optimistic developments in other market markers. The total Assets under Management (AUM) across all digital asset investment products rose 1.76% to $22.9 billion compared with September. This was the first increase in AUM since July. Related: A record 55,000 Bitcoin, or over $1.1 billion, was just withdrawn from BinanceAUM in trust products, which accounts for 77.3% of the market, rose 2.34% to $17.7 billion in October, while AUM represented by ETFs fell 1.59% to $2.21 billion. Another important marker is net flows. This October, weekly net flows for Bitcoin-based products recorded inflows averaging $8.37 million in October, and short Bitcoin-based products recorded the largest outflows, averaging $5.03 million. The situation is a lot worse for Ethereum products, which recorded the second-largest negative net flows of $2.87 million. At the same time, Ethereum blockchain’s native token Ether (ETH) recorded better gains than BTC by Oct. 26, jumping approximately 14% to reach its weekly high of $1,554. By press time, the price of ETH stands at $1,508. 

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Crypto investment firm Q9 gets provisional approval to operate in Dubai

A Hong Kong-headquartered crypto investment platform, Q9 Capital, received provisional virtual asset approval from Dubai’s Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA). The company announced its expansion to the UAE and applied for a full operating license as well. According to its press release from Oct. 27, Q9 will establish a regional hub in Dubai and start providing services to qualified investors and financial service providers once it receives a full operating license. The provisional approval from VARA gives the crypto platform the legal possibility to set up offices and provide digital asset exchange services to pre-qualified investors and financial firms. At the moment, Q9 also holds offices in Hong Kong, London and Limassol. James Quinn, a managing partner at Q9, expressed his company’s willingness to comply with all the regulatory requirements:“We look forward to participating in the authority’s robust compliance framework and continue building partnerships as we expand our presence in Dubai to roll out additional services and enhanced products for the region.” Since the Prime Minister and ruler of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, announced the establishment of the crypto regulator and an accompanying law in March, VARA has granted approval to Crypto.com, OKX and FTX subsidiaries to offer crypto-related services in Dubai. In July, Al Maktoum also launched a metaverse strategy that aimed to bring more than 40,000 virtual jobs to Dubai by 2030.Related: Dubai issues crypto marketing rules to better protect investorsIn September, Binance took the next step and received a Minimal Viable Product license. It took roughly six months for the world’s largest crypto exchange to get the license since the company has gotten its provisional approval from VARA in March.

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Andreessen Horowitz loses billions of dollars but remains faithful to crypto

Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), a hedge fund that manages roughly $28 billion USD, has become one of the major victims of the crypto market crisis that broke out last spring. Despite the downturn, the company said it remains faithful to “the crypto-centric vision of the internet called Web3.” In his commentaries to Wall Street Journal’s review of a16z’s crypto involvement, published on Oct. 26, Chris Dixon — a general partner of the fund and a chief decision maker on crypto investments — pledged his intention to continue investing in the market despite the losses. Dixon said he believes there is “a very long-term horizon” for crypto, as the sector still stays in the early stages of acquiring users. In his opinion, the market’s downturn is an opportunity for the fund to continue backing crypto entrepreneurs:“What I look at is not prices. I look at the entrepreneur and developer activity. That’s the core metric.”Nevertheless, a16z has corrected its bullish strategy on crypto assets after its main crypto fund, launched in 2018, lost around 40% of its value in the first half of 2022. In Q3 2022, it announced only nine deals with crypto startups, compared to 26 announcements in Q4 2021. The hedge fund still remains a large beneficiary of the crypto market’s positive leaps in recent years — it saw almost 10x gains from backing the exchange Coinbase in 2013, and a 100x increase in value of the nonfungible token marketplace OpenSea, which it backed in 2021. Related: a16z proposes a set of licenses especially for NFTs, based on Creative Commons modelOn Oct.3, a16z provided $40 million in funding to the ​​decentralized knowledge protocol Golden, with the fund’s general partner Ali Yahya and cofounder Marc Andreessen joining Golden’s board of directors. According to data from Cointelegraph Research, in August 2022 the blockchain industry saw $1.36 billion of venture capital invested in the blockchain industry — a 12-month low and the fourth consecutive month-on-month decline in capital inflows.

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BIS, UN, Hong Kong Monetary Authority concludes tokenized green bonds trial

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the Hong Kong Monetary Authority and the United Nations Climate Change Global Innovation Hub presented the results of their “Genesis 2.0” initiative. The project aims to explore the use of blockchain, smart contracts and the internet of things (IoT) for a global environment cause. The project resulted in two prototypes of tokenized green bonds, developed by two separate international teams, which are “de facto verified carbon credits” recognized by either international, national or other verification mechanisms.As specified in the press release from Oct. 24, both prototypes of “green bonds” are developed using blockchain and smart contracts, which ensure the tracking of mitigation outcome interests (MOIs). MOI is an essential concept in the language of environment-conscious economic efforts. It allows issuers to borrow against the delivery of the carbon credits upfront and thus to fund their green economy projects in advance. The first prototype, developed by Goldman Sachs, Allinfra and Digital Asset, showcased an ability to achieve smart contract-based delivery of bonds and MOIs, and provided source data transparency enabled by IoT technology.The second prototype, developed by InterOpera in collaboration with Krungthai Bank, Samwoo and Sungshin Cement, was built on an interoperable host chain. With a combination of blockchain, smart contract and application programming interface (API) technologies, it also digitally tracked, delivered and transferred MOIs throughout the full green bond life cycle.Related: Hong Kong unveils completed retail CBDC project that has a CBDC-backed stablecoinProject Genesis 2.0 came as an extension of Project Genesis 1.0, conducted by the BIS and Hong Kong Monetary Authority in 2021. Back then, other private consortia tested the possibility of tokenization of retail green bonds using both a public blockchain and a permissioned blockchain. Project Genesis 2.0 sought to address issues of greenwashing and the additionality of green bonds.BIS remains one of the most proactive explorers of the digital economy among multinational institutions. In September, it finished a multi-jurisdictional central bank digital currency (CBDC) pilot after a month-long test phase that facilitated $22 million worth of real-value cross-border transactions.

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A new definition of crypto comes from the IRS — Law Decoded, Oct. 17-24

No matter how much attention the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or Commodity Futures Trading Commission gets in the crypto industry, for individual traders and investors, it often comes down to the Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) position — and how much tax one owes.Last week, the IRS last week released a draft bill featuring a well-defined digital assets section that outlines if and how taxpayers will account for the use of cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and nonfungible tokens (NFTs).Page 16 of the draft defines digital assets as any digital representations of the value recorded on a “cryptographically secured distributed ledger or any similar technology.” 2021’s tax form required taxpayers to indicate whether they had received, sold or exchanged in “virtual currency” — with this term changing in the yet-to-issued 1040 tax form for 2022.Taxpayers are required to answer the digital assets section of their income tax return whether or not they have engaged in digital asset transactions during the tax year. A number of situations will require American taxpayers to indicate yes to the question on digital assets of Form 1040 or 1040-SR. This includes receiving as a reward, award or payment for property or services or sold, exchanged, gifted or disposed of a digital asset in 2022.New amendment provides regulation for crypto activities in the U.K. An amendment to the Financial Services and Markets Bill now before the United Kingdom’s parliament could extend the law’s powers to regulate financial promotion and other activities to crypto assets. According to the explanatory statement accompanying the amendment, the new bill would “clarify that the powers relating to financial promotion and regulated activities can be relied on to regulate cryptoassets and activities relating to cryptoassets.” In a letter from Aug. 9, the Financial Conduct Authority stated that it would publish final rules for the promotion of crypto assets once the Treasury formalizes legislation to bring these into its remit. Continue readingHong Kong reportedly wants to legalize crypto tradingHong Kong is taking action to regain its status as a global cryptocurrency hub by launching several legal initiatives related to the crypto industry. The government of Hong Kong is considering introducing its own bill to regulate crypto in its own China-free way, according to Elizabeth Wong, head of the fintech unit at the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC). One of the SFC’s initiatives is allowing retail investors to “directly invest into virtual assets,” which would mark a significant shift from the SFC’s stance over the past four years. Continue reading Ripple continues to gain points in case against SECRipple seems to be inching closer to victory in its ongoing battle with the SEC. The company’s general counsel, Stuart Alderoty, confirmed on Twitter that the firm finally has a set of elusive documents after “18 months and 6 court orders,” though noted they remain confidential at the SEC’s insistence. “It was well worth the fight to get them,” he said, adding: “I’ve always felt good about our legal arguments, and I feel even better now. I always felt bad about the SEC’s tactics, and I feel even worse about them now.” The fought-over documents relate to a 2018 speech by former SEC division director William Hinman regarding the status of Ether (ETH), with the financial regulator seemingly pulling out all the stops to keep the documents under wraps.Continue reading

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