Apollo Global Management, the $500 billion-plus investment firm, is reportedly backing a bid to acquire shuttered cryptocurrency lender Celsius. Several entities are eyeing the bankrupt firm, though Celsius seems to favor a bid from asset manager NovaWulf that would reboot the firm as a crypto miner and security token service provider. Apollo has worked with Figure, a company NovaWulf has targeted as an infrastructure provider for the proposed tokenized securities business line. Meanwhile, Deloitte, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft and several other big name finance and tech institutions are backing a plan for a privacy-enabled interoperable blockchain designed by fintech company Digital Asset. The project, dubbed Canton Network, uses a bespoke smart contract programming language that “harnesses the potential of blockchain while preserving fundamental privacy requirements for institutional finance,” a backer said.
Broke Dealer?
Crypto exchange Bittrex has filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. state of Delaware on Monday, months after announcing it would wind down operations in the country and weeks after being sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The exchange said it has more than 100,000 creditors, with estimated liabilities and assets both within the $500 million to $1 billion range, according to a court filing. Bittrex Global, the non-U.S. crypto exchange, is unaffected, executives said. The SEC sued the exchange in mid-April on allegations it operated illegally without licenses, charges the exchange said it’d challenge in court. Elsewhere, Binance’s NFT market has added support for Bitcoin NFTs.
Long Time Since
For the first time since 2017, some bitcoin miners are earning more from transaction fees than the blockchain’s subsidy. The network’s block producers currently earn 6.25 BTC for each block of transactions they “mine,” an amount that decreases roughly every four years in a process known as the “halvening” and which will ultimately need to be replaced by fees paid by Bitcoin users per transaction. Two new Bitcoin-based asset types, Ordinals and BRC-20 tokens, which enable NFTs on Bitcoin, are driving much of the network’s increased activity. On Tuesday, due to increased demand for bitcoin, Binance.US users were paying a $650 premium on the BTC/USD trading pair compared to market rate. Trading activity has also increased on Ethereum, leading to rocketing fees. One user reportedly paid $120,000 in gas fees to buy a “meme coin” called Four. The trader paid through the nose for a stockpile of tokens worth $156,000 at the time, which reportedly appreciated as high as $2 million. This comes as ETH staking deposits surpass withdrawals for the first time since Ethereum’s Shapella Upgrade.
Join the world’s largest crypto copy trading platform!
Now everyone can trade like a pro! Bitget lets you copy proven strategies from over 80,000 elite traders for free, helping you take advantage of the market without having to rack up years of crypto experience.Join Bitget today to claim up to 5,005 USDT in welcome bonuses, and enjoy a “hands off, gains up” experience now.
“Crypto is exactly what we needed in a world with AI.”
– Tools for Humanity head of product Tiago Sada, on CoinDesk TV’s“First Mover”
The Takeaway: Bid Farewell to Bittrex
Most people, even those who live and breathe crypto, likely have not heard of Bittrex…I assume. On CoinMarketCap, it’s ranked as the 51st most active exchange by trading volume, a data point that at least partially explains why the company’s U.S. division filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday. In fact, Bittrex’s position on that list is almost certainly higher than the last few months, as people scramble to get off whatever tokens and bitcoin dust they may have left behind. But a sliver of people who entered crypto during the heady days of the initial coin offering (ICO) boom, beginning sometime in mid-2017 and ending a few months later in early 2018, may remember the exchange with the type of arm’s length appreciation stemming from familiarity and necessity.
Crypto class of 2017, of which I consider myself a part, was pampered in many ways. Unlike the bitcoin early adopters who, before the advent of cryptocurrency exchanges, literally had to meet up in person if they wanted to exchange coins,, or the saps who only had “enterprise blockchain” to get excited about, much of the infrastructure the industry now takes for granted was already laid out before the first major token mania. I bought my first fraction of a bitcoin using a credit card via Coinbase, easily. And when I wanted to sling around sh*tcoins, I logged into Bittrex (that is, before the exchange was geo-blocked in the State of New York).
While I’m glad on-chain options like Uniswap exist today, which allow users to trade and list various tokens without intervention or sacrificing custody of their coins, exchanges like Bittrex played an important role in crypto’s history. Binance, one of the bunch, grew to become one of the most valuable crypto companies ever.
While the idea behind centralized exchanges has always been fraught – they’re intermediaries in what’s supposed to be un-mediated finance – they serve an important role as gateways between the world of fiat and crypto. More to the point, at least in the U.S., Bittrex was one of a handful of exchanges ICO traders could trust. It filled the necessary role of listing tokens faster than more lawsuit-averse (at the time) platforms like Coinbase and offshore companies like Binance.
However, between market realities and the regulatory environment, Bittrex today occupies an impossible position. At a time when decentralized finance (DeFi) is only getting easier to use, centralized exchanges that have limited liquidity and token offerings yet more stringent KYC protocols are becoming increasingly irrelevant. Don’t call me bitter either, because I forgot to cash out my 20,000 FUN tokens when the exchange was forced to leave New York state (the funds are “irrecoverable”)! In an interview with CoinDesk, a Bittrex exec cited the “untenable regulatory and economic environment” in the U.S. for its decision first to withdraw from the country and now to seek Chapter 11 protections.
Bittrex stands as a symbol for the now forgone “sh*tcoin era,” a period of time few remember fondly. Although there are many “traders” who probably lost big on “investments” like FUN (which was supposed to power a blockchain casino), who left crypto entirely or became hard nosed bitcoiners, there are legion who might appreciate the crash course in finance and economics that day trading had to offer. I learned my lesson. And by-and-large, despite the fact that crypto seems locked into endless cycles of irrational market exuberance, the industry itself has matured since then. Seeing exchanges close up shop suddenly, or be forced to geo-block users, likely left a lasting impression of the importance of self-custody.
The exchange business itself is going through a reckoning. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, under Chairman Gary Gensler, has decided basically all cryptocurrencies besides bitcoin are securities and that crypto exchanges will need to be licensed as securities dealers. Even supposedly regulatory-friendly exchanges like Coinbase have been resistant to these assertions. In an open letter to the SEC, industry lobbyists at the Blockchain Association said a recent proposal to amend the SEC’s custody rule to bar all but “qualified custodians” from handling users’ coins would put a chokehold on the industry. A16z, the major VC firm, said the SEC is “waging war” on crypto, responding to the same SEC proposal.
No doubt Bittrex is a casualty to regulatory uncertainty, to some extent. But at times it seems like the crypto industry is putting a lot of effort into defending bucket shops, rather than coming to terms. The SEC gets a lot of flack for “regulating by enforcement,” and in fact regulates this industry harder than most, but that’s because – and you won’t like the sound of this – the agency’s primary responsibility is setting a bar for disclosures so investors can operate on a relatively-level playing field. There are technical reasons why on-chain KYC is dangerous (the blockchain destroys privacy), and why many tokens may have utility behind being just investment contracts. But by and large there’s no regulatory uncertainty in the U.S. – just private businesses that prefer dealing under a veil of corporate secrecy.
It’s unclear what will come from Bittrex’s lawsuit with the SEC, which accused the firm of listing six cryptocurrencies that are securities – DASH, ALGO, OMG, TKN, NGC and IHT – in an argument that worried some crypto lawyers as setting a dangerous precedent. Considering what ended up on Bittrex, things maybe could’ve been worse. The exchange said its global operations, headquartered in Liechtenstein, will remain in business and that its 100,000 U.S. creditors will be made whole after the bankruptcy – including its largest benefactor, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC). All I know is I had FUN while it lasted.
Hodlers have long favored the use of cold storage because of its ease of access and online connectivity. Tangem Wallet aims to enhance the simplicity and security of cold storage by utilizing an NFC card.
CoinDesk is coming back to Austin for Consensus 2024. Get your super early bird tickets for the lowest possible rates and join us May 29-June 1, 2024. Get your tickets now.
Arbitrage Opportunity
Kudos for making it this far! On occasion, we’ll give our loyal Node readers the opportunity to claim DESK, our social token, which is a mechanism for returning the value of engagement directly to the users who create it.