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Metalpha to raise $100M to offer Grayscale Bitcoin products in Hong Kong

Metalpha has secured $20 million out of the planned $100 million for its new fund from overseas Chinese investors, the CEO said.

Hong Kong-based cryptocurrency wealth manager Metalpha Technology is working to offer new entry points into Bitcoin (BTC) and Web3 to investors in Asia.

Metalpha is raising a $100 million fund to invest in Bitcoin and other crypto products by the major American crypto asset manager, Grayscale Investments. The new fund aims to help Chinese investors get a regulated channel to invest in cryptocurrencies and Web3, Bloomberg reported on April 12.

Known as the Next Generation Fund I, Metalpha’s upcoming investment project is launched in partnership with NextGen Digital Venture Limited. The fund will invest directly in Grayscale's crypto investment products and indirectly through structured derivatives related to Grayscale's products, allowing institutions and high-net-worth individuals to get indirect exposure to crypto.

According to Metalpha founder and CEO Adrian Wang, the company has already secured $20 million for its new fund since March. He said that the fund has so far attracted many Chinese investors, stating:

“A lot of our clients are family offices with traditional backgrounds, rather than pure crypto or pure Web3 native investors [...] It’s overseas Chinese institutions — some of them are family offices, some of them are public companies.”

Wang also noted that Metalpha had seen increased demand for its products recently, which followed a series of difficulties connected to the bear market of 2022 as well as the collapse of the FTX crypto exchange. “A lot of clients hesitated to place new orders, but now it’s getting much better,” Wang stated, adding that a lot of new traffic is coming in and people are gaining more confidence now.

Related: Chinese state insurance firm launches two crypto funds in Hong Kong: Report

Founded in 2015, Metalpha was originally known as Dragon Victory International, offering supply chain management platform services and cryptocurrency derivative product services in Hong Kong. The firm rebranded to Metalpha in late 2022, soon after receiving a Nasdaq notification regarding minimum bid price deficiency. Metalpha regained compliance with Nasdaq’s listing rules as of April 2023.

Metalpha is backed by Singapore-based venture capital firm Antalpha, which has been reportedly working with the Chinese crypto mining firm Bitmain to offer low-interest loans to crypto miners.

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

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Institutions ‘extremely interested’ in crypto ETFs, but buying has cooled: Survey

Almost half of surveyed fund managers plan to “add” crypto ETFs to their portfolio in 2023, while only a quarter will be increasing digital asset exposures.

Institutional interest in cryptocurrencies hasn’t budged despite the market being down 60% from the all-time highs (ATH), as a majority of asset managers stated they’re “extremely interested” in crypto themed-Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs).

On April 3, financial services firm Brown Brothers Harriman (BBH) released its 2023 Global ETF Investor Survey which polled 325 institutional investors, financial advisors, and fund managers from the United States, United Kingdom, Europe and China.

It found nearly three-quarters of institutional investors claimed they’re “extremely” or “very” interested in crypto ETFs, but the effects of crypto winter have chilled their appetite as only a quarter said they’re expecting to increase allocation to crypto ETFs over the next 12 months, a 6% fall from 2022.

While crypto-themed ETFs fell down the priority list for some — nearly half still plan to “add” crypto ETFs to their portfolios this year to diversify investments.

58% of fund managers in China are looking to add crypto ETFs to their portfolios, followed by the U.S. (55%) and Europe (29%). Source: BBH

BBH explained the rise in interest for crypto ETFs is partly due to fund managers learning to stomach the inevitable volatilities in the crypto market:

“As investors adapt to volatility, they are diversifying their portfolios and adding more innovative products. Even with a tumultuous year in crypto, interest hasn’t cooled entirely.”

BBH believes a clearer crypto regulatory framework will further increase the demand for related ETF exposure as it will provide more “comfort” when doing business with the crypto sector:

“Initiatives such as the draft regulation from the EU’s Markets in Crypto Assets proposal is expected to significantly ‘derisk’ investments in crypto assets for asset managers and provide an ‘additional layer of comfort’ for fund managers to engage with crypto exchange.”

More than 40% of the respondents claimed to manage assets worth more than $1 billion and over half said to have more than a quarter of their portfolio invested in ETFs.

Related: Samsung investment arm to launch Bitcoin Futures ETF amid rising crypto interest

Among the largest crypto ETFs are ProShares Bitcoin Strategy (BITO) available on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund (BITW). BITO was reportedly the first bitcoin-linked ETF launched in the United States, while BITW tracks the top 10 largest cryptocurrencies by market cap.

Grayscale’s Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), while not an ETF, is one of the largest digital asset investment products by market cap traded on a stock exchange with a current value of $11 billion according to Google Finance.

Not all crypto ETFs have fared well as the effects of the crypto market winter saw two Australian crypto ETFs — BetaShares Crypto Innovators ETF (CRYP) and Cosmos Global Digital Miners Access ETF (DIGA) — take the title as the worst-performing ETFs in the country.

It resulted in DIGA, along with Cosmos Purpose Ethereum Access ETF (CPET) and Cosmos Purpose Bitcoin Access ETF (CBTC) being delisted at the end of 2022.

Magazine: Crypto winter can take a toll on hodlers’ mental health

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

US Government Remains a Top Bitcoin Holder With Seized Stash Valued at $5.6 Billion

US Government Remains a Top Bitcoin Holder With Seized Stash Valued at .6 BillionAs of March 25, 2023, the U.S. government held 205,515 bitcoins worth $5.6 billion, which is approximately 1.06% of the circulating supply, according to current statistics. The cache of bitcoins is a result of three forfeitures that began in 2020. Glassnode’s on-chain data reveals that on March 9, about 9,860 bitcoins worth roughly $269 million […]

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Judges Will Likely Rule in Favor of Grayscale in Bitcoin Spot ETF Battle With SEC, Says Bloomberg Expert – Here’s Why

Judges Will Likely Rule in Favor of Grayscale in Bitcoin Spot ETF Battle With SEC, Says Bloomberg Expert – Here’s Why

A senior litigation analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence believes that the odds are now in favor of Grayscale in its legal battle with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Last year, Grayscale sued the SEC after the regulator rejected its application to convert the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) into a spot-based Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund […]

The post Judges Will Likely Rule in Favor of Grayscale in Bitcoin Spot ETF Battle With SEC, Says Bloomberg Expert – Here’s Why appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Crypto Biz: Silvergate shutting down, Alameda suing Grayscale

Negative headlines surrounding Silvergate dragged Bitcoin's price below $20,000. Meanwhile, bankrupt Alameda is planning to sue Grayscale and its parent company DCG.

With the Bitcoin (BTC) halving more than a year away, don’t expect crypto industry narratives to change anytime soon. Nay, crypto winter is still in full force, and the nasty headlines show no signs of abating. 

This week, Silvergate Bank’s parent company announced it would shut down and liquidate the crypto bank “in light of recent industry and regulatory developments.” This hardly comes as a surprise after most of Silvergate’s high-profile partners abandoned the company when the regulators came knocking.

The latest Crypto Biz newsletter documents the voluntary liquidation of Silvergate, a new lawsuit from Alameda Research targeting the Digital Currency Group (DCG), and “stale” Tether allegations from The Wall Street Journal.

Silvergate Capital Corporation will ‘voluntarily liquidate’ Silvergate Bank

After months of uncertainty, Silvergate Bank’s parent company announced on March 8 that it would unwind its operations and liquidate its remaining assets. While this marked another blow to the crypto industry, the writing was already on the wall for Silvergate Bank. According to reports, Silvergate Bank had been negotiating with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to avoid a shutdown. Apparently, those talks went nowhere. Like other crypto firms, Silvergate’s troubles began with the meltdown of FTX and ended with regulators investigating the bank’s alleged involvement in Sam Bankman-Fried’s doomed empire. By the time Silvergate went under, companies like Coinbase, Paxos, Gemini, Galaxy Digital and BitStamp had already cut ties.

Alameda Research files suit against Grayscale over ‘self-imposed redemption ban’

Here’s a headline you probably weren’t expecting: Bankrupt Alameda Research is suing Grayscale Investments and its owner, the Digital Currency Group, for its exorbitant fees and refusal to unlock shareholder redemptions. The lawsuit, filed in Delaware, alleges that Grayscale charged over $1.3 billion in management fees, supposedly violating trust agreements. The company also “contrived excuses” to prevent shareholders from redeeming their shares. The lawsuit seeks to “unlock $9 billion or more in value for shareholders of the Grayscale Bitcoin and Ethereum Trusts […] and realize over a quarter billion dollars in asset value for the FTX Debtors’ customers and creditors.” These sorts of allegations against DCG and Grayscale are nothing new. In January, Bitcoin billionaire Cameron Winklevoss accused DCG CEO Barry Silbert of orchestrating “a carefully crafted campaign of lies” to hide a hole in an associated company’s balance sheet.

Bitcoin ASIC manufacturer Canaan saw 82% revenue drop in Q4

In another sign of the times, Chinese Bitcoin miner and manufacturer Canaan reported a massive drop in revenue during the fourth quarter. The company’s sales plummeted 82.1% year-over-year to $56.8 million. During the quarter, Canaan sold 1.9 million terahashes per second worth of computer power for Bitcoin miners, down 75.8% compared to a year ago. Regarding profitability, Canaan was deeply in the red for the quarter — reporting a loss of $63.6 million. Overall, Canaan appears healthy enough to withstand a crypto winter that could last for the rest of the year. The company currently has $706 million in total assets against $67 million in liabilities.

Tether strikes at WSJ over ‘stale allegations’ of faked documents for bank accounts

Here’s how you know the bear market isn’t over: Mainstream media’s attacks against stablecoin issuer Tether show no signs of letting up. If you’ve been in crypto long enough, you know that Tether is the industry’s favorite conspiracy theory because people love to doubt the company’s collateral, the make-up of its reserve holdings and its association with crypto exchange Bitfinex. This week, a familiar Tether foe alleged that the stablecoin issuer faked documents and used shell companies to access the banking system. According to The Wall Street Journal, Tether and Bitfinex faked sales invoices and transactions as part of a ploy to open bank accounts. On the same day the report was released, Tether fired back, claiming the story was based on “stale allegations from long ago,” and “wholly inaccurate and misleading.”

Before you go: How will the Silvergate implosion impact crypto?

The fallout from the FTX collapse continues to impact crypto markets. Now, crypto-friendly lender Silvergate Bank is on the brink of insolvency after reporting a $1 billion net loss in the fourth quarter. That’s not the worst of it, though. Several major crypto companies, including Coinbase, Circle, Paxos, Galaxy Digital, MicroStrategy and Tether, have distanced themselves from the company as the United States Department of Justice investigates its involvement in the FTX debacle. On this week’s Market Report, I sat down with fellow analysts Marcel Pechman and Joe Hall to discuss how Silvergate could impact crypto sentiment. You can watch the full replay below.

Crypto Biz is your weekly pulse of the business behind blockchain and crypto, delivered directly to your inbox every Thursday.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

FTX Debtors Launch Lawsuit Against Grayscale, Says Crypto Titan Charged $1,300,000,000 in Exorbitant Fees

FTX Debtors Launch Lawsuit Against Grayscale, Says Crypto Titan Charged ,300,000,000 in Exorbitant Fees

Debtors of the bankrupt digital asset exchange FTX have filed a lawsuit against crypto giant Grayscale in Delaware. Alameda Research, a “debtor affiliate” and the disgraced sister company of FTX, sued Grayscale in the Delaware Court of Chancery, claiming the crypto asset manager extracted more than $1.3 billion “in exorbitant management fees in violation of […]

The post FTX Debtors Launch Lawsuit Against Grayscale, Says Crypto Titan Charged $1,300,000,000 in Exorbitant Fees appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Judges hear oral arguments in Grayscale suit against SEC over BTC spot ETF rejection

A panel of three judges heard the sides’ arguments and posed significantly more questions about the SEC’s stance, leading to speculation about their leaning.

A panel of judges heard oral arguments in the Grayscale Investments suit against the United States Securities and Trade Commission (SEC) on March 7. Grayscale is challenging the SEC order not to approve Grayscale’s application to create a Bitcoin (BTC) spot exchange-traded fund (ETF). The SEC issued its order on July 6, 2022.

Former solicitor general Donald Verrilli Jr. represented Grayscale and SEC senior counsel Emily Parise spoke for the SEC before Chief Judge Sri Srinivasan and Judges Neomi Rao and Harry Edwards in the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals. Verrilli opened, saying:

“The fundamental problem with the order is that it contradicts previous SEC orders giving the green light to Bitcoin futures ETPs that pose the same risk of fraud and manipulation and have in place the same CME [Chicago Mercantile Exchange] surveillance mechanism to protect against those risks.”

The SEC has approved investment products from Teucrium, ProShares, VanEck and Valkyrie linked to BTC futures.

Parise argued that the offerings are not comparable with the Grayscale proposal because the surveillance mechanisms are not identical, as the spot markets underlying the asset in the proposed ETF are “fragmented and unregulated,” unlike the CME, which is regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Parise went on to dismiss the argument that the Bitcoin spot and futures markets move together 99.9% of the time, pointing out that it is unclear whether the futures market leads the spot market when impacted by fraud and manipulation, or vice versa.

Related: GBTC approval could return a ‘couple billion dollars’ to investors: Grayscale CEO

For the proposed Grayscale product, CME surveillance would serve as a proxy for surveillance of the spot market. Furthermore, the 99.9% correlation is based on “once-a-day” futures prices, irrespective of intraday prices, Parise added.

The judges addressed more questions to Parise than to Verrilli, leading crypto community commenters to interpret their leanings as favorable to Grayscale. They asked for elucidation, for example, on how Teucrium’s product that received SEC approval differs from Grayscale’s, and why spot and futures markets might be impacted differently by fraud and manipulation.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Alameda Research files suit against Grayscale over ‘self-imposed redemption ban’

The FTX Debtors want to “unlock” $9 billion in share value and management fees that they dispute through the Delaware Court of Chancery.

Alameda Research has filed suit against Grayscale Investments in the Court of Chancery in the State of Delaware, it announced March 6. It also made claims against Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein, Grayscale owner Digital Currency Group (DCG) and the group’s CEO Barry Silbert. 

Alameda Research is an affiliate debtor of FTX, which filed for bankruptcy in November. The suit seeks to “unlock $9 billion or more in value for shareholders of the Grayscale Bitcoin and Ethereum Trusts […] and realize over a quarter billion dollars in asset value for the FTX Debtors' customers and creditors,” according to a statement.

The plaintiff claimed Grayscale charged over $1.3 billion in management fees in violation of trust agreements. In addition, it “contrived excuses” to prevent shareholders from redeeming their shares in what the statement described as a “self-imposed redemption ban.” As a result, the statement continued, the Trusts' shares trade “at approximately a 50% discount to Net Asset Value.” Therefore, the plaintiff claimed:

“If Grayscale reduced its fees and stopped improperly preventing redemptions, the FTX Debtors' shares would be worth at least $550 million, approximately 90% more than the current value of the FTX Debtors' shares today.”

According to The Financial Times, Alameda owns 22 million shares in Grayscale’s Bitcoin (BTC) Trust and 6 million shares in its Ethereum (ETH) Trust.

Related: Digital Currency Group's Genesis implosion: What comes next?

The Court of Chancery describes itself as “a forum for the determination of disputes involving the internal affairs of […] Delaware corporations.” Fir Tree Capital Management filed a suit in the same court seeking similar remedies in December. 

DCG’s lending branch, Genesis Global, filed for bankruptcy on Jan. 19. Grayscale has sued the United States Securities and Exchange Commission over the latter’s decision to deny Grayscale’s application to create a Bitcoin spot exchange. Oral arguments in that case will be heard March 7 in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.

A spokeswoman for Grayscale called the suit "misguided" in a statement to Cointelegraph.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Digital Assets Under Management 5.25% Higher in February — Grayscale Still ‘Most Dominant Player’

Digital Assets Under Management 5.25% Higher in February — Grayscale Still ‘Most Dominant Player’The value of digital assets under management (AUM) for digital asset investment products in February rose to $28.3 billion, the highest number recorded since May 2022, according to Cryptocompare stats. The increase came against the background of rising U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) enforcement actions against crypto industry players. Bitcoin and ethereum continue to […]

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months

Grayscale CEO Says $2,000,000,000 Could Return to GBTC Investors’ Pocket Upon Conversion To Spot Bitcoin ETF

Grayscale CEO Says ,000,000,000 Could Return to GBTC Investors’ Pocket Upon Conversion To Spot Bitcoin ETF

Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein says that investors would greatly benefit from the conversion of GBTC into an exchange-traded fund (ETF), something the firm has been fighting for for multiple years. In a new interview with Peter McCormick, Sonnenshein says that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is violating Section 706(2)(A) of the Administrative Procedure […]

The post Grayscale CEO Says $2,000,000,000 Could Return to GBTC Investors’ Pocket Upon Conversion To Spot Bitcoin ETF appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Plastic Surgery Fails to Help Crypto Scammer Evade Arrest After 10 Months