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Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta in Talks to Sell Assets in Crypto Project Diem: Report

Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta in Talks to Sell Assets in Crypto Project Diem: ReportMeta, formerly Facebook, is reportedly in talks with investment bankers to sell its assets in the cryptocurrency project Diem, formerly Libra. The diem USD stablecoin was supposed to be issued by Silvergate Bank but it failed to get regulatory approval. Meta Reportedly Seeking Buyers for Diem Crypto Project Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, formerly Facebook, is trying […]

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Zuckerberg’s Diem reportedly weighing sale after stablecoin plans falter

It looks like Meta is planning to jump ship, with inside sources saying that the crypto initiative is trying to sell its assets.

Meta-backed crypto initiative “Diem” is reportedly trying to sell its assets, seemingly calling time on Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s grand ambitions for a stablecoin to act as the internet’s currency.

Diem — which was previously known as Libra — is Meta Platform’s cryptocurrency initiative. According to insider sources speaking with Bloomberg, it is considering selling assets to return capital to its investors.

The sources said that Diem is in discussions with investment bankers to determine the best way to sell its intellectual property and cash out on whatever value the project has maintained.

It’s unclear how the company will be valued, and there is no guarantee that they will be able to find a buyer. According to the source, about a third of the venture is owned by Meta. The remainder is owned by members of the association and partners, which include Coinbase Global, Uber and Shopify.

Diem has sparked no shortage of controversies in its short time of existence since launching on June 18, 2019. Libra, as it was known at the time, intended to be maintained by a Switzerland-based consortium of companies called the “Libra Association.”

However, news of the project’s launch triggered immediate pushback from the U.S. government and regulators around the world, who cited concerns regarding privacy and monetary sovereignty. Both Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and former Libra head David Marcus testified before the House Financial Services Committee.

Related: New name, old problems? Libra’s rebrand to Diem still faces challenges

At one July hearing in 2019, Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio asked Marcus, "do you really think people should trust Facebook with their hard-earned money?"

“If our country fails to act, we could soon see a digital currency controlled by others whose values differ radically from ours,” Marcus responded.

Deterred by regulatory scrutiny, many partners began to abandon the project altogether, eventually including Marcus himself. It was at this point it rebranded to Diem, hoping to shake off the mass regulatory panic that drowned out Libra’s initial announcement.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Privacy or policy? Why Facebook’s crypto wallet, Novi, is facing resistance

Facebook’s Novi wallet lets users send and receive a dollar-pegged stablecoin, but not hold it.

The stablecoin market has grown exponentially over the last few months due to the numerous advantages blockchain-based versions of fiat currencies have. But, when Facebook launched its cryptocurrency wallet Novi using Paxos’ stablecoin, some United States senators were quick to oppose it. Are they concerned about user data or monetary sovereignty?

The social media giant which, according to its Q2 2021 report, has 2.9 billion monthly active users across all of its platforms, tapped Coinbase and Paxos for its Novi digital wallet project that kicked off its testing phase in the U.S. and Guatemala on Oct. 19.

The pilot program allows users in both countries to download the Novi digital wallet app for iOS or Android devices and fund their accounts with a debit card. The wallet allows them to send and receive Pax dollars (USDP), which are dollar-pegged stablecoins issued by Paxos.

Novi customer funds will be custodied with Coinbase, which manages over $180 billion in assets. A Facebook spokesperson told Cointelegraph that the pilot phase allows the company to evaluate the wallet’s core functions and showcase operational capabilities. 

Additionally, the spokesperson said that the company hasn’t dropped support for the permissionless payment system it’s developing called the Diem network and is, instead, waiting for a green light from Washington. After receiving regulatory approval, Facebook plans to launch Novi with Diem.

Bringing stablecoins to the masses

Facebook’s digital wallet Novi and its use of a stablecoin custodied by a central entity may go against the cryptocurrency space’s ethos of decentralization and self-sovereignty but could help move blockchain technology to the back-end, potentially allowing billions of people to use it every day without noticing.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, Justin Hartzman, CEO of Toronto-based cryptocurrency exchange CoinSmart, said he believes the launch of Novi is “definitely a major step towards mainstream adoption” of cryptocurrencies, given Facebook’s massive user base.

Hartzman said that on the negative side of Novi’s launch, users won’t be holding their own coins directly, but will instead “keep track of your USDP balances while they are held in custody by Coinbase.”

Sergey Zhdanov, chief operating officer of United Kingdom-based cryptocurrency exchange EXMO, echoed Hartzman’s sentiment on the potential advantages of the Novi project, pointing out that stablecoins today are the “main bridge between traditional finance and the cryptocurrency market.” Zhdanov told Cointelegraph:

“Not to mention the fact that stablecoins are often the only possible option for receiving and sending money in countries with an undeveloped banking system.”

Zhdanov said that stablecoins can become the foundation for “faster and cheaper payments, making it easier for people to pay for goods or store their money.” This will only happen, however, if stablecoins are not “stifled by overly strong regulation.”

Regulators have notably cracked down on Facebook’s original cryptocurrency ambitions, which involved launching a coin backed by a basket of fiat currencies. The project ended up changing course over a year after it was originally announced, complete with a rebrand from Libra to Diem.

Regulatory woes

Soon after Facebook launched its Novi wallet pilot, five senators called for the immediate closure of the cryptocurrency wallet. In a letter sent to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder and CEO, the five senators wrote that given the “scope of the scandals surrounding” the company, they were voicing their “strongest opposition to Facebook’s revived effort to launch a cryptocurrency and digital wallet.”

The letter came from the office of Senator Brian Schatz and was co-signed by senators Tina Smith, Richard Blumenthal, Sherrod Brown — who also chairs the Banking Committee — and Elizabeth Warren. 

In response, Diem told regulators it’s an independent organization, stating, “Diem is not Facebook. We are an independent organization, and Facebook’s Novi is just one of more than two dozen members of the Diem Association. Novi’s pilot with Paxos is unrelated to Diem.”

To Zhdanov, Facebook may not have any other choice but to “accept the request and disconnect the wallet.” He said that global regulators cracked down on Libra because they saw it as a threat to their monetary sovereignty, adding:

“It would be strange to imagine that the United States would easily agree to redirect huge cash flows to a private company with a huge audience.”

The CEO concluded that he hopes large industry players will be “able to influence what is happening and will not let the largest part of the cryptocurrency market die,” referring to stablecoins.

To CoinSmart’s Hartzman, regulators have been pressuring Facebook because of the company’s past, and not because of its involvement with the cryptocurrency sector or stablecoins. To him, even if Facebook caves to the pressure and shelves Novi, it may not have a major effect on the wider crypto market.

Shift to the metaverse

Speaking to Cointelegraph, CEO of trading platform Spectre.ai Kay Khemani pointed to something bigger than Facebook’s plans initially revealed: the company’s rebrand to focus not on social media, but the metaverse.

The metaverse is loosely defined, but it’s often seen as a digital reality combining aspects of social media, augmented reality and online gaming and cryptocurrencies together. Sources at Facebook have been claiming the company is getting ready to announce a rebrand meant to reflect its shift in priorities to the metaverse.

As The Verge reported, the move is meant to signal the company’s focus on being known for something other than social media. Mark Zuckerberg has said the metaverse will be a “big focus” for Facebook as he believes it “is just going to be a big part of the next chapter for the way that the internet evolves after the mobile internet.”

Khemani said that Facebook is an innovator that “changes paradigms” and that it could corner the market by owning both premier virtual reality hardware producer Oculus and having the largest social media user base out there.

These two things combined could make Facebook a major player in the metaverse, one that U.S. regulators may be more lenient on to “prevent the social media conglomerate from potentially relocating its operations outside the USA.” That move, Khemani said, would trigger an exodus from tech giants that would “undoubtedly harm the U.S. economy.”

As it stands, Facebook appears to be moving forward with both its cryptocurrency wallet Novi and its stablecoin project Diem. If the company manages to make the use of blockchain technology imperceptible, it could launch a cryptocurrency application that would be adopted by billions.

As Facebook is already working with Coinbase and Paxos, it wouldn’t be a stretch to believe Novi could, in the future, offer its users seamless access to other cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin (BTC). Veteran crypto users may nevertheless choose to stay away, as controlling their private keys is paramount.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

US Senators Urge Facebook to Discontinue Crypto Wallet Pilot Citing ‘Insufficient’ Ability to Keep Consumers Safe

US Senators Urge Facebook to Discontinue Crypto Wallet Pilot Citing ‘Insufficient’ Ability to Keep Consumers SafeA group of U.S. senators has asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to discontinue his company’s crypto wallet pilot and commit to not bringing the cryptocurrency Diem to market. “Facebook cannot be trusted to manage a payment system or digital currency when its existing ability to manage risks and keep consumers safe has proven wholly insufficient,” […]

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Facebook’s Novi Launches Pilot Program in Guatemala and US Using Pax Dollar

Facebook’s Novi Launches Pilot Program in Guatemala and US Using Pax DollarNovi, Facebook’s digital wallet, will launch a pilot program to test the functionality of the service in two countries: Guatemala and the U.S. The test will allow Novi to test all of its main functions and to evaluate what things need to be improved before launch. Novi will use pax dollars as the main currency […]

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Facebook ‘definitely looking’ at NFTs, says exec

“When you have a good crypto wallet like Novi will be, you also have to think about how to help consumers support NFTs,” Facebook’s David Marcus said.

As Facebook now finalizes the development of its proprietary cryptocurrency wallet, Novi, the social media giant could soon be supporting nonfungible tokens (NFT).

David Marcus, head of Facebook Financial and co-creator of Facebook-initiated cryptocurrency Diem, said Wednesday that the firm is “definitely looking” at possible ways to get involved in the NFT industry.

Facebook is considering multiple options to introduce NFT features, as it finds itself in a “really good position to do so,” Marcus said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “When you have a good crypto wallet like Novi will be, you also have to think about how to help consumers support NFTs,” he added.

Marcus said that the Novi crypto wallet is now “ready to launch” after a couple of years of development, but Facebook has decided to put its launch on hold until the firm gets approval from regulators to move forward with Diem. Facebook began work on the digital currency two years ago, initially under the name Libra. The social media giant would still consider launching Novi without Diem “as a last resort,” Marcus said, but he believes that both are necessary for Diem to be a success.

Related: Facebook’s David Marcus calls for 'fair shot' at crypto payments

Facebook released a white paper for its then-called Libra in June 2019, originally planning to peg the digital currency to several fiat currencies, including the United States dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen, the British pound and the Singapore dollar. Due to global regulatory pushback, the Libra Association has been struggling to launch its stablecoin ever since, eventually rebranding to the Diem Association and redesigning the digital currency to be pegged solely to the U.S. dollar and be regulated under the U.S. government.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Facebook’s David Marcus calls for “fair shot” at crypto payments

Marcus shares his honest thoughts on the crypto market, as well as declaring that Novi is ready to launch.

In a newly published Medium piece titled "Good stablecoins, a protocol for money, and digital wallets: the formula to fix our broken payment system", Facebook’s crypto pioneer David Marcus shared his views on topics of economic inequality, regulatory challenges and Novi’s proposed stablecoin solution.

Marcus has spent the last couple of years building Diem’s crypto wallet Novi – a interoperable digital wallet designed to integrate with the Diem payment system. It is meant to enable individuals and businesses worldwide to transfer money with ease, revolutionizing the age-old financial payments system once and for all.

In the piece, Marcus cites the 1.7 billion individuals unbanked across the world, as well as the reported 62 million Americans not maximising their financial potential with their current banking provider, as primary reasons to innovate this sector.

Marcus showed continued bewilderment at the lack of urgency shown by regulatory bodies and policy makers in the capturing of cryptocurrency and blockchain’s seismic potential:

“Here at home in America, … our payments infrastructure is arguably the worst of any developed country in the world, and increasingly falling behind, while China is moving with determination and haste to build an infrastructure that will make the digital yuan a challenger to the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.”

Ripple’s executive chairman voiced a similar opinion last year, writing that the US is losing the “tech cold war” with China to control the “next-gen financial system.”

Back in 2019, Diem (rebranded from Libra), proposed to create a native cryptocurrency for usage across Facebook’s owned platforms of Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger, and potentially rival the sovereignty of traditional fiat currencies like the US dollar.

This bold approach sparked outrage, prompting the team to quickly backtrack for further consideration of its business model. After various public back and forth over the past few years, Diem and Novi are now the two singular products set to launch in 2021.

Under Marcus’ vision, Novi remains keen to pursue the stablecoin method, believing that now is the optimal moment to combine an “underlying payments network that’s cheaper, faster, safer, interoperable and programmable” with an efficient crypto stablecoin.

“We’re a challenger in the payments industry, and we will offer free person-to-person payments domestically and internationally for people using the Novi wallet”, he claimed.

He also mentioned the need for Novi wallets to support NFTs, and noted that traditional contracts and titles would be replaced by smart contracts.

Related: The metaverse: Mark Zuckerberg’s Brave New World

Novi has reportedly “engaged in constructive consultations” with regulators and policy makers around the world, securing regulatory licenses or approvals with almost every US state.

On two occasions, Marcus wrote that despite well-documented trust issues surrounding Facebook’s data records, Novi deserves a “fair shot” in its financial ambition and that innovation should not be stifled, but rather embraced. Similar language was noted in his “benefit of the doubt” plea late last year.

In his concluding thoughts, Marcus shared his passionate belief that it would be “unreasonable to delay” the launch of the Novi wallet, though never revealed specific dates.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

How stablecoins stay stable, explained

Stablecoins use a variety of techniques to keep their value fixed, generally to a specific fiat currency like the U.S. dollar.

Can a stablecoin make Ethereum scalable?

Crypto-backed stablecoin Free TON aspires to provide a layer-two solution for Ethereum’s scalability problems.

With overloaded Ethereum increasingly choked by slow transaction speeds and widely overinflated gas prices, the Free TON stablecoin will be a “true layer-two solution with immense upside,” TON Labs added. “The application of Free TON’s second layer solution does much to remedy these problems. With the stablecoin, super cheap microtransactions can now be made and in a fraction of the time it would take on the original blockchain.”

That in turn opens up a wide variety of new uses, ranging from making small payments viable, in fields like payment and gaming, it said.

Along with the new bridge between Free TON and Ethereum built by Broxius and the enormous scaling potential of Free TON’s dynamic sharding, the forthcoming stablecoin’s biggest hurdle, according to Free TON, “will be getting users to recognize the qualities of the platform and proving that it can handle the high workloads it was built for.”

Learn more about Free TON

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What is a crypto-backed stablecoin?

Crypto-backed stablecoins use what amounts to overcollateralized loans to keep their value correctly pegged.

Crypto-collateralized stablecoins are backed by a basket of one or more other cryptocurrencies. As these are themselves highly volatile, these stablecoins are highly overcollateralized, and require purchasers to lock their collateral tokens into smart contracts that will be liquidated if the collateral drops in value too much. The collateral that can be collected by replacing the stablecoins. 

One of the best-known crypto-backed stablecoins is MakerDAO’s DAI, pegged to $1. However, as MakerDAO learned during the March 12, 2020 “black swan” event in which ETH’s value was cut in half in less than 24 hours after it got overwhelmed by liquidations, making sure the system can handle extreme conditions is vital — forcing it to implement substantial governance and auction management changes. That was successful, and the stablecoin’s market capitalization is more than $4.8 billion at this writing.

It is getting some competition this summer from Free TON, the fully decentralized blockchain project that took up the Telegram Open Network blockchain’s work once the messaging company that founded it pulled out after a legal battle. 

This summer, Free TON is planning to release a stablecoin sibling to its TON Crystal token. The stablecoin’s liquidity will be 100% backed by locked-in Ether, providing liquidity providers with potential returns. It will have “widespread application for services with recurrent subscriptions and high-risk offerings,” said TON Labs, the core developer of the Free TON project.

What is an algorithmic stablecoin?

These complex stablecoins use algorithms and smart contracts to protect price stability by increasing or decreasing supply, using market forces to maintain a level price.

The most complex version of the stablecoin is the algorithmic stablecoin, which is not backed by any kind of collateral. Rather, as the name suggests, its value is controlled by specialized algorithms and smart contracts that automatically reduce or increase the supply of tokens on the market to keep the token’s price stable with the fiat currency it tracks. If the market price starts to fall below the value of that dollar, euro or whatever, the algorithms will remove tokens from circulation. If it stablecoin’s value rises above that of the fiat, the system will dump new stablecoins into the market. 

Which is to say, the goal is essentially to create a decentralized and automated central bank that increases or decreases the stablecoin supply as needed to keep the price level.

What is an asset-backed stablecoin?

An asset-backed stablecoin is similar to a fiat-backed one, except that it holds physical assets like gold.

Commodity-backed stablecoins replace fiat currencies with a variety of other tangible collaterals, notably the traditional store of value, gold. But others are backed by baskets of precious metals, even Swiss real estate. Generally, these stablecoins are linked to a specific amount of the commodity and stored in a known location and frequently subject to outside audits — something which fiat stablecoin Tether long avoided. 

Pax Gold — an ERC-20 created by Paxos CEO Charles Cascarilla — is backed by one fine troy ounce of London Good Delivery gold stored in Brinks’ LBMA-approved gold vault in the U.K.’s capital, and can be redeemed for the precious metal. Digix Gold, on the other hand, is one gram of 99.99% fine gold stored in Singapore and audited quarterly.

What is a fiat-backed stablecoin?

A fiat-backed stablecoin keeps prices level by storing fiat backing each coin on a one-to-one basis.

The first and simplest stablecoin is fiat-backed, notably the U.S. dollar, as well as the euro, yen and others, at a one-to-one ratio. So long as the underlying currency — or basket of currencies as Libra originally proposed — stays stable, the stablecoin will maintain its value. They are, essentially, backed by the “full faith and credit” of the fiat issuer, with a value defended by that nation’s central bank.

Far and away the largest of these is Tether, with a market capitalization of $62.2 billion at this writing. But other leading stablecoins include Circle and Coinbase’s USD Coin ($23 billion), Binance USD ($9.6 billion), and DAI ($4.8 billion). 

Tether long claimed to be backed 100% by U.S. dollars, one to one. After the New York Attorney General sued Tether, it was revealed that 26% was an IOU from the Bitfinex exchange, a sister company. Tether recently revealed its “cash reserves” contain about 3% cash.

Are stablecoins controversial?

While bankers and authorities are seeing stablecoins as a very useful tool, the potential of some tokens to compete with national currencies makes regulators very wary.

The answer is, it depends on how it’s used and who’s using it. In June 2019, Facebook launched its Libra stablecoin project — since renamed Diem to ditch a toxic brand. The idea was to create a national currency-backed stablecoin that all of the social media network’s 2.3 billion members could use for payments. 

Within days, the responses ranged from very cautious with calls for strict regulation to outrage and warnings of financial doomsday from elected officials, central bankers, regulators, and international financial organizations around the world calling Libra a threat to national sovereignty and world financial stability. It’s been watered down and is moving ahead, but big barriers remain. 

On the flipside, in January 2021, then U.S. acting comptroller of the currency Brian Brooks issued a guidance letter specifically authorizing banks to use stablecoin networks to facilitate payments and to run nodes, while the EU is working on a broader cryptocurrency regulatory framework that would include stablecoins. 

So, a stablecoin run by a deeply distrusted and dominant social media network that is seen to be trying to create a global stablecoin capable of bypassing and undermining national currencies? Beyond controversial. Stablecoins used by banks with no interest in disrupting the current world financial order? Not so much.

What is a stablecoin?

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that use a variety of methods to keep their value fixed.

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to maintain the price stability of (strong) fiat currencies while maintaining the security, speed, and low cost of virtual asset transactions. This was initially done to minimize the impact of the price volatility of cryptocurrencies in trading and as a bridge to mainstream spending and financial institutions. Now they are beginning to branch out into mainstream banking to ease the cost and burdens of making payments.

There are four basic types of stablecoins. The three centralized stablecoins are backed by fiat currencies, commodities or cryptocurrencies, while decentralized ones rely on algorithms and smart contracts to automatically maintain value.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Facebook-Backed Crypto Project Diem Moves to US, Unveils New Launch Plan

Facebook-Backed Crypto Project Diem Moves to US, Unveils New Launch PlanFacebook-backed cryptocurrency project Diem, formerly Libra, is moving from Switzerland to the U.S. In collaboration with Silvergate Bank, the association, which oversees the development of the diem cryptocurrency, has unveiled a new launch plan. Facebook-Backed Stablecoin Has New Launch Plan The Diem Association announced Wednesday a partnership between Diem Networks U.S. and Silvergate Capital Corporation […]

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital

Diem parters with Silvergate bank to launch stablecoin in the US

Facebook-initiated Diem Association announces a new model of its upcoming stablecoin that is set to be issued by California state-chartered bank Silvergate.

Facebook-backed digital currency project, the Diem Association, has partnered with cryptocurrency-friendly bank Silvergate to launch a stablecoin pegged to the United States dollar.

Diem announced Wednesday a new model of its upcoming stablecoin, relocating its main operations from Switzerland to the United States and withdrawing its application for a payment system license from the Swiss Financial Markets Authority.

The association, which comprises of 26 financial firms including Nasdaq-listed cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, is now planning to move forward with its USD stablecoin plans through Silvergate bank, which is set to be the issuer of the Diem USD and will manage the Diem USD reserve.

Diem Networks U.S., Diem’s wholly-owned subsidiary, will run the Diem Payment Network, a permissioned blockchain-based payment system facilitating Diem stablecoin transactions.

While Silvergate is a California state-chartered bank and a member of the Federal Reserve, Diem Networks U.S. is seeking to register as a money services business with the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the announcement notes.

“We believe in the future of U.S. dollar backed stablecoins and their potential to transform existing payment systems,” Silvergate CEO Alan Lane said. “We're inspired by Diem's technology and commitment to building a regulatory compliant payment system that offers a safe and secure way to move money,” he added.

“While our plans take the project fully within the U.S. regulatory perimeter and no longer require a license from FINMA, the project has benefited greatly from the intensive licensing process in Switzerland,” Diem CEO Stuart Levey noted.

The Diem Association did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, Facebook released a white paper for its Libra cryptocurrency in June 2019, originally planning to peg the digital currency to several fiat currencies including the U.S. dollar, euro, the Japanese yen, the British pound and the Singapore dollar. Due to global regulatory pushback, Facebook-backed Libra Association has been struggling to launch its stablecoin ever since, eventually rebranding to the Diem Association in an apparent renewed effort to launch the digital currency.

The news comes shortly after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg apparently hinted at being a Bitcoin holder earlier this week, announcing that two of his pet goats were named “Bitcoin” and “Max.” Some crypto industry observers including CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju subsequently suggested that the move could be a sign of soon-to-come announcements of Bitcoin purchases from companies like Facebook.

Ethena secures $100 million in funding round backed by Franklin Templeton, F-Prime Capital, and Dragonfly Capital