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Mashinsky says USDT is minted for crypto as $1M bounty offered to unpick reserves

Hindenburg Research is offering a $1 million bounty for information on Tether’s reserves, with the firm stating that Tether is yet to disclose virtually anything “about its counterparties.”

A bounty of up to $1 million has been offered up to anyone who can cast light on the precise backing of Tether’s reserves.

That backing just got a little bit murker, after Celsius Network CEO Alex Mashinsky reportedly said that Tether mints new USDT in exchange for crypto assets — which appears to conflict with Tether’s own terms and conditions.

"Forensic financial research" firm Hindenburg Research tweeted on Oct. 20 to its 171K followers that it holds "doubts about the legitimacy of Tether," and offered a reward of up to $1 million for important details on Tether’s reserves which it claims could pose a threat to investors on a “systemic” scale.

“Tether is a key underpinning of the multi-trillion-dollar crypto market. Yet despite its repeated claims of transparency, its disclosures around its holdings have been opaque.”

“The company claims to hold a significant portion of its reserves in commercial paper yet has disclosed virtually nothing about its counterparties,” Hindenburg Research added.

But, as more than a few observers noted, $1 million isn’t a lot of money to dish the dirt on a token with a $70 billion market cap.

Tether has been the subject of intense scrutiny, with regulators taking action against the firm on multiple occasions over the composition of its reserves. In May Tether published a loose reserve breakdown in May which showed a large amount of unspecified commercial paper, along with minimal cash or bank deposits.

On Oct. 15 Tether and its sister company Bitfinex reached a settlement to pay $42.5 million to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which claimed Tether did not have sufficient cash reserves for two thirds of the period between 2016 and 2018.

Tether settled but it denied the claims noting there was “no finding that Tether tokens were not fully backed at all times—simply that the reserves were not all in cash and all in a bank account titled in Tether’s name, at all times.”

It went on to say: “As Tether represented in the Order, it has always maintained adequate reserves and has never failed to satisfy a redemption request.”

Related: Crypto lending firm Celsius Network raises $400M

Meanwhile Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky is facing his own regulatory issues after the New York Attorney General’s office began looking into his firm and another stablecoin lending platform this week.

In a subsequent interview, Mashinsky told the Financial Times on Oct. 19 that as part of a lending agreement, Tether minted new USDT tokens in exchange for digital assets:

“If you give them enough collateral, liquid collateral, Bitcoin, Ethereum and so on . . . they will mint Tether against it.”

“New USDT is issued for such loans,” he added, stating that the new USDT is later destroyed after the loan is closed in order to not “permanently increase USDT in circulation”.

Such a lending structure on the face of it would appear in violation of Tether's terms of service which state:

“Tether will not issue Tether Tokens for consideration consisting of the Digital Tokens (for example, Bitcoin); only money will be accepted upon issuance.”

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks

SEC was the only regulator not willing to meet with Coinbase: Brian Armstrong

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has stated that SEC won’t meet with the firm, while asserting the 50% of Washington officials are concerned over the risks of crypto.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong claims that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is the only government branch that is not willing to meet with the firm.

Speaking on Anthony Pompliano’s Best Business Show on Sept. 24, Armstrong said that during his visit to Washington after Coinbase went public in April, the SEC was the “only regulator” that refused to meet with him:

“I reached out to the SEC. I tried to get a meeting with them. They told me that they weren't meeting with any crypto companies.”

“I was kind of surprised by that because there are so many different regulators out there. Every single one has been willing to meet with us and every other branch of government,” he added.

Armstrong highlighted his firm’s issues with the SEC’s approach earlier this month, when he revealed the enforcement body had threatened to sue the firm if it launched a USD coin (USDC) lending program that offered 4% annual yields. Despite other firms already offering similar services, he said the SEC refused to give the green light as they deemed the program to be a security but provided no explanation on how it came to that conclusion.

During the interview with Pomp, the Coinbase CEO noted that the SEC has not changed its tune since then, and said they hadn’t even placed a phone call to the firm. Armstrong asked:

“How are they protecting consumers in this case? I think a lot of consumers demonstrably have wanted to earn higher yields on their savings accounts. They're not really getting those products from the existing financial services.”

“So that was one open question. And then the second one was how are they creating a level playing field?” he added.

Armstrong said Coinbase had considered taking the SEC to court but decided that it was not worth a lengthy legal battle, not least because “there's a lot of deference given to regulators in the court system.”

The firm has now walked back its plans to launch the program, and will instead sit on the sidelines until the regulatory landscape around crypto lending services become more transparent:

“We're going to wait and see what the SEC does in terms of the other products that are out there already in the market where it's not a level playing field today.”

“I think we want to also just focus our efforts on maybe even more important things happening in crypto, like the questions around which of these tokens are securities and how is DeFi going to be used?” he added.

Crypto goes to Washington

On the subject of how policy makers view crypto, Armstrong said there’s a 50/50 split in Washington between people who think it’s risky and people who see the opportunity the sector provides:

“You know, 50% of the people I talked to in DC, roughly, they're still thinking of crypto as a risk. They think this is scary. This is dangerous. They have all kinds of misconceptions in their head about the percentage of activity that's for illicit activity.”

“So that's probably half the people I meet in D.C. and the other half, they realize that this is actually a huge opportunity,” he added.

Armstrong also appeared at TechCrunch Disrupt conference on Sept. 22 and revealed that Coinbase is preparing a draft regulatory framework that it will put forward to U.S. lawmakers next month. The firm is hoping to be an “advisor” that can advocate for “sensible regulation”, with Armstrong noting that regulators have asked the firm multiple times for a crypto proposal.

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks

Coinbase applies to trade crypto futures

If Coinbase gets approval from the National Futures Association, it will then need to register with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to get the green light.

Top U.S. crypto exchange Coinbase has submitted an application to become a registered Futures Commission Merchant (FCM) with the National Futures Association (NFA).

Details are sparse, but according to the NFA website the pending application was submitted on Sept. 15 under the name “Coinbase Global Inc.”

Coinbase highlighted the move via Twitter on Sept. 16 and stated that “this is the next step to broaden our offerings and offer futures and derivatives trading on our platforms. Goal: Further grow the crypto economy.”

If Coinbase becomes an approved FCM member under the NFA, the firm will then need to register with U.S. derivatives regulator the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to get the green light.

Related: President Biden announces picks to fill CFTC vacancies

The crypto derivatives markets dwarf the size of spot markets, and despite an abundance of regulatory FUD derivatives have exploded in popularity in 2021. According to data from CoinGecko the market processed more than $143 billion over the past 24 hours. Binance, FTX and Bybit currently lead the pack in terms of 24-hour open interest, with $10.1 billion, $6.8 billion and $3.8 billion respectively.

Coinbase will be hoping its move to futures and derivatives goes a lot smoother than its plans to offer a USD coin (USDC) lending product, after the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) threatened to sue the company if it went through with the launch.

According to a Sept. 15 report from The Economic Times, Coinbase also sold $2 billion worth of junk-bonds this week in an offering that saw $7 billion worth of orders placed for seven and 10-year bonds.

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks

SEC threatens to sue Coinbase over crypto yield program it considers a security

"They refuse to tell us why they think it's a security, and instead subpoena a bunch of records from us,” said Brian Armstrong after he revealed that the SEC threatened to sue Coinbase.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has reportedly threatened to sue Coinbase over a crypto yield program it deems as a security.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong tweeted on Sept. 8 that has been some “really sketchy behavior coming out of the SEC recently” before launching into a 21 post thread detailing the SEC’s dealings with the firm.

Armstrong explained that the crypto exchange approached the SEC earlier this year to brief the enforcement body over the up-and-coming Coinbase Lend program that intends to offer 4% annual yield returns on deposits of the USDC stablecoin.

According to the Coinbase CEO, the SEC responded by telling the firm that the lending program is a security without any explanation, and threatened to sue if the service was launched:

“They refuse to tell us why they think it's a security, and instead subpoena a bunch of records from us (we comply), demand testimony from our employees (we comply), and then tell us they will be suing us if we proceed to launch, with zero explanation as to why.”

Armstrong pointed out that there are other crypto firms on the market who currently provide similar lending services to their customers, and called for the SEC to provide regulatory clarity on the topic. The SEC’s actions, if Armstrong has reported them accurately, appear to be bad news for competitors BlockFi and Celsius which already offer crypto yield products. BlockFi is facing investigations in a number of states over its high-interest products.

In a blog post published today, Paul Grewal the Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase expressed his dismay at the SEC’s actions as he questioned the assertion the lending feature can be deemed as an “investment contract or a note.”

“Customers won’t be ‘investing’ in the program, but rather lending the USDC they hold on Coinbase’s platform in connection with their existing relationship. And although Lend customers will earn interest from their participation in the program, we have an obligation to pay this interest regardless of Coinbase’s broader business activities,” he said.

Grewal went on to explain that the only clarification the firm has been provided is that the lending program is currently being assessed under the Howey Test:

“They have only told us that they are assessing our Lend product through the prism of decades-old Supreme Court cases called Howey and Reves. The SEC won’t share the assessment itself, only the fact that they have done it.”

SEC boss Gary Gensler has regularly urged crypto firms to work with the SEC so that they can operate under public frameworks and ensure their survival. Grewal said the SEC's actions appear to contradict Gensler’s statements:

“The SEC has repeatedly asked our industry to ‘talk to us, come in.’ We did that here. But today all we know is that we can either keep Lend off the market indefinitely without knowing why or we can be sued.”

“A healthy regulatory relationship should never leave the industry in that kind of bind without explanation. Dialogue is at the heart of good regulation,” he said.

Related: SEC reportedly investigates decentralized exchange Uniswap

Grewal stated that the firm will be holding off the launch of the lending program until at least October while they wait for further feedback from the SEC.

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks

SEC Allegedly Probes Operators Behind World’s Largest Decentralized Exchange, Uniswap: Report

SEC Allegedly Probes Operators Behind World’s Largest Decentralized Exchange, Uniswap: ReportAccording to a recent report, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has allegedly started probing the startup that operates the decentralized exchange (dex) Uniswap. The dex platform Uniswap is the largest dex in terms of trade volume with over $10 billion in crypto tokens swapped in the last seven days. Sources from the report […]

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks

Celsius users to receive yield from its $200M Bitcoin mining investment

“There’s nothing better than building a factory that makes Bitcoin,” said Celsius CEO, Alex Mashinsky.

Alex Mashinsky, the CEO of centralized crypto money market Celsius, has revealed that a share of profits from the company's recent $200 million investment into Bitcoin mining infrastructure will be redistributed back to depositors.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, Mashinsky stated the firm's mining expansion has added a fifth stream of yield generation for its crypto depositors — alongside lending funds to institutional investors, leveraging DeFi protocols, retail lending, and market making on centralized exchanges.

In early June, Celsius announced it had invested more than $200 million into North American Bitcoin mining infrastructure and positions in Core Scientific, Rhodium Enterprises and Luxor Technologies.

“A big chunk of our community owns Bitcoin and they want to be paid in Bitcoin,” he said, adding: “So, there's nothing better than building a factory that makes Bitcoin.”

“By creating a mining business we are guaranteeing that we can pay our community what we owe them, which is interest in Bitcoin.”

Celsius was founded by the serial entrepreneur in 2017, with the platform offering yield on deposits for more than 40 digital assets including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and stablecoins.

Celsius’ mining expansion comes as Mashinsky notes Bitcoin yields are shrinking amid the growth of DeFi, with numerous protocols offering interest in the form of BTC on Bitcoin deposits. Celsius doesn’t charge any management fees from users, but instead takes 20% or more of the profits generated.

The company is not alone looking to invest in North America’s mining sector, with analysts expecting the continent will see an influx of miners who have been dislocated by China’s recent crackdown on the sector.

Mashinsky is unsurprised by China’s regulatory moves, characterizing the clampdown as a move to eliminate competition and protect its emerging central bank digital currency (CBDC).

Ultimately, Celsius’ CEO argues the Chinese miner exodus will prove to be beneficial for the decentralization of the Bitcoin network, stating:

“Moving a lot of the miners out of China is definitely helping Bitcoin get decentralized even more. So it's a good thing for Bitcoin, just not necessarily a good thing for the citizens of China.”

Related:  Cointelgraph Magazine — The adventures of the inventive Alex Mashinsky

The CEO has bullish expectations of Bitcoin’s price for the rest of the year, asserting that the price will tag heights of “anywhere between $140,000 and $160,000.”

However, he believes the markets will peak before 2022, asserting Bitcoin will “close the year below $100,000” after sellers step in to take profits in the six-figure price range.

Things Are About To Get ‘Silly’ With Memecoins Again, Says Top Crypto Analyst – Here Are His Leading Picks