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US and China try to crush Binance, SBF’s $40M bribe claim: Asia Express

Binance’s future threatened after superpowers try to crush it, SBF accused of massive bribe over trading in China, former OKX exec charged.

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Binance’s secret U.S. users

On Mar. 27, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) charged Binance and its founder Changpeng Zhao with alleged willful evasion of federal law and operating an illegal digital assets exchange. In the 74 page complaint, the CFTC claimed that despite the exchange’s public position of banning U.S. users, internal documents suggest that at least 20% to 30% of the exchange’s traffic came from U.S. customers. That equates to almost three million alleged U.S. users by mid-2020.

Crypto exchanges are required to register with either the CFTC or the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission before soliciting U.S. customers. However, the CFTC allege that Binance ignored such ruling as its executives claimed that the regulations were “not reasonable” in the context of Binance’s corporate structure and that it was more “profitable” to simply bypass them.

Since the allegations surfaced, Chicago quantitative trading firm Radix Trading has confirmed that it is one of the three high-volume trading firms onboarded by Binance and listed in the CFTC complaint. In an official statement, Binance called the CFTC lawsuit “unexpected and disappointing.”

Founded in China by CZ in 2017, Binance quickly became the world’s largest crypto exchange through its low-fee trading mechanisms and wide range of product offerings. However, the exchange also came under intense scrutiny by regulators over allegedly lax know-your-customer and anti-money-laundering measures. Among many items, the CFTC seeks disgorgement of revenue generated by U.S. users’ trading activities, civil monetary penalties and permanent injunctive relief.

Interestingly, a screenshot cited by the CFTC shows that Binance's top 2019 revenue came from the U.S. and Chinese segments, both being countries where Binance.com is not authorized to operate.
Interestingly, a screenshot cited by the CFTC shows that Binance’s top 2019 revenue came from the U.S. and Chinese geographical segments, both being countries where Binance.com is not authorized to operate.

USA’s unexpected ally in the fight against Binance

From heated diplomatic arguments on human rights issues to ruffling feathers in the South China Sea, the U.S. and China, two major superpower, often find little common ground in everyday global affairs. However, it appears the two have finally found an entity worthy of mutual disdain Binance.

Around the same time the CFTC unveiled its investigation of millions of allegedly undisclosed U.S. users on Binance, a Mar. 23 report by CNBC found that Binance employees or volunteers allegedly shared techniques for Mainland Chinese users to evade the exchange’s KYC verification.

Techniques shared include the use of fake residential addresses, VPNs, non-Chinese affiliated email addresses to create an account and then backlink it to a Chinese national ID.

Cryptocurrency exchanges have been banned in China since 2017 with its websites blocked and major social platforms banning keyword searches containing “Binance.”

The same week, an investigation by The Financial Times alleged that Binance had significant ties to Mainland China despite its relocation in 2017. Speaking on the matter, a Binance spokesperson told Cointelegraph that Binance “does not operate in China nor do we have any technology, including servers or data, based in China,” and “we strongly reject assertions to the contrary.”

Despite their differences, the U.S. and China has finally found common ground in the fight against Binance.
Despite their differences, the U.S. and China has finally found common ground in the fight against Binance. (Magazine via Imgflip)

SBF alleged $40M bribe to Chinese officials

In a new series of indictments filed against Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), founder of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX, by the U.S. District Court Southern District of New York, prosecutors alleged that SBF paid $40 million to one or more Chinese government officials to unfreeze accounts related to Alameda Research, which was based in Hong Kong.

In 2021, Chinese authorities alleged froze $1 billion in cryptocurrencies from Alameda Research’s trading accounts on Chinese exchanges as part of an ongoing investigation into a counterparty. Exchanges were banned in China in 2017 but actual enforcement and offboarding of users did not come until a later time.

After months of failed attempts to unlock the accounts, the self-proclaimed effective altruist apparently concluded the wheels of justice needed a little grease. Prosecutors say that under direct orders from SBF, an Alameda employee allegedly transferred $40 million from one of the firm’s accounts to a private wallet in Nov. 2021. Shortly thereafter all Alameda trading accounts were unfrozen and SBF quickly went back to his routine trading activities. The criminal trial for the disgraced crypto executive is scheduled for Oct, 2, 2023 and he faces up to 115 years in prison if convicted on all charges.

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Chinese blockchain executive’s rape charges

According to local media reports on Mar. 28, Jun Yu, founding partner of Web 3.0 fund A&T Capital and former investment director at cryptocurrency exchange OKX, is currently under criminal investigation by Chinese authorities over allegations of sexual misconduct.

Yu has reportedly left his role at A&T Capital following the accusations. According to the criminal complaint, the event started when Yu’s car slammed into a vehicle driven by the alleged victim, Ms. Wan, at an unspecified time during the year in Hangzhou, China. Captivated by her “beauty,” Yu then asked Ms. Wan for her WeChat contact to “discuss compensation”.

Afterwards, Yu repeatedly made requests to ask Ms. Wan out to dinner, to which she agreed. Authorites say that during the meetup, Yu allegedly pressured Ms. Wan into drinking excessive amounts of alcohol whilst bragging about his connections to senior Chinese Communist Party officials. Later Yu called a taxi and took the woman to a nearby hotel where she was allegedly raped.

Yu fled to Singapore shortly after the alleged incident, a country that, perhaps unbeknownst to Yu, has an active extradition agreement with Mainland China. Hangzhou police reportedly found evidence at the scene which resulted in his prompt arrest.

A&T Capital was founded in 2021 and closed $100 million in funding in 2022. The fund has invested in notable crypto projects such as Mysten Labs, or Sui Network, Scroll, and BitKeep.

The firm has since stated it had “zero tolerance” for illicit or immoral activities and will be launching its own independent investigation in addition to cooperating with law enforcement regarding the incident. Jun Yu previously worked at OKX as an investment director from Mar. 2018 to July 2019.

Jun Yu's Twitter account.
Jun Yu’s Twitter account with professional descriptions. (Twitter)

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Justin Sun vs. SEC, Do Kwon arrested, 180M player game taps Polygon: Asia Express

Chinese crypto billionaire Justin Sun sued by SEC, Do Kwon busted in Casino Royale location, game with 180 million players embraces Polygon.

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Chinese crypto billionaire sued by SEC

On Mar. 22, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, announced charges against Chinese blockchain personality and billionaire Sun Yuchen better known as Justin Sun and three of his wholly-owned companies Tron Foundation Limited, BitTorrent Foundation Ltd., and Rainberry Inc. (formerly known as BitTorrent).

The complaint alleges that Sun and his companies “fraudulently” manipulated the secondary market for Tron (TRX) tokens through “extensive wash trading”, citing more than 600,000 such trades, and paying celebrities to promote TRX and BitTorrent (BTT) tokens with zero disclosure.

Multiple prominent American celebrities, such as Lindsay Lohan and Jake Paul, were named as defendants in their alleged roles in promoting TRX and BTT without proper disclosure. Some have since settled with the SEC. In addition, the SEC alleges that bounty programs and airdrops used to promote TRX and BTT were unregistered investments. Gary Gensler, chairman of the SEC, commented:

“As alleged, Sun and his companies not only targeted U.S. investors in their unregistered offers and sales, generating millions in illegal proceeds at the expense of investors, but they also coordinated wash trading on an unregistered trading platform to create the misleading appearance of active trading in TRX.” 

Justin Sun is an active figure in the crypto industry who rose to prominence via the $70 million initial coin offering (ICO) of Tron in 2017. The ICO was reportedly conducted one day prior to the Chinese government’s announcement of a blanket ban on all ICOs within the country. Sun, who allegedly left Beijing shortly after and moved to San Francisco, used his newfound wealth from the successful Tron ICO to acquire the peer-to-peer downloading platform BitTorrent.

Sunreportedlylaid low while in the U.S. and presented himself as an honest businessman fleeing from the spectres of communism. U.S. authorities have heard this sort of rhetoric before however and on Mar. 15, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that it had arrested Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui over his role in an alleged $1 billion stock and crypto fraud scheme. Just days before his arrest, Guoshilled to his viewersthe importance of his crypto exchange, blockchain technology, and tokens he had created in the fight against communism.

The interest from U.S. authorities may have been behind Sun’s decision to move out of the U.S. in 2020 into the sunny Caribbean island of Grenada. He has since become the country’s ambassador to the World Trade Organization. Aside from foreign relations duties and the bestowment of the fancy title “His Excellency,” the role grants Sun a diplomatic passport that theoretically provides immunity against prosecution.

Despite the controversies, Sun appears to be doing quite well in his new home. Last November, Sun reportedly acquired 100% of co-founders’ stakes in cryptocurrency exchange Huobi Global even though he publicly claims he is just a humble “advisor” in Huobi’s everyday affairs.

In January, Asia Express reported that many Huobi employees’ benefits were allegedly axed via direct orders from Sun. In other areas, cryptocurrency exchange Binance has also significantly limited its utilization of Tron Tether (TRC-20 USDT) after regulatory backlash on its own stablecoin Binance USD.

“Thx for your support & advice on how to take #TRON to the next level!,” wrote Sun on Twitter following a $4.5M dinner with American billionaire investor Warren Buffet. (Twitter)

Do Kwon’s bad bet at Casino Royale

If Do Kwon has anything in common with James Bond in the 2006 hit filmCasino Royale, it is that both found (or is currently finding) their stay in the beautiful seaside nation of Montenegro to be deeply unpleasant. On Mar. 23, Filip Adzic, Minister of the Interior of Montenegro, announced that a South Korean national suspected of being the wanted fugitive Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon had been arrested at Podgorica Airport over falsified documents.

Shortly after the announcement, South Korean authorities confirmed that the detained individual is, in fact, Do Kwon based on a positive match of name, birth date, nationality, and photographic evidence. Police say they are awaiting a fingerprint check from Montenegrin authorities to definitively identify the arrested individual. 

Do Kwon is currently wanted by Interpol, as well as South Korean, Singaporean, and U.S. authorities, for his role in the collapse of the $40 billion Terra Luna ecosystem in May 2022. Last October, South Korean prosecutors revoked Kwon’s passport, who was reportedly hiding in Serbia at the time.

Serbia shares borders with Montenegro, a Balkan country that became independent in 2006 and, as a result, has signed few extradition agreements with other nations. However, an extradition agreement merely facilitates the process and is not a requirement for extradition to take place. Interestingly, South Korea does not have an embassy in Montenegro, and vice versa.

Kwon had not been seen since late 2022 until news of his reported arrest. If anything, the blockchain executive has proven to be somewhat of a lackluster gambler. Aside from what appears to be a failed attempt to evade arrest and attempts to double down on the Terra Luna (LUNC) ecosystem, Kwon recently, and finally, lost a $11 million bet that the price of LUNC will be above $90 per token by mid-March 2023. LUNC’s price is $0.0001259 at the time of publication.

Shortly after an Interpol Red Notice was issued, Do Kwon explained to Journalist Laura Shin that Terra
Shortly after an Interpol Red Notice was issued, Do Kwon explained to Journalist Laura Shin in an interview that Terra “was never really about money or fame or success.” (Unchained)

Maplestory moves into GameFi

On a happier note, South Korean gaming giant Nexon announced on Mar. 22 that it had selected Ethereum layer-two scaling solution Polygon (MATIC) to power the blockchain ecosystem for multiplayer 2-D fantasy role-playing game Maplestory.

According to Nexon, a Polygon supernet, created by Polygon Labs, will be deployed within Maplestory to allow players to earn and collect in-game items as nonfungible tokens. Ryan Wyatt, president of Polygon Labs said:

“Nexon selecting Polygon Supernets to power its worldwide hit MapleStory Universe sends a strong message to the entire gaming industry about the future of blockchain gaming.”

Last January, Wyatt announced his resignation as head of gaming at Youtube and joined Polygon Studios as its new CEO.

Created in 2003, MapleStory has immense popularity in the Asia-Pacific region and has surpassed 180 million registered players. In-game items are currently purchased using Nexon’s currency NX. The company reported $2.6 billion in revenue in 2022 and has developed over 50 games since inception. 

Maplestory embraces blockchain technology after 20 years. (Nexon)
Maplestory embraces blockchain technology after 20 going strong for years. (Nexon)

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Chinese billionaire’s $1B fraud charges, Kwon’s $11M bet, Zhu Su and Islam: Asia Express

Chinese billionaire using crypto to fight communism charged over $1 billion fraud, Do Kwon’s $11M bet comes due, Zhu Su bonds with Islam.

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Chinese billionaire arrested in U.S. for $1B financial fraud 

According to an announcement published by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) on Mar. 15, Chinese billonaire Ho Wan Kwok (aka Miles Guo and more commonly as Guo Wengui), has been arrested on a total of twelve charges, including wire fraud, securities fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering. Among many items, the DOJ alleges that Kwok/Guo “fraudulently obtained” more than $262 million from victims through cryptocurrency platform Himalayan Exchange. 

The Himalaya Exchange included assets such as Himalaya Dollar (HDO), a purported stablecoin, and Himalaya Coin (HCN), a purported trading coin. According to the indictment, Guo told investors that HCN was 20% backed by gold and that he would personally compensate investors for “100%” of trading losses. 

“If anyone loses money, I can say that I will compensate 100%. I give you 100%. Whoever loses money, I will bear it.”

Guo launched both HCN and HDO coins in an initial coin offering (ICO) around Nov. 1, 2021, when HCN was trading at around $0.10 apiece. Two weeks later, the Himalaya Exchange website stated that each HCN was worth 27 HDO, or $27, and had a total market cap of $27 billion.

Between Sept. 2022 to Mar. 2023, U.S. Authorities subsequently seized $634 million in Guos alleged fraud proceeds, including $278 million from bank accounts held by Himalaya Exchange and related entities. At the time of publication, social accounts and Himalaya Exchange’s website appears to be still online and active.

Guo Wengui promoting the purported benefits of the Himalaya Coin in 2021 (Youtube)
Ho Wan Kwok/Guo Wengui promoting the purported benefits of the Himalaya Coin in 2021 (Youtube)

In another incident, Guo allegedly sold $452 million in common stock in an initial public offering (IPO) to over 5,500 investors for shares of GTV Media Group. The DOJ allege that in both incidents, the entreprenuer misappropriated a substantial portion of investors funds and will seek forfeiture for the seized assets. Back in 2021, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission took enforcement action against three of his companies with unregistered ICOs and IPOs. At the time, the firms agreed to pay $486.6 million in fines, prejudgment interest of $17.6 million, and a civil penalty of $35 million combined.

The billionaire is reportedly a close-friend of former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon. Rising to prominence through real-estate and construction in China, he fled the country in 2014 after receiving information of his imminent arrest on charges of bribery, kidnapping, money laundering, fraud and rape. He has since lived in self-imposed exile in the U.S., sought asylum, and is a vocal critic of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). However, several documents used by Guo to critique the CCP have been alleged to be forged. An Interpol red notice for his arrest has been reportedly active since 2017.

To defeat communism buy my coin

For the Chinese billionaire, “taking down the CCP” is a goal that neatly lines up with the promotion of crypto. In 2020, Guo founded the political movement “New Federal State of China” (NFSC) with the stated aim of overthrowing the CCP alongside the non-profit organization Himalaya Supervisory, which is related to the aforementioned cryptocurrency exchange.

Aside from educating viewers on the evils of communism, Guo also used official NFSC and Himalaya Supervisory branding to shill his followers about the purported benefits of his HDO and HCN coins:

“Himalaya Coin will crush Bitcoin in the snap of a finger if a certain country grants Himalaya Reserve or Himalaya Coin a visual banking license and a virtual banking exchange.”

In another “lecture” dated shortly before his arrest, Guo explained to viewers that the “U.S. and Communist China are fighting over the power to establish blockchain standards that will govern all digital currencies,” but the major takeaway is that the NFSC will be the one to emerge victorious in the struggle:

“In the end, people will have to use digital U.S. dollars, and then, the U.S. will be in charge of setting up the future blockchain standards. However, the U.S. has encountered a rival called the CCP. So when these two tigers are fighting, we [the NFSC] will end up being the winner.”

Guo claims to have invested $100 million into the NFSC movement. However, the source of funds is reportedly under investigation by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Chinese billionaire was arrested on Mar. 15 in New York and shortly afterward, his luxury apartment in Manhattan caught fire. It is not clear if the two incidents are related.

Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui explaining to followers how the NFSC will be the ultimate winner in a global battle between the U.S. and CCP for blockchain supremacy. (Youtube)
Guo explaining to followers, shortly before his arrest, how the NFSC will be the ultimate winner in a global battle between the U.S. and CCP for blockchain supremacy. (Youtube)

Do Kwon officially loses once highly publicized LUNC bet

In March 2022, South Korean Terraform Labs CEO and co-founder Do Kwon accepted two bets from cryptocurrency traders GiganticRebirth (GCR) and Algod, totaling $11 million, wagering that the price of Terra Luna (LUNC) would not be lower than $92.4 and $88 per token, respectively, by March 13, 2023. The bets resulted in a $22 million prize money pool, held in escrow by blockchain personality Cobie.

After LUNC’s price plummeted to near-zero in May 2022 as part of the $40 billion Terra Luna ecosystem collapse, Cobie paid out the bets, purchasing LUNC as a hedge in case its price recovered. However, Cobie’s hedge was reportedly lost when cryptocurrency exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy in Nov. 2022, freezing over one million creditors’ assets and nine million users’ deposits. The current status of the funds remains unclear.

Do Kwon listening intensely as convicted felon Martin Shkreli outlines why
Do Kwon listening intensely in a Twitch stream post-Terra collapse as convicted felon Martin Shkreli explains why “jail’s not that bad.” (UpOnly)

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has since charged Terraform Labs and Kwon with “defrauding investors in crypto schemes,” while the FBI and Department of Justice began investigating the company’s collapse in March 2023.

If losing his nearly entire net worth in the LUNC implosion and being out an additional $11 million from the bet wasn’t enough, Kwon is also reportedly on the run from authorities in Serbia, a country with no extradition agreement with South Korea. Interpol issued a red notice arrest warrant for Kwon in September 2022 at the request of South Korean prosecutors, accusing him of fraud related to Terra Luna’s downfall. South Korean prosecutors have also been in Serbia in search of the blockchain executive since Feb. 2023.

Zhu Su’s spiritual journey through bankruptcy and Islam

Compared to the precarious situation faced by Do Kwon, Zhu Su, and Kyle Davies, both co-founders of the now-bankrupt Singaporean hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC), appear to be doing quite well. Despite being on the run from creditors with a total claim of over $10 billion, the two have yet to face any criminal charges over their role in the 3AC bankruptcy that brought down themselves and major counterparties in the centralized finance space such as Voyager Digital and Genesis Global.

Liquidators claim that Davies and Su are located somewhere in Indonesia or United Arab Emirates, where foreign court orders are reportedly tough to enforce. Nowadays, Davies actively shares his views on trending financial stories via Twitter, while occasionally trying to solicit sympathy over the “frustrations” of 3AC’s current bankruptcy process.

Su is also active on Twitter, except his interests have turned from the material world to the much more sophisticated realms of philosophy, religion and, introspection. On Mar. 15, Su quoted Prophet Muhammud (PBUH), the founder of Islam, as follows:

“The Messenger of Allah, peace and blessings be upon him, said, There is no forbearance unless one has blundered, and there is no wisdom unless one has experience.”

Su previously made a similar reference to Islam on Nov. 27, 2022, writing that “Allah does not charge a soul except that which is within its capacity.”

Interestingly enough cryptocurrency and blockchain is currently a matter of intense controversy within Islam circles. Some Islamic scholars have labeled all cryptocurrencies and blockchain-related activity as haram (forbidden), making them prohibited under all circumstances. Others, such as Dubai’s crown prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, support the technology and he wants to incentivize at least 5,000 blockchain and metaverse companies to relocate to the United Arab Emirates by 2027.

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Thailand’s $1B crypto sacrifice, Mt Gox final deadline, Tencent NFT app nixed: Asia Express

South Korea is throwing another $51 million at the metaverse, Mt. Gox saga is drawing to a close, Canaan BTC miner sales revenue plunges 60%.

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

South Korea invests another $51M in metaverse tech

South Koreas plans for metaverse domination are gathering pace. A March 8 document prepared by the Ministry of Science and Information and Communication Technology (ICT), the National IT Industry Promotion Agency and the Korea Radio Promotion Association, says the three entities will invest a total of 27.7 billion Korean won ($21 million) in metaverse projects across 13 sectors such as healthcare, tourism and education. One example use case is about telemedicine in the metaverse:

Establish a virtual counseling space and provide mental health recovery and promotion services through expert psychological counseling, healing contents, and community activities.”

The same day, South Koreas Ministry of Science and ICT also announced the creation of a 40 billion Korean won ($30 million) metaverse fund to be operated by local investment management companies. It cited the need to incubate domestic metaverse-related companies to become big enough to compete with global companies through the expansion of business areas and scale.

The South Korean government is betting big on the development of VR (Korean Tourism Organization)
The South Korean government is betting big on the development of VR. Source: Korean Tourism Organization

Mt. Goxs final deadline for claims

Mt. Gox creditors have until April 6 to complete registration to receive repayment, trustees of the bankrupt Japanese cryptocurrency exchange announced on March 9. Mt. Gox was the biggest Bitcoin exchange in the world when it filed for bankruptcy in 2014, after discovering that 850,000 of its customers Bitcoin (BTC) had been stolen via discreet hacks and siphoning over a number of years. The exchange has since recovered around 200,000 BTC. The funds have been held in trust for the creditors, with 162,106 BTC ($3.49 billion) sitting in wallet addresses tracked by Token Unlock.

Over the years, the trustees, attorney Nobuaki Kobayashi and the Japanese Bankruptcy Courts have repeatedly extended the deadline for registration, likely due to the sheer volume of affected users located all around the world and the manual processing needed for every individual involved during such a legal procedure.

Everyone appears well and truly tired of the nine-year-long bankruptcy process and just wants their money back (or to move on to the next case in the judicial backlog). Kobayashi wrote that anyone who misses the deadline is out of luck:

“Please note that, in the interest of making the repayments to rehabilitation creditors as early as possible, unless there are unavoidable reasons, further extension of the Deadline will be difficult.

From one perspective the enforcing hodling could have been a blessing in disguise for some, as Bitcoin was worth around $580 at the time of Mt. Goxs collapse but is now worth more than $20K. Many users will likely see positive returns on investment, even accounting for the fact that the repayment is only a fractional recovery.

Tencent to shutdown NFT app

An in-app message posted on Chinese internet giant Tencents NFT platform Huanhe states that users will have until June 30 to file for a refund before the app goes permanently offline. Dubbed the first digital collectibles App in China,” Huanhe launched in August 2021 and featured both traditional and modern Chinese concept art, video, audio, photos and 3D models. However, Tencent halted all activity on the app on July 1.

Though the company did not explicitly state its reasons, some users have speculated that NFT sales volumes did not meet expectations. The app also didnt offer a secondary market where users could buy and sell collectibles, nor a feature that allowed users to gift their NFTs to others. On Tencents official app store, Huanhe has recorded 134,000 downloads since its inception.

Thai government sacrifices $1 billion to enhance crypto industry

Thailands cabinet has approved a plan to waive corporate income tax and value-added tax for companies that issue digital tokens for investment, according to a March 7 Reuters report. The decision incentivizes companies to raise capital using investment tokens in addition to more traditional methods such as debentures.

A Tencent Huanhe digital collectible. (8btc)
A Tencent Huanhe digital collectible. Source: 8btc

The Thai government estimates that there will be around 128 billion Thai baht ($3.71 billion) worth of investment token offerings over the next two years and the new measures will see it forgo around $1 billion in tax revenue. Cryptocurrencies have gained popularity in Thailand since the Securities Exchange Commission began regulating digital assets. Still, the countrys central bank and other regulators have banned the use of digital assets as a means of payment.

Canaans Bitcoin ASIC sales fall

On March 7, Chinese Bitcoin mining equipment manufacturer Canaan reported its fourth quarter and full-year 2022 financial results. During the final quarter of 2022, Canaan brought in 391.9 million yuan ($56.8 million) in sales, representing a decrease of 59.9% from the previous quarter. The firm attributed the decrease to the ongoing crypto winter.

For the full year, Canaans revenues decreased from 4.986 billion yuan ($715 million) in 2021 to 4.378 billion yuan ($635 million) in 2022.

Going forward, the company expects its total installed mining computing power to be around 5 exahash per second (EH/s) by the end of this quarter. In context, the Bitcoin network currently has a hash rate of around 250 EH/s, an all-time high.

Canaan has also established strategic partnerships with two data center companies, which are expected to provide stable and cost-effective hosting solutions for the companys expanding mining business. For the first quarter of this year, Canaan projects its total net revenues to slightly improve to 450 million yuan ($65 million) but cites continued challenging business conditions.

A Canaan Avalaon ASIC Bitcoin miner (eBay)
A Canaan Avalon ASIC Bitcoin miner. Source: eBay

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Hong Kong crypto frenzy, DeFi token surges 550%, NBA China NFTs — Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. Hong Kong moves bullish On Feb. 20, the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) of Hong Kong launched a consultation on its proposed regulatory requirements for digital asset trading platforms. The SFC requires the licensing of all cryptocurrency exchanges operating in Hong […]

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Hong Kong moves bullish

On Feb. 20, the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) of Hong Kong launched a consultation on its proposed regulatory requirements for digital asset trading platforms.
The SFC requires the licensing of all cryptocurrency exchanges operating in Hong Kong, or soliciting services from Hong Kong investors, by June 2023.

In addition, the SFC said it will seek feedback on whether licensed platform operators should be allowed to provide services to retail investors and what measures should be implemented to ensure suitability and token inclusion when establishing business relationships with customers.

Currently, retail trading of cryptocurrencies is banned in Hong Kong. The announcement that the special administrative region of China was dipping its toes back into crypto immediately set off bullish reactions from everyday users and executives alike. Brian Armstrong, CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase,wrote:

“America risks losing its status as a financial hub long term, with no clear regs on crypto, and a hostile environment from regulators. Congress should act soon to pass clear legislation. Crypto is open to everyone in the world and others are leading. The EU, the UK, and now HK.”

To be fair, he wrote that in response to a tweet suggesting retail trading would be allowed from June 1, which is not the case, but the sentiment remains. At the same time, Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Gemini, said in a tweet:

“My working thesis atm is that the next bull run is going to start in the East. It will be a humbling reminder that crypto is a global asset class and that the West, really the US, always only ever had two options: embrace it or be left behind. It can’t be stopped. That we know.”

Shortly afterward, cryptocurrency exchanges Gate.io and Huobi Global stated that they would apply for crypto exchange licenses in Hong Kong. Both exchanges said they will comply with the relevant regulations in order to be able to offer services to Hong Kong clients. Crypto users and stakeholders alike have until Mar. 31 to partake in the SFC consultation.

FTX Japan customers withdraw $49M

On Feb. 21, FTX Japan, the Japanese subsidiary of troubled cryptocurrency exchange FTX, resumed withdrawals for its customers after assets were frozen for approximately three months as part of international bankruptcy proceedings.

Customers’ funds, which were managed separately in compliance with Japanese laws and regulations, were revealed as being worth JPY 5.6 billion ($41.58 million) in digital currencies and JPY 1 billion ($7.43 million) in fiat currencies as of Feb. 20.

The company also reported its own net assets to be around JPY 10 billion ($74.3 million) in Sept. 2022, which increased to JPY 17.8 billion ($132.2 million) in the last update dated Nov. 21, 2022.

Since reopening withdrawals, over JPY 6.6 billion ($49 million) in crypto and fiat has left the exchange. To withdraw, users were required to verify their account balance and transfer their assets to Liquid Japan, another cryptocurrency exchange previously acquired by FTX.

As tabulated by FTX Japan, 3,453 individuals, and 94 corporate accounts were eligible to withdraw their balances. There were 1,947 fiat withdrawals and 5,697 total crypto withdrawals. A total of 7,026 accounts were transferred from FTX Japan to Liquid Japan. They were the lucky ones as due to bankruptcy proceedings, the vast majority of FTX customers, including users of FTX US, are still unable to withdraw their assets.

The withdrawal process varies in complexity based on customers' circumstances.
The withdrawal process varies in complexity based on customers’ circumstances. (Liquid Japan)

NBA China wants to mint more NFTs

On Feb. 21, the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) Chinese subsidiary announced a partnership with Alibaba-owned Ant Financial. Among many items, the two entities will carry out comprehensive cooperation regarding NBA video content, program broadcasting, joint membership, and the creation of a mini-series.

In addition, both NBA China and Ant Financial wish to further pursue the joint development of nonfungible tokens (NFTs) and to launch “multi-media NFT drops to fans.” Since last year, NBA China has minted a series of Chinese New Year basketball-themed NFTs using the latter’s Ant Chain.

A NBA China NFT
A Mengniu Dairy and NBA China NFT (Sohu)

Tencent Cloud’s great leap forward to Web 3

According to a Feb. 22 announcement, Tencent Cloud, the cloud business brand of Chinese internet giant Tencent, announced that it will support the development of the Web 3.0 ecosystem and provide technical support to developers to promote its digitalization.

Firstly, Tencent Cloud unveiled a new product, dubbed “Metaverse-in-a-Box,” that the internet giant says will act as a one-stop solution that integrates infrastructure, products, software development kits, and low-code solutions to be used primarily in games and media entertainment.

Tencent Cloud VP Poshu Yeung made the announcement in Singapore.
Tencent Cloud VP Poshu Yeung during the announcement in Singapore. (Tencent)

In addition, the firm signed a memorandum of cooperation with Ankr, Avalanche, Scroll and Sui to further those goals. For Ankr, this means the joint deployment of a series of blockchain API services for remote procedure call nodes on Tencent Cloud. As for Avalanche, it will join forces with Tencent Cloud to provide developers with efficient and fast node settings. Finally, Tencent Cloud will assist developers with building practical projects on Scroll and create cloud game development tools with Sui. Tommy Li, vice president of Tencent Cloud said:

“Tencent Cloud Metaverse-in-a-Box meets the needs of customers and developers for different scenarios, helping them obtain better real-time interactive experience, larger-scale communication and more secure access services, and quickly build online and video virtualized and virtualized metaverse scene applications.”

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DeFi token rises 550% after Huawei shill 

In a 30 second video posted by Chinese telecom conglomerate Huawei on Feb. 21, the firm showcased DeFi protocol Defactor by its co-founder Alejandro Gutierrez. During the video, Gutierrez said the project is about creating a bridge between traditional finance with DeFi, exploring the tokenization of real-world assets, and building partnerships with start-ups and large corporations like.

In the eyes of crypto investors the statements Gutierrez made were anything but ordinary. Immediately after the video was published, Defactor (FACTR) tokens recordeda gain of over 550% in less than three days to trade a $0.14 apiece at the time of publication. Defactor is currently part of Huawei International Scale-Up Program in Ireland.

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

China’s 180M digital yuan airdrop, Devastation in Turkey, Laos’ CBDC: Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. China airdrops 180 million digital yuan to celebrate Lunar New Year  According to state-owned media Global Times, Chinese cities airdropped a total of 180 million digital yuan (e-CNY) worth $26.6 million to boost consumption during the Lunar New Year celebrations between […]

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

China airdrops 180 million digital yuan to celebrate Lunar New Year 

According to state-owned media Global Times, Chinese cities airdropped a total of 180 million digital yuan (e-CNY) worth $26.6 million to boost consumption during the Lunar New Year celebrations between Jan. 22 and Feb. 5. Nearly 200 digital yuan activities were launched during the festival, and commercial institutions also participated in these promotions, covering various sectors such as mobile communications, supermarkets, transportation and tourism.

Data from Meituan, a popular Chinese food delivery platform, showed that its 20 million digital yuan vouchers given out in partnership with the city of Hangzhou government were claimed in less than 10 seconds. China has prioritized the development of its central bank digital currency (CBDC) as part of its digital economy transformation, with numerous local party officials receiving key performance indicator targets regarding their efforts to promote the currency.

Chinas state-owned television also hosted a metaverse event for its Lunar New Year program this year. Source: FuXi. 

Asia-Pacific crypto exchanges donate to Turkey

In an act of international solidarity, cryptocurrency exchanges operating from several countries in the Asia-Pacific region were quick to react to a series of devastating earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6, with death tolls exceeding 12,000 at the time of publication. Singaporean exchange OKX said it would donate 1 million lira to the relief effort, while Binance stated it would airdrop $100 in BNB to Turkish users with addresses listed in the affected region. Cryptocurrency exchange MEXC Global also announced it would donate 1 million lira to help with earthquake relief. Meanwhile, Justin Sun, an adviser at crypto exchange Huobi Global, pledged 2 million lira for relief efforts. Donations are currently not available to Syrian residents due to sanctions. 

While the [proof of address] method has its limitations and inaccuracies, it is the best method we have available for us to locate potentially impacted users. We estimate the total donations will be around $5 million USD (or 94,000,000 TRY), Binance stated.

Laos made-in-Japan CBDC 

On Feb. 7, the Bank of the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic (PDR) and Japanese fintech company Soramitsu joined forces to launch a proof-of-concept for a CBDC in the country. The project, dubbed DLak (Digital Lao Kip), follows a feasibility study of a blockchain-based payment infrastructure in Lao PDR, which took one year to complete and was initiated by the Japan International Cooperation Agency. 

The proof-of-concept will first be issued to a commercial bank, sent to individuals for payments at stores and collected by the Bank of the Lao PDR from the commercial bank. 

According to the Lao central bank, the objectives of the study are financial inclusion, cross-border remittances and the advancement of payment systems. 

Soramitsu has been selected by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of the Japanese government to conduct feasibility studies on CBDC in several countries, including Lao PDR, Fiji, Vietnam and the Philippines. The company has developed a digital currency for the National Bank of Cambodia and is actively involved in proof-of-concept tests for major Japanese enterprises and open-source projects.

The DLak proof-of-concept inauguration event. Source: Soramitsu

Binance halts dollar deposits and withdrawals

Binance has announced it will temporarily suspend all U.S. dollar bank transfers starting Feb. 8 for its non-U.S. international customers. The firm says that only around 0.01% of its monthly active users utilize the transfer option, but acknowledges it still represents a bad user experience.” 

According to Binance, the suspension will only affect U.S. dollar bank transfers for users outside of the Binance.US exchange and will not impact other methods of buying and selling cryptocurrencies. Although the firm did not state a particular reason, Cointelegraph reported on Jan. 22 that Binances SWIFT banking partner, Signature Bank, banned USD SWIFT transfers below $100,000 to limit exposure to the crypto sector. The exchange is reportedly looking for a new banking partner and will have an announcement for affected users in the next couple weeks.

Damus censored in China 

On Feb. 2, just one day after the launch of the decentralized social network Damus, developers claimed that their app was removed from Chinese app stores because it includes content that is illegal in China. A message to developers read:

According to the CAC, your app violates the Provisions on the Security Assessment of Internet-based Information Services with Attribute of Public Opinions or Capable of Social Mobilization. If you need additional information regarding this removal or the laws and requirements in China, we encourage you to reach out directly to the Cyberspace Administration of China.

Previously, Damus reached the top 10 in terms of free social media apps on the App Store in the U.S.

The social network, which operates on the decentralized network Nostr, emphasizes user control and privacy, with no centralized servers. Although banned in China, the app is still available anywhere else in the world. On Feb. 7, developers teased a new feature that will allow users to earn satoshis, the smallest denomination of Bitcoin (BTC), based on their post engagement.

Huobi lists FTX debtors coin

On Feb. 5, Huobi announced the exclusive listing of FUD (FTX Users Debt) token issued by DebtDAO. FUD is a Tron-based bond token issued on behalf of creditors of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX with an initial issuance and liquidity of 20 million FUD with a fair-price range of 0 to 5 Tether (USDT). As a contract with DebtDAO, FUD holders are entitled to secondary offerings and airdrops after FTX restores its database or confirms the actual debt of the creditor.


After the airdrop, DebtDAO says it will conduct a 1:1 debt buyback for FUD holders. However, after a wild price surge to $113, Huobi stated the very next day that it would burn 18 million FUD tokens to maintain parity. Justin Sun, an adviser at Huobi, claimed that early users received 10x return after the burn event. 

Binance returns to South Korea with acquisition

On Feb. 3, Bloomberg reported that Binance acquired a majority stake in the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange Gopax. While terms of the deal werent disclosed, users reported a 14.91 million Binance USD (BUSD) withdrawal from Binances $1 billion Industry Recovery Initiative around the same time of the announcement.

Binance previously exited the South Korean market in 2021, citing low usage and volume, but claims it is returning to the market to help customers of the ailing Gopax exchange. In November, Gopax halted withdrawals and interest payments for its decentralized finance yield product GoFi after its broker, Genesis Global, suspended withdrawals due to unprecedented market conditions. As part of the acquisition terms, Gopax CEO Lee Jun-haeng reportedly resigned and sold his entire 41.22% stake in the exchange. 

Gopax CEO Lee Jun-haeng. Source: Daum

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Huawei NFTs, Toyota’s hackathon, North Korea vs. Blockchain: Asia Express 

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. Huawei moves to trademark its NFTs According to a Jan. 28 report by Sina News, Chinese telecom giant Huawei has recently filed for eight trademarks related to its Huawei “YunYunBao” nonfungible tokens (NFT) series. The trademarks include digital collectibles in the […]

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Huawei moves to trademark its NFTs

According to a Jan. 28 report by Sina News, Chinese telecom giant Huawei has recently filed for eight trademarks related to its Huawei “YunYunBao” nonfungible tokens (NFT) series. The trademarks include digital collectibles in the scientific instruments, furniture, education, jewelry, advertising and telecom sectors. Last April, Huawei unveiled its YunYunBao NFTs, featuring characters inspired by its namesake cloud service. Huawei NFTs are minted on its proprietary Huawei Petal Chain, which the telecom giant says has over 1,000 nodes and can handle over 50,000 transactions per second. 

A Huawei cloud NFT. Source: Huawei

Toyota sponsors blockchain hackathon

In a Feb. 1 Medium post, Sota Watanabe, the founder of Japanese blockchain Astar Network, announced that Astar had received a sponsorship from Japanese automobile manufacturer Toyota for its latest Web3 hackathon. Astar is currently a parachain built on the Polkadot blockchain. 

According to Watanabe, over $100,000 in prizes will be distributed to projects that develop “intra-company DAO [Decentralized Autonomous Organization] support tools for this hackathon which Toyota employees may actually use in the future.” The hackathon will run from Feb. 14 to March 25.

The Toyota hackathon prize structure. Source: Hakuhodo

“Needless to say, Toyota is the largest company in Japan and one of the world’s leading international companies, Watanabe wrote. We are very excited to be hosting the Web3 Hackathon on Astar with Toyota. During the event, we aim to develop the first PoC DAO tool for Toyota’s employees. If a good tool is produced, Toyota employees will interact daily with products on Astar Network.”

North Korea devastates crypto

On Feb. 2, blockchain forensic analytics firm Chainalysis revealed that North Korean hackers stole an estimated $1.65 billion out of the $3.8 billion funds siphoned from decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols in 2022. For context, North Korean-related entities only stole $299.5 million in 2020 and $428.8 million in 2021. The firm also warned that despite the United States Treasury Department imposing sanctions on cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash on Aug. 8, North Korean hackers have increasingly turned to other digital asset mixers, such as Sinbad, to launder stolen funds. Chainalysis said:

North Korea-linked hackers tend to send much of what they steal to other DeFi protocols, not because these protocols are effective for money laundering they’re actually quite bad for money laundering given their increased transparency compared to centralized services but rather because DeFi hacks often result in cybercriminals acquiring large quantities of illiquid tokens that aren’t listed at centralized exchanges. The hackers therefore must turn to other DeFi protocols, usually DEXes, to swap for more liquid assets.”

On Jan. 29, decentralized finance analyst Zachxbt claimed he had traced another 17,278 Ether (ETH) worth around $27.18 million  laundered by North Korean hackers in the aftermath of the $100 million Harmony Bridge hack last June. According to Zachxbt, the funds were then moved to 14 wallet addresses spread across four exchanges. On Jan. 24, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation confirmed that North Korea’s Lazarus Group was the mastermind behind the attack. 

North Korean hacking activities have seen a sharp rise as part of the countrys desperate push to earn foreign currency reserves amid sanctions. Source: Chainalysis

No Binance metaverse for now 

In an ask-me-anything session on Jan. 14, Changpeng Zhao, CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Binance, said that the firm “is more open to just investing in other virtual reality or metaverse games,” as the firm is not a game-builder and doesnt have a game building team. 

“Nobody really knows what metaverse means. Everybody has a different concept of it,” the crypto executive said, according to a transcript published on Jan. 27.

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Instead, Zhao says that Binance will focus its “next big product” on releasing multiple proofs-of-reserves and proofs-of-solvencies to increase its transparency. The exchange has set a goal of 1 billion users passing Know Your Customer verification for the new year. 

Huobi denies data sharing allegations 

Digital asset entrepreneur Justin Sun has responded to allegations that his exchange Huobi provided client information to Chinese tax authorities. The TRON founder tweeted that Huobi “doesn’t share any client information to tax authorities unless it follows international judicial assistance procedure.”

Previously, Sun praised the introduction of a new 20% Chinese cryptocurrency income tax as “a clear indication that the Chinese government views cryptocurrencies as a legitimate form of wealth and wants to ensure its proper taxation.” 

Although based in the Seychelles, Huobi has a sizable number of staff working in mainland China, who reportedly revolted against the firm’s stringent new labor policies early this month. 

Huobi founder’s new ventures

After selling his entire stake in Huobi to Suns About Capital last October, Chinese businessman Lin Li has dedicated his time to managing Hong Kong blockchain investment holdings firm New Huo Technology. On Jan. 30, New Huo launched a staking technical support service, dubbed “Sinohope Staking,” that will first serve the Cosmos community before expanding into Ethereum, EOS and ChainLink. 

According to developers, Sinohope Staking will provide “multi-node deployment, real-time monitoring of node operation process, 7*24h online support, 3-layer wallet structure and multiple signature technologies” for users interested in staking their assets on public blockchains. New Huo says it will help clients set up their stake nodes and monitor their operations “without handling or holding any clients’ assets,” and claims clients will retain “100%” of their staked cryptocurrencies during the process. 

Bitzlato allegedly defiant despite sanctions

The co-founder of Hong Kong-based cryptocurrency exchange Bitzlato says the platform will reopen after being shut down by United States authorities last month.

In a Jan. 31 YouTube interview, Russian national Anton Shurenko said that the exchange would open later at an unspecified time and claimed up to 50% of funds held in seized hot wallets would be available for withdrawal at that time. In addition, the supposed founder claimed he had no idea why his company was singled out. 

On Jan. 18, Bitzlato was shut down after an investigation by law enforcement officials, including the U.S. Department of Justice, revealed that the exchange imposed lax Know Your Customer rules and allegedly laundered over $700 million worth of illicit funds via crypto-fiat transactions. Shurenko’s fellow co-founder, Anatoly Legkodymov, was arrested in Miami around the same day. After revelations that Binance was one of the top counterparties to Bitzlato, the exchange froze a number of accounts related to the entity.  

According to recent reports, Spanish police have detained three executives from the firm, namely the CEO, a sales executive and the marketing director.

Despite its notoriety, many users in the crypto community say they’ve never heard of Bitzlato before the incident. Source: Twitter

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Bithumb in turmoil, Binance’s 47K law requests, Axie players down 85%: Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. Bithumb in turmoil  On Jan. 25, Yonhap Infomax reported that South Korean authorities had requested an arrest warrant for Kang Jong-Hyun, chairman and owner of cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb, over embezzlement allegations. That same day, the Financial Investigation Second Division of the […]

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Bithumb in turmoil 

On Jan. 25, Yonhap Infomax reported that South Korean authorities had requested an arrest warrant for Kang Jong-Hyun, chairman and owner of cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb, over embezzlement allegations. That same day, the Financial Investigation Second Division of the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors Office accused Jong-Hyun and two Bithumb executives of embezzlement, conducting fraudulent transactions and breach of trust. 

A leaked photo of Bithumb chairman Kang Jong-Hyun. Source: Korea Post English
A leaked photo of Bithumb chairman Kang Jong-Hyun. Source: Korea Post English

Authorities said that Kang played a key role in manipulating the stock prices of Bithumb affiliates Inbiogen and Bucket Studio through the issuance of convertible bonds.

Bithumb is one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in South Korea. Its previous chairman, Lee Jung-Hoon, was found not guilty last month of a $70 million fraud charge related to his activities at Bithumb. Park Mo, Bithumbs former largest shareholder, died on Dec. 30 while under investigation for allegedly embezzling funds from Bithumb and related companies. The firm is also currently probed by the National Tax Service over tax compliance incidents. 

Binances 2022 annual report

In its annual report released on Jan. 19, cryptocurrency exchange Binance revealed that the firm received more than 47,000 law enforcement inquiries throughout the year. The exchange said such requests were processed at a record time and that it was the first among blockchain firms to join the National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance, a nonprofit cybercrime fighting unit based in Pittsburg. 

In response to the inquiries, Binance said it increased the headcount of its security team by more than 500% and hosted 70 law enforcement workshops around the globe in 2022 to help fight blockchain-related financial crime.

In the event of security incidents, Binance also stated it would tap into funds from its $1 billion SAFU (Secure Asset Fund for Users) user insurance program to compensate for losses. The exchange also tightened requirements such as NFT listings. Starting Feb. 2, Binance will delist all NFTs listed before Oct. 2 that had an average daily trading volume of less than $1,000 between Nov. 1 and Jan. 31.

In January 2022, we announced that SAFU was worth
$1B. Due to market conditions in 2022, that value
dropped to $735m. As of November 2022, we topped the
SAFU balance back to $1B. We made a promise to our
users, along with the larger crypto ecosystem, that SAFU
would always maintain a sizable level.

The exchange received 14 licenses and regulatory registrations in 2022. Other highlights include its $1 billion pledge for an industry recovery fund amid FTXs collapse and investing $500 million into Web3 and blockchain firms through Binance Labs. Although it does not have a fixed corporate office, the exchanges governing jurisdiction is the Hong Kong International Arbitration Center for legal disputes. Its servers are also reportedly located in Japan. 

Jurisdictions where Binance received regulatory clearance in 2022. Source: Binance.
Jurisdictions where Binance received regulatory clearance in 2022. Source: Binance

Axie Infinitys declining numbers 

The latest data from the website Active Player reveals that the number of players of the popular monster battle P2E game Axie Infinity, developed by Vietnamese gaming studio Sky Mavis, fell to 432,001 in the past month. This represents the lowest level seen since November and means the game has lost approximately 85% of its player base over the past year. 

Axie Infinity's popularity has dwindled in recent months. Source: ActivePlayer.io
Axie Infinity’s popularity has dwindled in recent months. Source: Active Player

Initially a groundbreaking GameFi success, Axie Infinity has fallen on hard times as the crypto winter took a toll on its play-to-earn dynamic, which was exacerbated by the infamous Sky Mavis Ronin bridge hack last March. New features, such as the much-anticipated Land Gameplay release on Dec. 28, did not appear to reverse the declining trend. At the time of publication, about $3.85 million worth of Axie NFTs changed hands in the past 30 days, compared with $639.5 million in November 2021. 

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City of Busans crypto exchange

As first reported by local news outlet News 1 Korea, the city of Busan is working to establish a decentralized digital assets exchange scheduled for operations this year. According to municipal officials, the exchange will include buying and selling of tokenized intellectual property rights for films and games, as well as trade in gold, precious metals, agricultural and livestock products, ships and real estate. The Busan Digital Asset Exchange Establishment Promotion Committee plans to coordinate with domestic financial companies and conduct system tests in the near future. 

Bybits Genesis exposure 

In a Jan. 20 Twitter thread posted by Ben Zhou, CEO of Singaporean cryptocurrency exchange ByBit, the blockchain executive clarified the exchange positions after questions arose regarding an alleged $151 million exposure to bankrupt crypto lender Genesis Global. As told by Zhou, the exposure amount is limited to Mirana, the investment arm of ByBit, and that $120 million of collateralized positions out of the $151 million exposure amount had already liquidated.

Zhou claims that Mirana only manages some ByBit company assets and that clients funds are separated. In addition, Zhou said that ByBit Earn products dont use Mirana. Genesis Global froze withdrawals last November, citing unprecedented market conditions, and filed for bankruptcy on Jan. 20, reportedly owing $3.5 billion to over 50 creditors. 

Bitzlatos trail of dirty money

According to a Reuters report on Jan. 24, cryptocurrency exchange Binance allegedly helped move $346 million in Bitcoin for now-defunct Hong Kong cryptocurrency exchange Bitzlato. Binance was also reportedly one of the largest counterparties to the exchange. On Jan. 23, Europol stated that $19.5 million were seized in enforcement actions against Bitzlato.

Last week, the United States Department of Justice announced a major international cryptocurrency enforcement action against Bitzlato for the latters alleged role in laundering $700 million in funds tied to dark web marketplace Hydra and Russian illicit finance. Its founder, Anatoly Legkodymov, a Russian national and resident of China, was arrested in Miami on Jan. 18 on charges of operating an unlicensed money transmitter. The exchange has since been shut down. 

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Samsung’s Bitcoin ETF, $700M bust, Coinbase exits Japan: Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Samsungs new Bitcoin ETF

On Jan. 13, Samsung Asset Management, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the namesake South Korean conglomerate, successfully listed the Samsung Bitcoin Futures Active ETF on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. According to local news outlet Edaily, the ETF debuted under the ticker 3135:HK and seeks to replicate the performance of spot Bitcoin by investing in Bitcoin futures listed on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).

The ETF will also simplify the procedures for investors seeking exposure to regulated Bitcoin products in the Asia-Pacific time zone. Park Seong-jin, head of Samsung Asset Managements Hong Kong office, commented: 

Hong Kong is the only market in Asia where Bitcoin futures ETFs are listed and traded in the institutional market. It will be a new option for investors who are interested in Bitcoin as a competitive product that reflects their experience in risk management and risk management.

North Korean hackers launder 41K ETH

As revealed by blockchain sleuth ZachXBT on Jan. 16, hackers linked to the North Korea-backed Lazarus Group moved close to 41,000 Ether ($63.5 million) from the Harmony bridge hack to Railgun, a platform that uses zero-knowledge technology to obfuscate blockchain transactions.

Funds were allegedly deposited to three different cryptocurrency exchanges after leaving Railgun. The same day, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao said the exchange, along with Huobi Global, had frozen a portion of the stolen funds and recovered 124 Bitcoin ($2.59 million).

Nomad Bridge TVL before and after the exploit.
Nomad Bridge TVL before and after the exploit. Source: DefiLlama

Last June, the Nomad cross-chain bridge was drained of over $100 million after suspected North Korean hackers targeted the login credentials of Nomad employees in the Asia-Pacific region. After gaining control of the protocol, the hackers deployed automated laundering programs that moved the stolen assets late at night.

Lazarus Group has been linked to a series of high-profile decentralized finance incidents last year, including the $600 million Axie Infinity Ronin hack, as the sanctions-ridden country turned to hacking and ransomware to make up for its shortfall of foreign currency reserves. 

Bitzlato busted for laundering $700M+

According to a Jan. 18 statement from the U.S. Department of Justice, Hong Kong cryptocurrency exchange Bitzlato was shut down by U.S. and E.U. authorities over allegations that since May 2018 the exchange has processed $700 million in funds linked to illicit activities, including millions in ransomware proceeds. Prosecutors alleged that illicit funds made up a significant part of its trading volume, with Bitzlato only processing around $4.58 billion worth of cryptocurrency transactions since its inception. 

Bitzlato website taken down after authorities' raid.
Bitzlatos website has been taken down following enforcement action. Source: Bitzlato

Anatoly Legkodymov, a Russian national and majority shareholder of Bitzlato, was arrested in Miami on Jan. 17 on charges of conducting an unlicensed money-transmitting business. He faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison if convicted. 

Legkodymov was allegedly an OG in the early Bitcoin community. Source: Telegram.
Legkodymov was apparently an OG in the early Bitcoin community. Source: Telegram

Legkodymov, who lives in Shenzhen, China, allegedly implemented minimal Know Your Customer requirements on Bitzlato users, specifying that neither selfies nor passports [are] required, and allowing users to signup using information belonging to straw man registrants. Authorities said that Bitzlato became a safe haven for illicit transactions and served as the largest counterparty to dark web marketplace Hydra Market. 

Hydra Market users exchanged more than $700 million in cryptocurrency with Bitzlato, either directly or through intermediaries, until Hydra Market was shuttered by U.S. and German law enforcement in April 2022. Bitzlato also received more than $15 million in ransomware proceeds.

Coinbase leaves Japan

In a Jan. 18 statement, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase said it would cease operations in Japan, citing difficult marketing conditions. According to the exchange, users Japanese yen and crypto assets were segregated, and all customers will have until Feb. 16 to withdraw their crypto holdings. Alternatively, users can also liquidate their digital assets and withdraw yen to their fiat bank. 

Any remaining crypto holdings held on Coinbase on or after Feb. 17 will be converted to JPY. In the month following Feb. 17, Coinbase will send any remaining JPY to a Guaranty Account at the Legal Affairs Bureau in accordance with legal requirements. If customers do not take any action before Feb. 16, they will have to coordinate with the Legal Affairs Bureau to retrieve their JPY balance.

Coinbase first began its expansion into the Japanese market in 2018. Another crypto exchange, Kraken, ceased operations in Japan on Dec. 28, citing weak market conditions. Earlier this month, Coinbase said it would lay off another 20% of its staff amid the ongoing crypto winter. 

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Hodlnauts angry creditors

On Jan. 13, Bloomberg reported that creditors of Singapore cryptocurrency borrowing and lending platform Hodlnaut refused a corporate restructuring plan and opted for the liquidation of remaining assets. Last August, Hodlnaut suspended all withdrawal, deposit and token swap services. The firm is currently facing a police probe after allegedly misrepresenting its exposure to the Terra USD stablecoin (USTC) and losing investors $190 million in the subsequent Terra ecosystem collapse. 

Japan clarifies NFT tax rules

As first reported by local news outlet Coin Post, Japans National Tax Agency released a document on Jan. 13 summarizing the general tax treatment of nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, in the country. Specifically, NFTs are taxed if an individual creates a digital collectible and sells it to a third party and when individuals resell it to another person.

In both cases, sales represent the transfer of viewing rights related to digital art and are classified as business income during primary sales and transfer income during secondary sales, where capital gains rules apply. Moreover, in the event that NFTs were hacked or stolen, individuals can claim either a miscellaneous loss deduction or can include the lost NFT as part of expenses if it was a business asset. 

30,000 e-CNY airdrop prizes claimed in 15 secs 

According to a Jan. 18 report by local news outlet Hangzhou Wang, the City of Hangzhou, in partnership with Chinese food delivery platforms Meituan Dianping and Eleme, airdropped a series of digital yuan central bank digital currency (e-CNY CBDC) vouchers for residents. Once claimed, users could then cash them in at the namesake platforms to purchase deliverables for the upcoming Chinese New Year on Jan. 22.

The only catch? All of the 30,000 e-CNY vouchers were claimed within 15 seconds of launch. Since late last year, the e-CNY has expanded into utilities such as paying for taxes, and local transportation, as well as being included in The Peoples Bank of Chinas M0 calculations

Bitcoin’s price won’t ‘dramatically’ increase from here, says billionaire

Huobi employees revolt, GameFi lives, Antminer on steroids: Asia Express

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industrys most important developments.

Huobis disgruntled employees

According to local media reports, cryptocurrency exchange Huobi Global has terminated all year-end employee bonuses and benefits, as well as axed its entire core development staff located in mainland China. The laid-off staff will be instead switched to advisory contracts that do not receive protection under Chinese labor laws. Employees also claim that their leftover paid vacation days and sick leave days for 2022 were set to zero without prior notification. 

Moreover, executives allegedly imposed a messaging ban on all major Huobi employee chat groups. In response, employees reported formed a 400-member strong rights maintenance group and have since sought the advice of counsel in the labor dispute. One employee reportedly wrote: 

I love my company and my job; at the same time, I support all decisions that benefit the company, and I know that with economies recessionary everywhere in the globe, Huobi management staff must tighten their belts, and I can understand the lack of year-end bonuses. That said, I cannot accept the unreasonable swap of employment contracts. I will fight this to the end.

However, it appears that employees still received the short end of the stick. On Jan. 6, Cointelegraph reported that Huobi laid off 20% of its workforce while denying insolvency rumors. But at the time of publication, sources say that the exchange is operating at a loss of $10 million per month.

Founded by Chinese entrepreneurs Leon Li and Du Jun in 2013, Huobi relocated its registrar to Seychelles following Chinas Bitcoin ban. Last October, its founders reportedly sold 100% of their stake to Chinese blockchain personality Justin Sun, who also founded the Tron network and is the CEO of BitTorrent. Sun claims merely to be an adviser to Huobi, currently the 17th-largest cryptocurrency exchange worldwide by 24-hour trading volume. 

MOBA games 100,000 downloads 

Approximately one month after launch, SuperpowerSquad (SPS) has been downloaded from Google and Apples app stores more than 100,000 times, a spokesperson for the multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) blockchain game told Cointelegraph.

The spokesperson said that the BNB Chain-based game, which had been in development for over two years, seeks to become a complete GameFi blockchain ecosystem, and the next steps include cross-bridge integrations and expanding the native token SQUADs utility to its second and third blockchain games in development.

SPS Gameplay. Source: Superpower Squad.
Superpower Squad is a multiplayer battle arena blockchain game. Source: Superpower Squad

The firm has already completed its mainnet and token launch and developed a built-in in-game wallet address that allows users to collect NFT hero rewards and digitized items. SPS currently has around 3,000 daily active users. The company is registered in the British Virgin Islands, with its core development staff based in Hong Kong and Singapore. 

Bitmain unveils 122 TH/s Bitcoin miner

On Jan. 11, Beijing-based application-specific integrated circuit manufacturer Bitmain launched the new Antminer S19j Pro+. The company claims that the new Bitcoin miner is 10% more potent than the S19j Pro, with a hash rate of 122 terrahash per second. The firm states its now a truly global Antminer:

In addition to its excellent performance is its adaptability to most global data centers, with a new input voltage range of 220-277V. Given that the industrial electrical voltage in the United States is 277V, Kazakhstan 220-230V, and Russia 220V, the voltages in these three countries are within the coverage of 220-277V.

Although pricing has not been disclosed, the S19j Pro predecessor currently costs $1,842 without shipping via computer hardware retailer Newegg.

A Bitmain ASIC miner
A Bitmain ASIC miner. Source: Newegg

Digital yuan included in M0 figures

According to a Jan. 10 local news report, the Peoples Bank of China in December began including its digital yuan central bank digital currency (e-CNY) in official M0 money supply figures. Official data revealed that over 13.61 billion Chinese yuan ($2 billion) worth of e-CNY has been issued since the pilot program began in January last year. Over the past year, state developers have rolled out features such as offline and no-electricity-required payments. However, some officials say that adoption remains below expectations

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Researchers quantum digital signature

As reported by the Chinese technology website Lianmenhu, researchers Chen Zengbing and Yin Hualei at Nanjing University have successfully signed a digital file using a quantum digital signature framework. Using a combination of one-time hash and one-time pad encryption principles, researchers reportedly increased the signing rate by a factor of hundreds of millions. Unlike classical signatures, such as signing a document with a pen or public key encryption, quantum signatures are verified via quantum mechanics and theoretically cannot be forged. The university said: 

The team demonstrated the worlds first full-featured quantum security network experimentally, realizing the protection of all elements of information security and providing a technically complete network and quantum safety base for the digital economies and digital currencies.

WangYis Lunar New Year metaverse

On Jan. 10, Shanghai Securities News reported that Chinese internet giant WangYi has partnered with state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) for a metaverse night special on the latters 2023 Chinese New Year program. 

For this operation, WangYi mobilized its LeiHuo, FuXi, Entertainment AI Lab, and WangYi Blockchain departments, utilizing digital twinning, blockchain, AI digital art, and AI sound technologies, to create the first Chinese New Year metaverse concert that can support tens of thousands of audiences, the outlet reported.

The WangYi metaverse platform reportedly features a 30 km digital water space where users can follow the official CCTV New Years program, participate in concerts and launch fireworks. WangYi also said it would spread its audience across multiple parallel universes (i.e. servers) to reduce lag and enhance multiscreen streaming. 

WangYi Metaverse
WangYi’s Chinese New Year metaverse. Source: WangYi

Thailand SEC probes Zipmex

On Jan. 11, Cointelegraph reported that Thai cryptocurrency exchange Zipmex is facing a probe by the countrys Securities and Exchange Commission alleging a breach of local rules.

On Dec. 2, Thai VC fund V Ventures announced that it had acquired the exchange for $100 million. On July 20, the company paused user withdrawals just moments after its CEO denied financial trouble rumors. The exchange has asked for a credit protection extension in Singapore pending the acquisition.

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