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HK vs. US: China AMC Leads but Can’t Lift Hong Kong Spot Bitcoin ETFs to US Levels

HK vs. US: China AMC Leads but Can’t Lift Hong Kong Spot Bitcoin ETFs to US LevelsHong Kong’s debut of six spot bitcoin and ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) garnered HK$87.5 million ($11 million) on their first day, April 30. However, these ETFs underperformed compared to their U.S. counterparts, which had attracted a much larger sum of $4.6 billion on their initial day. Despite High Hopes, Hong Kong’s Bitcoin ETFs Start Slow […]

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

China Asset Management Exec Anticipates Hong Kong Spot Bitcoin ETFs to ‘Exceed’ US Debut

China Asset Management Exec Anticipates Hong Kong Spot Bitcoin ETFs to ‘Exceed’ US DebutWith the debut of spot bitcoin and ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in Hong Kong trading on Tuesday, market observers are speculating about the potential demand for these ETFs in the region, reminiscent of the enthusiasm seen in the U.S. following the approval of 11 spot bitcoin ETFs on Jan. 10. Zhu Haokang, head of digital […]

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

Crypto Investment Products Witness $2,250,000,000 Worth of Inflows in 2023, up 2.7x Year-on-Year: CoinShares

Crypto Investment Products Witness ,250,000,000 Worth of Inflows in 2023, up 2.7x Year-on-Year: CoinShares

Digital assets manager CoinShares says crypto investment products saw a significant recovery in 2023 as inflows increased by nearly threefold from the preceding year. In its latest Digital Asset Fund Flows report, Coinshares says inflows reached $2.25 billion in 2023, representing a 2.7 times year-on-year increase. Total assets under management (AuM) also rose by 129%, […]

The post Crypto Investment Products Witness $2,250,000,000 Worth of Inflows in 2023, up 2.7x Year-on-Year: CoinShares appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

What crypto traders can learn from Charlie Munger — even if he hated BTC

Legendary investor Charlie Munger may have once called Bitcoin “rat poison squared” — but that doesn't mean crypto traders should ignore his years of investing wisdom.

Legendary investor and billionaire Charlie Munger, known as the right-hand man of Warren Buffet who helped build investment powerhouse Berkshire Hathaway, has passed away at 99 years of age.

Munger’s family informed Berkshire “that he peacefully died this morning at a California hospital,” according to a company announcement on Nov. 28.

Munger, who served as vice chairman at Buffet’s empire since 1978, accumulated a net worth of $2.6 billion and was routinely praised for adopting a sound investment and stock-picking philosophy throughout his tenure at Berkshire.

While Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies weren’t favored investments for Munger and Buffet, who once referred to Bitcoin (BTC) as “rat poison” and “rat poison squared,” crypto traders could still benefit from Munger’s learnings over his 60 years of investing experience. Here are some approaches to investment that Munger swore by: 

Only invest in what you know

Munger said Berkshire Hathaway would often categorize stocks into one of three baskets when evaluating a potential investment.

“We have three baskets for investing: yes, no, and too tough to understand.”

The latter could explain why Munger and Buffet never invested in Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, but the takeaway message is that they avoided investing in what they didn’t know.

Buffet has previously admitted he and Munger — both regarded as tech skeptics — were “too dumb to realize” the potential of Amazon’s e-commerce business in the 1990s and underestimated the company’s founder, Jeff Bezos.

Berkshire didn’t invest in Microsoft or Google either. “We blew it,” Munger once said, reflecting on the firm’s decision not to invest in Google.

Despite that, Berkshire stuck to the sectors it knew inside out, such as the banking and food and beverage sectors, making huge profits from investments in Bank of America, American Express, Coca-Cola Co, and later Apple after initially deciding not to invest in it.

Munger and Buffet also mastered the art of valuation by interrogating a firm’s balance sheet before making an investment decision, which Munger once said is the only intelligent way to invest.

“All intelligent investing is value investing [...] You must value the business in order to value the stock.”

While blockchains and protocols can’t often be valued via a discounted cash flow model or other traditional methods, plenty of insights can be obtained from on-chain data — from the number of daily active users and transaction volumes to total value locked (relative to market cap) and net inflows and outflows, to name a few.

Temperament, not IQ, is a bigger contributor to investment success

Munger was never been one to dive headfirst into a new trend, preferring to stay on the more conservative side of investing.

He’s previously said many “high IQ” people are terrible investors because they have terrible temperaments. “Great investors,” on the other hand, tread with caution and think things through:

"The great investors are always very careful. They think things through. They take their time. They're calm. They're not in a hurry. They don't get excited. They just go after the facts, and they figure out the value. And that's what we try to do."

“You need to keep raw irrational emotion under control,” Munger said in another comment.

Related: Bitcoin is a ‘disgusting’ product that comes ‘out of thin air,’ says Charlie Munger

Having been in the investment arena for over 60 years, Munger says patience is also of great importance when accumulating wealth.

“The big money is not in the buying or the selling, but in the waiting.”

Build conviction and stomach volatility

Munger has seen Berkshire’s investment portfolio dip several times over the decades, such as the Black Monday crash in 1987, the financial crisis in 2007-2008 and most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic.

He once stressed that long-term investors must learn to stand by their investments when unfavorable macroeconomic conditions trigger market downfalls:

"If you're not willing to react with equanimity to a market price decline of 50% two or three times a century, you're not fit to be a common shareholder and you deserve the mediocre result you're going to get."

“There are going to be periods when there’s a lot of agony and other periods when there’s a boom,” Munger said in a separate comment. “You just have to learn to live through them.”

Munger was born on Jan. 1, 1924 — meaning he passed away 34 days shy of his 100th birthday.

"Berkshire Hathaway could not have been built to its present status without Charlie's inspiration, wisdom and participation," Buffett said in a statement.

Magazine: This is your brain on crypto: Substance abuse grows among crypto traders

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

Google to invest another $2B in AI firm Anthropic: Report

Google has already invested $500 million as part of the deal, while the outstanding $1.5 billion will be paid over time, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Google has doubled down on its artificial intelligence bets by investing another $2 billion into AI startup Anthropic, according to a new report.

Google has already invested $500 million upfront to Anthropic — a rival to ChatGPT creators OpenAI — and will pay off the remaining $1.5 billion over time, according to an Oct. 27 report by the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), which cited people familiar.

The mega-deal adds to Google’s $550 million investment into Anthropic earlier in the year.

Google Cloud also striked a multi-year deal with Anthropic a few months ago worth over $3 billion, WSJ revealed, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The news follows Amazon’s massive $4 billion investment into Anthropic late last month.

Anthropic is using much of these investments to train its AI systems, such as AI assistant Claude, in hopes that the firm can achieve the next big breakthrough in the AI industry.

On the other side of the fence is OpenAI, who have received more than $13 billion in funding from Microsoft alone since 2019 and continue to build more advanced versions of its own AI chat bot, ChatGPT. The popular chat bot amassed over 100 million users within the first two months of launching in November, which caught the attention of many venture capital firms around the world looking to invest in the space.

The co-founders of Anthropic, siblings Dario and Daniela Amodei, previously worked at OpenAI but left in 2021 following disputes with OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman over safety implications associated with building AI systems.

Related: Universal Music Group sues Anthropic AI over copyright infringement

Prior to Google and Amazon, Anthropic was largely bankrolled by former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, who invested about $530 million in Anthropic's in April 2022 — about seven months before FTX collapsed.

Anthropic’s surge in valuation has been viewed as a positive sign for FTX creditors in hopes that they will be compensated fully from FTX’s bankruptcy case.

Magazine: AI Eye: Real uses for AI in crypto, Google’s GPT-4 rival, AI edge for bad employees

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

Sam Bankman-Fried $500M Anthropic stake irrelevant to case, prosecutors say

United States prosecutors argue that the potential for FTX investors to be made whole through the high valuation of Anthropic cannot be presented by Sam Bankman-Fried’s legal team.

United States prosecutors have requested the court presiding over Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial to bar his legal team from making any arguments relating to the potential recovery of FTX customer assets that were invested in Anthropic.

Bankman-Fried invested $500 million in the artificial intelligence startup in April 2022. The U.S. government is set to present evidence that the Anthropic investment was made using misappropriated funds from FTX customer deposits.

Anthropic has made headlines in recent weeks as it looks to raise fresh funds from investors, courting the likes of Amazon and Google which could lead to a valuation of $20 to $30 billion.

U.S. prosecutors note that recent reports focused on the potentially high valuation of the company would also increase the value of Bankman-Fried’s investment, which could increase the potential recovery for FTX customers and other creditors in the FTX bankruptcy.

Related: Sam Bankman-Fried ordered ‘special privileges’ for Alameda account on FTX — Gary Wang

According to the letter submitted to Judge Lewis Kaplan, the legal teams representing the U.S. government and Bankman-Fried conferred over various issues that could be elicited during cross-examination of witnesses.

Bankman-Fried’s legal team plans to present evidence regarding the current value of the former FTX CEO’s $500 million investment in Anthropic last year.

The prosecutors believe that this evidence is intended to be used to support the argument that FTX customers and other victims would be fully compensated for their losses, which the court has previously indicated as an “impermissible purpose”:

“Such evidence would therefore be wholly irrelevant, and present a substantial danger of unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, and waste of time.”

The U.S. government maintains that its indictment against Bankman-Fried is centred on allegations of wire fraud using FTX customer deposits to make investments and other expenditures. The prosecutors argue that any mention of investments made that might have been profitable are ultimately immaterial and irrelevant to the charges that the jury is considering.

The U.S. government contends that while it plans to introduce evidence of Bankman-Fried’s alleged misappropriation of customer deposits that resulted in massive losses on FTX’s balance sheet, it does not intend to offer any evidence regarding the ultimate losses of victims once the FTX bankruptcy process is complete.

Cointelegraph journalist Ana Paula Pereira is in New York covering the Bankman-Fried trial. The first week of the trial has been centered on establishing how some $8 billion of FTX customer funds went missing from the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange.

Magazine: Blockchain detectives: Mt. Gox collapse saw birth of Chainalysis

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine

Bitcoin energy pivot achieves what ‘few industries can claim’ — Bloomberg analyst

Bitcoin's hash rate has continued to increase and yet its emissions intensity has been trending down, contrary to most other industries, Bloomberg analyst Jamie Coutts explained.

While the Bitcoin network has continued to expand over the years, the Bitcoin mining industry has yet to see a comparable increase in carbon footprint — an achievement that a Bloomberg analyst argues “few industries can claim.”

This, in turn, could drive the next wave of institutional investment.

On Sept. 20, Bloomberg crypto market analyst Jamie Coutts cited data showing that the sustainable energy mix for Bitcoin has continued to rise since 2021, and is now over 50%. This has led to the growth of emissions slowing relative to the network’s continued expansion.

“Bitcoin as a global monetary network is scaling while its carbon impact declines. Few industries can claim this achievement”

He said that the evolving relationship between Bitcoin network growth and the global push to transition from fossil fuels could “catalyze a wave of institutional and even sovereign investment capital.”

The analyst added that as energy constitutes well over 50% of mining's operational costs:

“The incentive to acquire the cheapest energy sources is contributing to the network's rising hash rate while simultaneously reducing the industry's emissions or carbon intensity.”

Energy emissions refer to the greenhouse gases and air pollutants emitted as byproducts from different energy sources and activities whereas carbon intensity measures how clean the electricity is.

On Sept. 18, Cointelegraph reported that the next generation of Bitcoin miners was focusing on alternative energy sources for efficiency.

However, the percentage of sustainable energy used in Bitcoin mining has been a point of debate, as Cambridge University's model (which hasn't been updated since January 2022) stated that mining from sustainable energy sources is just 37.6%.

Climate technology venture investor and activist Daniel Batten, however, argues that this is actually above 50%.

He said that the Cambridge figures were out because off-grid mining and methane mitigation are currently not included in its calculations.

Related: Bitcoin mining is becoming more environmentally friendly

Earlier this year, Batten reported that Bitcoin mining emissions intensity had fallen to its lowest-ever level.

Bitcoin Net Zero Emission Tracker. Source: batcoinz.com/@dsbatten

Moreover, he predicted that the Bitcoin network will become carbon neutral by December 2024.

“By 2030, the Bitcoin network is projected to mitigate 10x more emissions from the atmosphere than it produces, an astonishing achievement,” claimed Batten.

Magazine: Bitcoin is on a collision course with ‘Net Zero’ promises

Federal Reserve Ends Enforcement Action Against Crypto-Friendly Bank Silvergate After Levying $43,000,000 Fine