Autor Cointelegraph By Gareth Jenkinson

Binance ban off the cards, says Philippine trade and industry department

A proposal to ban global cryptocurrency exchange Binance from operating in the Philippines will not gather steam due to a lack of regulations towards cryptocurrencies in the country.The Philippines’ Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has cited no clear guidelines set out by the country’s central bank, Banko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), as a dead-stop after a lobbying group called for the prohibition of Binance in early July.Local think tank Infrawatch PH had asked the DTI to investigate Binance for the promotion of its services and offerings, which the group believed to have been done without the necessary permits.Binance had looked to acquiesce the parties involved, telling Cointelegraph that it intends to secure virtual asset service provider and e-money issuer licenses in the Philippines.Related: Terra crash highlights stablecoin risk to financial stability: ECBNevertheless, DTI is unable to enforce any ruling against Binance from operating in the country according to their latest correspondence with Infrawatch PH. As reported by Forkast, the department cited a lack of legislation for virtual assets creating a gray area:“Cryptocurrency and other forms of virtual assets are not consumer products, the Department of Trade and Industry has no jurisdiction to act on applications for sales and promotion permits to promote virtual assets per se in the absence of clear legislation on the matter.”The DTI noted that the proposal would fall under the auspices of the country’s central bank, which has to date not released any official guidelines or regulations for the use or sale of cryptocurrencies in the Philippines. This would include any companies or service providers conducting sales or promotion activities linked to financial products.

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Compass Mining retrenches 15% of staff, execs to take major pay-cuts

Ongoing strife in the cryptocurrency space has forced Compass Mining to lay off 15% of its employees while top executives and staff take major pay-cuts.The firm announced its decision to downscale its workforce in a bid to weather difficult market conditions, just a week after the resignation of CEO Whit Gibbs and chief finance officer Jodie Fisher. Chief technology officer Paul Gosker and chief mining officer Thomas Heller have taken over the reins at the firm as interim co-presidents and CEOs. The duo penned a letter to staff, investors and the wider community outlining the company’s road ahead.While 15% of the company’s workforce faces difficult layoffs, the acting CEOs also announced that senior employees and its executive team will take significant pay cuts of up to 50%. The Compass Mining website currently displays its workforce — with 78 individuals making up the current team.Cointelegraph has reached out to the company to ascertain the exact number of staff that will leave the business.Compass Mining began operations in January 2021 as a mining hosting service. To date, it has sold over half a billion dollars of mining equipment and currently operates more than 30,000 mining machines for its customers.Gosker and Heller’s message highlighted a fateful pitfall of the business’s initial success, as its efforts to upscale to meet increasing demand led to the company growing too quickly:“When we launched, we were amazed by the level of demand for our services, and as a result, we tried to address the operational, financial and technology bottlenecks faced by all growing companies by hiring more people.”Compass is the first mining firm to announce job cuts amid the ongoing downturn across cryptocurrency markets, but it is not the only casualty in the ecosystem. Related: Another miner cashes in: Argo Blockchain reports selling 637 BTC to pay debtsAs previously reported, a host of high-profile firms are at opposite ends of the spectrum. The likes of major exchanges Binance, Ripple and Kraken are looking to bolster their workforces, while Gemini, Coinbase and Crypto.com have begun reducing their staff numbers. A number of major mining companies have also been forced to sell off portions of their Bitcoin (BTC) holdings in response to cryptocurrency market sell-offs since June.

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Fairfax County highlights the value in the 'short-term nature' of yield farming

Virginia’s Fairfax County continues to be a prominent public institutional investor in the cryptocurrency space and is set to diversify its portfolio with a move into yield farming.As previously reported, global asset managers VanEck announced that the Fairfax employees’ and police retirement systems will invest $35 million into the firm’s crypto lending fund. It’s the latest investment move by the two county-run funds in the cryptocurrency space since their original foray began in 2018.Cointelegraph reached out to Andy Spellar, the chief investment officer of Fairfax’s employees’ retirement system, to unpack their investment in VanEck’s crypto lending fund and the reasoning behind it. Spellar confirmed that the employees’ retirement system (ERS) had committed $25 million to the fund while the police officers’ retirement system (PORS) had pledged $10 million. The investment will take place between July and September this year, depending on market conditions.An initial tranche has already been received by VanEck, with Spellar revealing that the ERS and PORS have invested $10 million and $5 million, respectively for the month of July.The move is certainly good news for the cryptocurrency space, which is currently enduring a severe downturn alongside conventional stock markets worldwide. The Decentralized Finance (DeFi) sector has arguably suffered the most, with the collapse of algorithmic stablecoin Terra causing a cascading effect throughout the space.Related: Survey shows 55% of crypto investors chose to HODL as Bitcoin and altcoin prices collapsed As the wider cryptocurrency ecosystem weathers the storm, investment schemes and funds like Fairfax County’s ERS and PORS continue to see the value offered by the sector, as Spellar told Cointelegraph:“We have looked at the space as a diversifier with our credit/high yield portfolios and particularly performance periods like the very short-term nature (1-3 months) of the positions.”Spellar offered food for thought on the current market conditions, noting that a risk-adjusted basis outlook suggests that cryptocurrency markets haven’t sold off any more than high growth sectors like tech, life sciences or government bonds:“We have not seen anything to counter the long-term thesis that more things than less will be digitized in the future, including traditional assets themselves. These types of markets shake out weak players and technologies and are overall healthy for markets and industries.”The ERS and PORS funds have managed to fare well amid broad market sell-offs due to their broadly diversified portfolios. Spellar noted that both are top-performing public funds across short and long-term time domains and expects the latest quarter of the year to be no different in terms of performance.Despite the first six months of 2022 being one of the worst performance periods on record, Fairfax expects both systems to be top decile performers over the period. Spellar said the digital asset segment of their portfolio was very small, with the vast majority made up of traditional venture capital equity investments.

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VC firm Konvoy launches new $150M fund, eyes blockchain-based games

Venture capital firm Konvoy Ventures is set to fork out at least $30 million to back various cryptocurrency and blockchain-based games.The American firm announced the launch of Konvoy Fund III, with $150 million in capital that it plans to invest in a variety of platforms and technologies in the global gaming sector. According to Bloomberg, up to 30% ($45 million) of the fund will be allocated to the crypto and blockchain gaming space.Konvoy is no stranger to the world of cryptocurrencies and blockchain-based games. The firm boasts an impressive portfolio of gaming companies and projects which it has funded, including the likes of Axie Infinity creators Sky Mavis, Metaverse avatar platform Ready Player Me and open-world NFT game Genopets.Related: Animoca, WeMade, Samsung Next back Web3 studio to develop open-source gamesThe firm has invested in a total of 35 companies to date through its first two funds across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and South-East Asia. Interest in blockchain-based games has increased over the past year, with play-to-earn and NFT-featuring games big focal points in the industry. There has been no shortage of funding either, with Konvoy’s latest fund following a $32 million investment made by Animoca Brands, Samsung Next and WeMade into Planetarium Labs.A recent report from DappRadar also outlined continued interest in GameFi projects. The likes of A16z and Dapper Labs have pledged around $1.3B in investments in GameFi and Metaverse projects and technologies.

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Bitstamp cancels ‘inactivity fee’ plans after huge backlash

Luxembourg-based cryptocurrency exchange Bitstamp has scrapped plans to implement an inactivity fee after widespread outcries from users online.The exchange had previously announced at the end of June that it would enforce a €10 fee on inactive users on its platform with account balances valued at €200 or less from the beginning of August.The inactivity fee was due to be applied to users of Bitstamp Limited and Bitstamp Global Ltd from 1 August and for customers of Bitstamp Europe S.A. from 6 August. Bitstamp users based in the United States were exempt from the proposed fee, according to the company’s fee schedule.The move was met with condemnation from users on social media, with prominent cryptocurrency accounts among the chorus of voices hitting out against the exchange’s proposed plans. This is so disappointing BitStamp -It’s actually pathetic.You’re charging the lowest holders approx 5% of their account balance so they are “forced” to trade or stake with you!!??How is this even legal https://t.co/DeBicjMIF3— Crypto Bitlord (@crypto_bitlord7) July 3, 2022Cointelegraph reached out to Bitstamp to ascertain why the initial decision was taken to implement the inactivity penalty and whether the current downturn across cryptocurrency markets played a role in the now-scrapped move.A spokesperson from the exchange cited administrative costs incurred by maintaining inactive accounts as the primary reason for implementing the proposed inactivity fee. Bitstamp had been considering the idea since last year while reaffirming that current market conditions did not play a role in the move:The spokesperson agreed that there was turmoil across the crypto markets but noted that Bitstamp has “zero exposure to any of these companies, that our financial position remains strong and healthy, and that we are continuing to invest in our product and technology.”Related: Hardware crypto wallet sales increase as centralized exchanges scramble The company has since removed the initial announcement from its website and social media accounts but the Bitstamp fee schedule page still reflects the details of the inactivity fee. The company also confirmed that some users had requested to close their accounts after the initial announcement of the proposed fee.Users that had been inactive for more than a year would have had to buy or sell cryptocurrency on the exchange, make a fiat or cryptocurrency deposit or withdrawal or stake on Bitstamp Earn to avoid incurring the fee.Bitstamp had planned to deduct €10 from an inactive user’s fiat currency balance, or the equivalent amount from their cryptocurrency holdings if their fiat balance was lower than the penalty.

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