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55% of the world’s top 100 banks reportedly have crypto and blockchain exposure

Over half of the 100 largest banks by assets under management are reportedly investors in major crypto and blockchain technology-based companies and projects.

Global banking giants are reportedly increasing their involvement in the emerging crypto and blockchain firms by way of early- and late-stage funding for projects and businesses in the industry.

According to research by Blockdata, a blockchain market intelligence outfit, 55 out of the top 100 banks by assets under management (AUM) have some form of exposure to the novel technology. This involvement reportedly cuts across direct and indirect investments in crypto and decentralized ledger technology firms by the banks themselves or via their subsidiaries.

Blockdata’s research places Barclays, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs among the most active backers of crypto and blockchain firms, with JPMorgan and BNP Paribas also identified as serial investors in the emerging space.

These investments are part of a larger trend of significant backing for blockchain startups, with funding figures already doubling the amount recorded in 2020, according to a KPMG report.

The research also shows crypto custody as a major focus point for banks delving into the crypto space. Indeed, almost a quarter of the top 100 banks by AUM are either developing crypto custody solutions or are backing startups that offer custodial services for digital assets.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, several banks in the United States, Asia and Europe are building crypto custody platforms as part of their preliminary foray into cryptocurrencies.

Related: Cryptocurrency custody gives commercial banks a foothold in the market

Blockdata attributed the growing crypto and blockchain involvement among banks to three main factors — skyrocketing profits of cryptocurrency startups, regulatory advancements, and the increasing demand among bank customers for exposure to digital assets.

Back in May, NYDIG president Yan Zhao stated that the massive revenues of crypto trading giants such as Coinbase were making banks reexamine their initial reticence toward cryptocurrency involvement.

This massive revenue potential is despite the significantly smaller teams working for these major crypto companies.

At $58.09 billion as of the time of writing, Coinbase sits on a valuation almost half that of Goldman Sachs, the 13th largest bank in the world, despite employing only about 4% of the latter’s workforce.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Vontobel’s wealthy clients are interested in crypto, says CEO

The Swiss bank said some of the firm’s clients are allocating part of their portfolios to crypto.

Zeno Staub, CEO of Swiss private banking and investment management giant Vontobel, has revealed that some of the company’s wealthy clients have crypto exposure.

Speaking to Bloomberg on Tuesday, Staub stated that Vontobel's clients have an interest in cryptocurrencies.

According to Staub, blockchain technology will have a profound impact on global finance. As part of the interview, the Vontobel CEO described the novel tech as the “Logic consequence of the general trend securitization because it is the only available technology that can create trust without a central counterparty.”

Commenting on the bank’s crypto offerings for wealthy clients, Staub stated:

“What we offer to our clients is that we’ve wrapped some cryptocurrencies in a secure, convenient, easy to handle way and clients appreciate that and allocate part of their wealth to that.”

In its half-year financials published on Tuesday, the bank also reported significant interest for its Bitcoin (BTC) tracker certificate investment product. According to the report, the bank’s assets under management grew 11% in the first half of 2021 to reach an all-time high of 274.5 billion Swiss francs (about $300 billion).

Indeed, as previously reported by Cointelegraph, Vontobel is one of the pro-crypto banks in Switzerland. Back in 2016 and 2017, the bank was already creating Bitcoin-based investment products.

In January 2019, Vontobel also created a regulated crypto custody product for banks and asset managers.

Related: Many JPMorgan clients see Bitcoin as an asset class, says senior exec

Staub’s comments reinforce previous statements by other wealth management firms about the growing appetite for crypto exposure among their big-money clients.

Such is the extent of this growing interest that investment banks are becoming more incentivized to offer crypto investment products to their rich clients.

Earlier in July, JPMorgan announced plans to provide access to Grayscale’s Bitcoin trust to retail wealth clients.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Crypto is an ‘untested asset category,’ says UBS CEO Ralph Hamers

The UBS chief said the bank continues to urge caution when it comes to crypto exposure for its clients.

Ralph Hamers, CEO of Swiss bank UBS, has said he does not fear missing out on crypto. Speaking to Bloomberg on Tuesday, Hamers said, “Clients are looking at different alternatives, and they hear about crypto, and there is a bit of a fear of missing out as well. They read it in the papers, but they also see the volatility.”

Commenting on the bank’s approach to providing exposure to crypto for its wealth management clients, the UBS CEO stated:

“We don’t offer it actively […] We feel that crypto itself is still an untested asset category.”

Back in May, reports emerged of UBS planning to offer crypto investments to wealthy clients. At the time, the proposed product was limited to a small fraction of the portfolios held by the bank’s wealth management clientele due to the volatility of cryptocurrencies.

However, in June, the bank warned customers to avoid crypto investments, stating that the market will crash under pressure from regulators.

Meanwhile, the Swiss branch of Spanish banking giant BBVA already offers Bitcoin (BTC) trading and custody solutions for clients in the country. Several Swiss banks, such as the 170-year-old Bordier & Cie, also offer crypto trading services.

Related: ‘Investors stay clear’: UBS warns regulators could pop ‘bubble-like crypto markets’

Hamers doubled down on the UBS’ reticence regarding crypto, stating that he does not have FOMO about the bank missing out on a few wealthy clients looking to invest in crypto.

While the UBS CEO appears not to be sold on crypto, banks in the United States are increasingly abandoning their previous anti-cryptocurrency stance and offering digital asset investment products.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, NYDIG has partnered with a host of internet banking providers to allow several U.S. banks to offer Bitcoin trading to their customers. In July, Bank of America reportedly created a crypto research team, dubbing cryptocurrency “one of the fastest-growing emerging technology ecosystem.”

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

$200M hedge fund pauses crypto arbitrage trading amid market downturn

The hedge fund co-founder says it is keeping its investment powder dry for when the crypto market resumes its parabolic advance.

Crypto hedge fund Nickel Digital Asset Management cycled into a cash position following the crypto market collapse of May.

According to Bloomberg, the $200 million crypto hedge fund led by JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs alumni redeployed its capital in anticipation of another explosive price run for cryptocurrencies.

Prior to piling into a cash position, Nickel Digital focused on cryptocurrency arbitrage opportunities resulting from cryptocurrency price differences across the spots and derivatives markets.

Indeed, crypto arbitrage trading reportedly offered double-digit annualized gains for institutional investors with sufficient capital to make sizable returns on these momentary price gaps. These trades are market neutral rather than directional since the focus on price discrepancies and not price action.

Commenting on the fund’s investment thesis, Nickel Digital CEO Anatoly Crachilov told Bloomberg: “We don’t take directional bets, so whether Bitcoin goes up 300% or down 70%, we will seek to capture arbitrage opportunities from market dislocations,” adding:

“Our market-neutral, low volatility strategy is designed to provide positive returns irrespective of market directionality. It’s meant to make a transition into the crypto market easier for investors with lower risk tolerance.”

Nickel Digital has reportedly earned 29% in gains at 3% volatility, far lower than the 78% market average for crypto assets. However, Bitcoin’s (BTC) blow-off top back in April and the ensuing altcoin capitulation in May has reportedly upended these arbitrage opportunities for hedge funds like Nickel Digital.

Bitcoin’s 50% crash from its $64,000 all-time high triggered a cascade of liquidations in the futures market especially for over-leveraged longs to the tune of about $9 billion. Altcoins also crashed more than 70% and price action has remained in a sideways accumulation state with frequent 10 to 15% dips.

Related: ‘Bitcoin will go all the way to $160,000 this year,’ says Celsius CEO

For Crachilov, it is all about playing the waiting game, for now: “June will be remembered as a cash-rich, wait-and-see month.” The Nickel Digital CEO also stated that the current market downturn is not out of the ordinary for investors long in the crypto business.

The crypto hedge fund chief stated that institutional investors are starting to move away from seeing crypto investments as a reputational risk. Indeed, banks in the United States and Europe are beginning to offer direct exposure to Bitcoin for both retail and big-money players.

Back in June, Alex Mashinsky, CEO of crypto lending platform Celsius, told Cointelegraph that he sees Bitcoin reaching a new all-time high of $160,000 before the end of the year.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Crypto and ‘meme stocks’ shunned by 90% of UK financial advisers

A recent Opinium poll has shown that a majority of British financial advisers are not advocates of crypto investing for their clients.

More than 90% of 200 independent financial advisers (IFA) in the United Kingdom who participated in a recent poll by research agency Opinium have indicated negative cryptocurrency sentiments with over a third reporting an increase in cryptocurrency-related inquires from clients since the start of the year.

Quoting figures from the poll, Reuters reported on Wednesday that 93% of surveyed IFAs would not recommend crypto investment vehicles to their clients.

A similar negative sentiment also showed for meme stocks — a term used to describe shares of companies whose values are often driven by retail trading mania. As part of the figures, 95% of polled IFAs also said they would not recommend meme stocks as viable investment options for their clients.

Details from the survey also showed that 90%–95% of IFAs advising clients with portfolios between $140,000 to $280,000 and above $280,000 would be concerned if those same clients invested in cryptocurrencies. Opinium research chief Alexa Nightingale told IFA Magazine:

“There is clearly uncertainty and concern in the industry, and advisors with clients of all sizes would be wary if their clients were investing in these products. However, these sorts of investments are becoming more mainstream, so it will be interesting to see how advisers navigate this in future.”

Related: Bank of England governor issues crypto investment warning

The IFA survey is consistent with the negative sentiments espoused by legacy finance figures in the country. Both the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority and the Bank of England have sounded cryptocurrency investment warnings in recent times.

However, cryptocurrency adoption continues to grow in the U.K. with a recent survey showing that more Brits invested in virtual currencies than stocks in 2020.

Despite most IFAs being anti-crypto, more than a third of the surveyed advisers agreed that cryptos will become a legitimate asset class in the future. A slightly lower proportion — 24% — offered the same prediction for meme stocks.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Bitwise secures $70M in Series B funding from major Wall Street investors

Bitwise has attracted significant investments from major American institutional investors to the tune of $70 million.

Bitwise, a four-year-old crypto asset management firm, has closed a Series B funding round, raising $70 million in fresh capital from investors.

According to a report by CNBC on Tuesday, major Wall Street figures such as billionaire investor and Bitcoin (BTC) proponent Stanley Druckenmiller and David McCormick, CEO of asset management giant Bridgewater Associates, participated in the funding.

Commenting on the stellar cast of investors, CNBC quoted Bitwise CEO Hunter Horsley stating that the company was keen to attract major Wall Street and crypto backers.

Bitwise will reportedly utilize the newly raised funds to beef up its balance sheet as well as double the size of its team. As previously reported by Cointelegraph, Bitwise’s assets under management crossed the $1-billion mark back in February 2021.

The milestone came shortly on the heels of its AUM moving north of $500 million only a month prior. The company’s asset base growth coincided with a bullish frenzy in the crypto market as Bitcoin raced to a new all-time high above $64,000 before the current price downturn.

At the time of writing, the AUM for the Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund has dipped to $796 million amid the cryptocurrency market downturn.

According to Horsley, the company’s focus is more long-term and is unfazed by periods of downtrends, stating, “We serve the long-term investor thinking if this has a role to play in the next five to 10 years of how they approach their portfolio and building a thesis.”

Related: For the long haul? When Bitcoin nosedived, institutions held fast

In a previous conversation with Cointelegraph, Matt Hougan, chief investment officer of Bitwise, also espoused similar sentiments. At the time, Hougan argued that institutional investors are “making a generational bet” by investing in Bitcoin and are not worried about “a few weeks of volatility.”

Indeed, a recent survey by Intertrust of 100 financial officers at major hedge funds across the world has shown significant interest in crypto investments. According to the survey, as many as 10.6% of hedge funds in the United States will hold crypto assets within the next five years.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Mike Novogratz-backed firm announces $100M crypto investment fund

Cryptology Asset Group wants to invest $100 million into new crypto and blockchain-focused venture funds.

Cryptology Asset Group, a Malta-based investment outfit co-founded by serial entrepreneurs Mike Novogratz and Christian Angermayer, is set to offer support for crypto VC firms.

In a release issued on Thursday, the European holding company announced plans to float a $100 million investment in first-time crypto funds. As part of the announcement, the investment outfit revealed that it will adopt an entrepreneurial approach in building its crypto fund portfolio with a focus on emerging managers and GP seeding.

Cryptology already has a significant footprint in the crypto and blockchain space with investments in the likes of crypto asset manager Iconic Funds and Bitcoin (BTC) mining operator Northern Data.

Indeed, Cryptology also offers indirect exposure to EOS developer Block.one and its recently announced $10 billion crypto tech company Bullish Global.

Commenting on the planned investment fund, Cryptology co-founder Angermayer said:

“We are at the very beginning of the crypto revolution, and we strive to become one of the leading global investors in this very nascent asset class. Our fund investment strategy will focus on emerging talent, taking a global approach, and will encompass both funds investing in equity stakes of crypto and blockchain-related companies as well as funds investing in crypto assets and tokens.”

For Patrick Lowry, CEO of Cryptology, the company’s increased focus on the crypto market lies in the fact that the industry constitutes the best investment bet. Lowry said that Cryptology has grown its assets under management to $548 million from an initial capital investment of about $33 million.

According to Lowry, the Malta-based firm has enjoyed an estimated internal rate of return (IRR) north of 300% per year. The CEO attributed the company’s positive growth performance to the “tectonic shifts” triggered by the emerging crypto asset class.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Andreessen Horowitz Discusses Raising Third Crypto Fund to $2 Billion, Sources Say

Andreessen Horowitz Discusses Raising Third Crypto Fund to  Billion, Sources SayIn May 2020, back when the crypto economy was still tumultuous from the coronavirus outbreak fears and gloomy global financial outlook, in general, the private venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) revealed the 500 million-dollar “Crypto Fund II.” A report published on May 27 by the tech writer Eric Newcomer indicates that Andreessen Horowitz is […]

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

ECB Vice President Says Crypto Assets Are ‘Not a Real Investment’ Citing Weak Fundamentals

ECB Vice President Says Crypto Assets Are ‘Not a Real Investment’ Citing Weak FundamentalsThe vice president of the European Central Bank (ECB), Luis de Guindos, has warned that crypto assets are “not a real investment” and are “subject to a lot of volatility.” His comments followed massive sell-offs across a broad range of cryptocurrencies. ECB VP Says Crypto Is Not a Real Investment European Central Bank Vice President […]

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6

Chinese trade associations sound crypto investment warning

Three associations outlined four issues related to crypto investment, beginning with a call for their members to understand the nature of digital currencies.

The China Internet Finance Association has signed a joint statement with the China Banking Association and China Payment and Clearing Association, warning the public about the risks of investing in cryptocurrencies.

According to a report by Shanghai Securities News on Tuesday, the aforementioned trade association under the People’s Bank of China issued a communique titled “Preventing the risk of virtual currency transaction speculation.”

The joint statement is reportedly an extension of previous releases from the PBoC about Bitcoin (BTC) and crypto risks.

As part of the communique, the three associations outlined four issues related to crypto investment, beginning with a call for their members to understand the nature of digital currencies.

According to the release, cryptocurrencies are not “real currency” and should not be used as a medium of exchange for goods and services.

Back in July, the Beijing Arbitration Commission issued a ruling declaring Bitcoin to be a virtual commodity.

For its second point, the trade associations warned financial institutions and other member organizations not to engage in crypto business transactions. An excerpt of the document specifically addressing internet platforms reads:

“Internet platform corporate member units shall not provide services such as online business premises, commercial displays, marketing promotion, paid diversion, etc. for virtual currency-related business activities. If clues or related problems are found, they shall promptly report to relevant departments and provide technical support for related investigations and assistance.”

The trade associations also warned retail traders to be wary of the risks involved in crypto investments while also calling on member institutions to abide by existing regulatory provisions regarding digital currencies.

China banned token issuance and crypto trading back in 2017, forcing major exchanges to move their operations out of the country. This action has been followed by a host of often conflicting statements on crypto, with the government seeming to favor the “blockchain, not Bitcoin” narrative.

Roaring Kitty fraud suit dropped, Ethereum Foundation hacked, and more: Hodler’s Digest, June 30 – July 6