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Undeterred by Fears of a Banking Crisis, ECB Raises Interest Rates by 50bps

Undeterred by Fears of a Banking Crisis, ECB Raises Interest Rates by 50bpsThe European Central Bank (ECB) has convened to raise three of its key interest rates by 50bps (0.5%), fueled by the persistence in the inflation numbers reported by the bloc. Christine Lagarde, president of the institution, stated that the banking sector in Europe was resilient and that the institution was ready to provide liquidity if […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

‘Next Round of Bailouts Is Here’ — Bitcoin and Precious Metals Soar Amid Speculation of Fed Policy Change

‘Next Round of Bailouts Is Here’ — Bitcoin and Precious Metals Soar Amid Speculation of Fed Policy ChangeAt around 7:30 a.m. ET, the price of bitcoin skyrocketed past the $27,000 range to a high of $27,025 per unit. Precious metals, or PMs, like gold and silver, also rose between 1.98% and 2.12% against the U.S. dollar over the past day. While many market observers are wondering why specific assets like PMs and […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Let First Republic and Credit Suisse burn

Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank set off a cascade among banks that haven’t been handling their finances responsibly. Let them face the consequences.

When crypto markets took a hit after the collapse of FTX and other crypto lenders last year, some crypto critics repeated the mantra, “Let crypto burn.” Now, it’s big banks that are faltering — including Credit Suisse and First Republic — after regional banks, including Signature Bank and Silicon Valley Bank, sparked a cascade. As a result, Moody’s has downgraded the entire banking sector.

If “Let crypto burn” was a snappy way of saying that operating outside the financial system means more personal responsibility and heightened risk, fine, crypto natives understand that concept. But now, we have a chance to turn a critical lens on the traditional financial system.

With traditional banks experiencing financial pressure, it’s time to let many of them fail. Forest fires can burn away old growth to make way for new trees to sprout. The same principles apply to banking.

Politicians and crypto critics have aligned to build the narrative that crypto is the risk at the heart of the crisis. The dirty little secret is that Treasury bonds were the nuclear bomb at the epicenter of this banking crisis, and central bank interest rate policy was the plane that delivered the payload.

Related: Expect the SEC to use its Kraken playbook against staking protocols

These struggling banks loaded up on long-term treasury bonds during a period of near-zero interest rates and at a time when the United States Federal Reserve continued to try to mollify banks that they would keep rates near zero for the foreseeable future.

There is an unavoidable tradeoff between low-interest rates and inflation; Fed macroeconomists know this, and yet the Fed acted with surprise as it quickly raised rates to catch up to the inflation wildfire over the last two years. A steep rise in rates made the old long-term treasuries — the ones paying very low interest — sharply decrease in value. When depositors demand their money back (with heightened speed in the era of internet banking) and all you have to sell to pay them are junk Treasuries, you have a problem.

The Federal Reserve has given Treasury bond holdings preferential treatment in its regulations and supervisory approaches (including those from which SVB was recently exempted). This puts blame on the Federal Reserve from two directions, its surprise about-face on interest rate policy and its regulatory policy favoring Treasury holdings.

There are many highly inefficient aspects of TradFi, where rotten trees are choking the growth of new sprouts. Some are a result of similar pathologies where the government uses the banking system to subsidize its own political objectives. It would be better for the economy to let them burn.

Much of the business model of taking in fiat short-term, on-demand deposits, and parking that money in illiquid long-term Treasurys (subsidizing the government) or mortgage-backed securities (where the government subsidizes unaffordable home prices) needs to burn away.

Rent-seeking brick-and-mortar facades, with most customer service outsourced overseas and who earn most of their revenue from overdraft fees, need to burn. Payment systems that bribe cardholders with “cash back” programs then use the market power their consumer bribes give them to gouge the merchant, need to burn.

Related: The Federal Reserve’s pursuit of a ‘reverse wealth effect’ is undermining crypto

Some smaller and regional banks who have failed to innovate, and for which the otherwise unobtainable bank charter has become the modern-day taxi medallion ensuring them rents from third-party custody of fiat deposits, need to burn away some of the overgrowth as well.

Crypto is a revolution in finance, intended to replace the intermediary-centric financial system with a self-sovereign approach where the individual is able to digitally custody native financial assets themselves.

This transformation will take time. Developers at decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols and layer-1 blockchains live most of their lives in the fiat economy. The federal government will only accept fiat dollars for tax payments, while banks dominate real estate mortgages.

DeFi protocols are making inroads into home mortgages, but that’s at its earliest stages. Consumer finance and tax payments are still fiat-based. And crypto developers at a minimum deserve the same treatment as anyone else participating in the fiat economy. That means they shouldn’t be discriminated against in the provision of basic checking and savings accounts.

We need some of the banking system to survive. But we don’t need all of it to survive, and the parts that burn away open opportunities for crypto-native replacements if banks don’t unfairly discriminate against crypto clients.

J.W. Verret is an associate professor at the George Mason Law School. He is a practicing crypto forensic accountant and also practices securities law at Lawrence Law LLC. He is a member of the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s Advisory Council and a former member of the SEC Investor Advisory Committee. He also leads the Crypto Freedom Lab, a think tank fighting for policy change to preserve freedom and privacy for crypto developers and users.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

US Bank Outflows and Concerns Mount: 11 Banks Bail Out First Republic Bank From Collapse

US Bank Outflows and Concerns Mount: 11 Banks Bail Out First Republic Bank From CollapseAfter the fall of Silvergate Bank, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), and Signature Bank (SNBY), First Republic Bank, a commercial bank and wealth management services provider, is the latest financial institution to receive a bailout. Close to a dozen lenders announced they will deposit $30 billion into the beleaguered bank’s coffers to shore up liquidity. U.S. […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

European Commissioner Says Impact of SVB Collapse ‘Limited’ as Credit Suisse Drags Down Banking Stocks

European Commissioner Says Impact of SVB Collapse ‘Limited’ as Credit Suisse Drags Down Banking StocksSilicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) collapse has had a “limited impact” on the European Union but authorities must still “stay alert” to events as they unfold, European Commissioner Mairead McGuinness has said. Despite McGuinness’ reassuring remarks, stocks of Europe’s largest banks still plunged by as much as 10% on March 15. Silicon Valley Bank’s ‘Limited’ EU […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Bitcoin returns to $25K as Credit Suisse bailout precedes EU rate hike move

A day of important macroeconomic news both in the U.S. and Europe sees BTC price action circling the all-important $25,000 zone.

Bitcoin (BTC) rebounded for a fresh challenge of $25,000 on March 16 ahead of a key interest rate decision in Europe.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Credit Suisse stock up 40% after "decisive action"

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD gaining almost $1,000 versus overnight lows of $24,229 on Bitstamp.

The pair remained buoyant as news hit that Switzerland’s central bank was due to inject $50 billion Swiss francs ($53.8 billion) into the embattled Credit Suisse, shares of which added 40% on the day.

“These measures demonstrate decisive action to strengthen Credit Suisse as we continue our strategic transformation to deliver value to our clients and other stakeholders," CEO Ulrich Koerner stated in a press release.

While averting potential catastrophe, the move came in for criticism ahead of a day full of economic maneuvers in both Europe and the United States.

“When Swiss banks need bailouts to survive it’s probably a decent time to think about buying,” trader, analyst and podcast host Scott Melker, known as “The Wolf of all Streets,” commented.

Uncertainty over European economic policy nonetheless remained, with the European Central Bank (ECB) due to decide on how much — if at all — interest rates should rise next.

Just like the Federal Reserve in the U.S., the ECB is caught between alleviating bank stress and keeping a lid on inflation. The day’s hike was previously due to be 50 basis points.

Twitter macro analytics account Tedtalksmacro noted that Bitcoin might already be falling behind equities markets based on the prior day’s performance.

In the U.S., the topic of interest was jobless claims, with analysts hoping for an overshoot of expectations to bolster the chances of the Fed pivoting on its own rate hike program.

“We are looking for a hot Jobless reports to start plotting an uptrend in Jobless claims. Getting it would increase the probability of the FED pausing rate hikes this month,” on-chain monitoring resource Material Indicators wrote in part of Twitter commentary.

Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, said the jobs data constituted a “big day.”

“Last week we've seen the largest jump since October, would be wondering whether we'll be seeing continuation of that rise, which might mean we'll have higher unemployment numbers,” he added.

Analysts see encouraging Bitcoin market strength

With that, traders were biding their time to gauge the impact of macroeconomic shifts, with BTC/USD still in a narrower trading range.

Related: Bitcoin to $100K next? Analyst eyes ‘textbook perfect’ BTC price move

"Same update as I was looking at yesterday guys," popular trader Crypto Tony wrote in his latest update on the day.

"$23,400 stop loss on my existing long position, and looking for shorts if we begin to lose the $22,600 support zone Until the sort of stuck in a sideways motion."
BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Crypto Tony/ Twitter

"BTC Grinding up while spot premium is increasing," a cautiously optimistic Daan Crypto Trades meanwhile noted while eyeing derivatives data.

"Funding rates already flipping below baseline or into the negative across the board. Looks healthy."
BTC/USD derivatives data. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/ Twitter

Popular commentator Byzantine General meanwhile entertained the prospect of future BTC price dips being "very shallow."

"Price keeps hugging upper range, perps basis already completely reset, futs basis still hovering around zero and there are lots of spot bids that don't seem to be going anywhere," he agreed.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Strategist Warns Credit Suisse Next to Collapse — Says ‘There’s a Run on the Bank’

Strategist Warns Credit Suisse Next to Collapse — Says ‘There’s a Run on the Bank’Market strategist Greg Foss has predicted that Credit Suisse will be the next major bank to collapse, citing capital trouble and a run on the bank. The Swiss banking giant has also identified “material weaknesses” in its financial reporting controls. Its shares plunged on Wednesday after the bank failed to raise capital from its largest […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Reminder: Credit Suisse Guilty of Tax Fraud and Subprime Mortgage Fraud, Accused of Aiding Clients Engaged in Torture, Drug Trafficking, and Money Laundering

Reminder: Credit Suisse Guilty of Tax Fraud and Subprime Mortgage Fraud, Accused of Aiding Clients Engaged in Torture, Drug Trafficking, and Money Laundering

As the Swiss government launches a potential rescue operation for troubled banking giant Credit Suisse, it’s worth remembering the massive levels of fraud the bank has been accused of over the last several years. In 2014, the bank pleaded guilty to charges of tax fraud from the U.S. Department of Justice after admitting to helping […]

The post Reminder: Credit Suisse Guilty of Tax Fraud and Subprime Mortgage Fraud, Accused of Aiding Clients Engaged in Torture, Drug Trafficking, and Money Laundering appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Swiss National Bank says it would support credit Suisse if necessary

Swiss regulators reaffirm the soundness of the Swiss financial system, following recent concerns about Credit Suisse.

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority released a joint statement on March 15 on the stability of the Swiss banking system and Credit Suisse (CS). The problems of “certain banks in the USA” do not pose a risk for the Swiss financial system, they wrote.

The statement was reportedly produced at the request of CS. The regulators said Credit Suisse meets all capital and liquidity requirements, but “if necessary, the SNB will provide CS with liquidity.” However, CS still “meets the capital and liquidity requirements imposed on systemically important banks.” The statement acknowledges that CS has been “affected by market reactions in recent days.”

On March 14, CS Group CEO Ulrich Körner confirmed that the bank is conservatively positioned against interest rate risks. That day, the bank admitted “material weakness in our internal control over financial reporting” after its 2022 performance was the worst since the 2008 global financial crisis.

The SBN statement comes as CS shares fell precipitously at the start of trading on March 15, losing up to 30%, and had been temporarily halted during a heavy sell-off. Trading was halted for several other European banks at the same time. 

Saudi National Bank chair Ammar Al Khudairy said on the morning of March 15 the Saudi central bank would “absolutely not” provide support for CS. That bank is the largest CS shareholder with 9.8% of its stock. 

European Central Bank officials have contacted banks they supervise to ask about their CS exposure, and the French finance minister would call his Swiss colleague to discuss the developments at CS. A U.S. Treasury official told the news service that it was monitoring the bank's situation. 

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology