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Crypto.com CEO Shares Company’s Crypto Reserve Addresses in the Wake of FTX Bankruptcy

Crypto.com CEO Shares Company’s Crypto Reserve Addresses in the Wake of FTX BankruptcyOn Nov. 11, 2022, the CEO of Crypto.com Kris Marszalek shared the company’s proof-of-reserves addresses that hold leading crypto assets like bitcoin and ethereum. Marszalek says a “proof-of-reserves audit preparation is underway” and the wallet addresses shared are the company’s cold wallets. Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek Shares Company’s Cold Wallet Addresses, Promises Full Audit Soon […]

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Nexo dodges $219M bullet just days before FTX’s solvency crisis

The firm withdrew its remaining balance from FTX at the 11th hour and topped weekly fund outflows from the troubled exchange.

According to a Nov. 8 tweet, crypto lender Nexo currently has net zero exposure to the ongoing crisis embroiling cryptocurrency exchange FTX and crypto trading firm Alameda Research. Nexo also explained that it withdrew its entire balance of funds from FTX within “the past few days.”

Alex Svanevik, CEO of blockchain analytics platform Nansen, confirmed the story, providing data showing that Nexo withdrew over $219 million from FTX between Nov. 1 and Nov. 8. This also ranks Nexo as the top entity for funds outflow in the past week.

The firm appears to have dodged a major bullet, as on Nov. 8, FTX announced that it would halt all non-fiat consumer withdrawals. Continuing with its assessment of the situation, Nexo said that it had a small loan to Alameda Research representing less than 0.5% of its assets. The loan was fully collateralized by digital assets, which Nexo said were sold on Nov. 6. According to the firm, the trade resulted in “100% principal recovery and $0 losses for the company.”

Nexo has thus far sidestepped major industrywide risk events this year, including the collapse of Terra, hedge fund Three Arrows Capital and crypto lender Celsius. According to a real-time audit of the firm’s custodied assets, Nexo currently has more than $3.4 billion in consumer liabilities, with a collateralization ratio of more than 100%, making them fully backed by Nexo’s assets. The numbers are attested by United States accounting firm Armanino LLP, which is an auditor certified by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

Sony’s Soneium Might Be the Answer to Mass Web3 Adoption

Man and Machine: Nansen’s analytics slowly labeling worldwide wallets

Nansen CEO Alex Svanevik sat down with Cointelegraph for an exclusive interview during Token2049.

Public blockchains can be accessed and read by anyone but creating meaningful insights from this data is no mean feat. Millions of transactions are recorded across a variety of chains and layer-2 protocols, creating petabytes of data daily.

Services like Google transformed the early internet, accomplishing a significant engineering task by structuring and curating millions of websites to serve simple user queries. A handful of blockchain analytics platforms are looking to do the same, with Nansen distinguishing itself by processing on-chain data into a growing database of wallet labels.

Cointelegraph visited the Singapore office of the growing firm during Token2049 for a one-on-one with co-founder and CEO Alex Svanevik. Occupying a dedicated space in a co-working environment, the office was a buzz with employees that were in town from the company’s hubs in Lisbon, Miami, London and Bangkok.

Svanevik’s background is rooted in artificial intelligence. Graduating from the University of Edinburgh in 2010, the Norwegian’s dissertation focused on building models based on how children learn mathematics. His first foray into the world of work involved the establishment of a business-focused AI consultancy before moving into management consulting.

Nansen CEO and co-founder Alex Svanevik chats to Cointelegraph at their office in Singapore during Token2049 in September 2022.

A stint as a data scientist for a media company preceded his eventual move into the world of cryptocurrencies, as Svanevik was introduced to Ethereum in 2017. His first job for a cryptocurrency firm bankrolled by a $15 million initial coin offering lasted about a year, as the company became one of many to boom and bust post-2017.

Svanevik, Lars Krogvig and Evgeny Medvedev then teamed up to create Nansen AI, eyeing a gap in the market for an on-chain analytics tool aimed at investors:

“On the one hand, you had the free tools that all crypto investors had access to like Coinmarketcap and Etherscan and then on the other extreme, you had very expensive tools that were used exclusively by enterprises like Chainalysis.”

Nansen was formed in late 2019 to provide high-caliber analytics tools to investors delivering blockchain data and insights in real-time. Svanevik admitted that the platform originally attracted sophisticated cryptocurrency traders with large holdings but has since evolved to have a 50/50 split of retail and institutional users:

“We started with what you might call the ‘DeGens’ right before DeFi summer. A lot of them were using Nansen to navigate DeFi summer, which DeFi pools should you allocate your capital to, which tokens should you buy and so on.”

The ongoing cryptocurrency bear market, which is mirrored by traditional stock markets, leads Svanevik to believe that their sector will trend toward greater institutional use over the next two years. Individual investors may take a break from crypto and cut back on analytics services, but continued institutional investment efforts will demand data-driven insights:

“There’s a lot of companies, funds, operators, blockchain and crypto projects where the businesses that raise money are doing fine from a financial perspective. They’re not just going to wind down their operations because crypto tanks 70% you know, they still need to have really high quality analytics and information.”

Labeling wallets 

Nansen has slowly garnered a reputation for its wallet labeling efforts across the cryptocurrency ecosystem. Again, this hardware and labor-intensive endeavor is a testament to the platform’s joint AI and human efforts.

Svanevik estimated that Nansen scans nearly a petabyte of data daily from the variety of chains it keeps tabs on. This also accounts for nearly 20% of the company’s running costs, with Svanevik describing Nansen as “Google Cloud maximalists,” with the computing service their infrastructure platform of choice since inception.

Recent: What remains in the NFT market now that the dust has settled?

This speaks to the fact that despite public blockchains being available to all and sundry, there is inherent value in bringing order to data and gleaning valuable information from it. This is where Svanevik drew parallels to the platform and what Google did with the wider internet:

“If you think about Google as a search engine, every website is public, right? But this is a huge engineering task to actually structure, curate and serve up the relevant websites for your query. I think Nansen is somewhat analogous to that. But, we also have proprietary data that we enrich the public data with, which is kind of one of the things we’re known for.”

Nansen has over 130 million addresses that it has labeled with additional information that is directly accessible from blockchains. This allows the average user to find out which addresses are held by notable entities like Binance, Alameda, Celsius and Hodlnaut, as Svanevik highlighted.

When asked if the labeling feature was a focal point from the outset of Nansen’s existence, Svanevik noted that the first iteration of the platform was a database in which a user could look up addresses and get wallet labels:

“We realized that that alone is not very helpful. You need to combine it with the transactional data and you need to have some kind of user interface, something that’s valuable.”

The evolution of Nansen’s platform was a result of combining “man and machine” into processes and an architecture to compile the information. A network effect led to compounding returns, as identified wallets that have been labeled often lead to the identification of other wallets interacting with them. Ninety-nine percent of this work is still done by AI, while Nansen’s research team plays a role in connecting the dots for the remaining 1%.

The labeling of wallets and individuals has also been a point of much debate in the wider cryptocurrency ecosystem. Privacy is an inherent value touted by blockchain technology, but the transparency of public blockchains means that analytics tools can now identify who is in control of specific assets and wallets.

Svanevik said that Nansen is mainly focused on labeling projects and corporations rather than individuals, save for those that are deemed to be notable public figures:

“We don’t really put a lot of effort into tagging individuals. If we do, it’s typically because they’re noteworthy. They’re founders of projects, imagine, you know, Do Kwon or Vitalik, these are notable public figures. And we think it’s in the public interest to have them labeled.”

The Nansen co-founder also believes that the labeling of wallets belonging to major exchanges, institutions and individuals has led to people becoming more privacy-aware. Curating, compiling and serving up information in a convenient way is the goal, which in itself raises some ideological considerations:

“There is a fundamental dilemma with transparency and privacy blockchain, and something that people should think about and be mindful of.”

“Bad labels” vs “Good labels”

Nansen is one of a handful of well-known analytics firms that is bringing sense and order to blockchain data. Distinguishing the product offering of these similar firms, Svanevik highlighted platforms like Chainalysis and its focus on tracking illicit use of cryptocurrency as a key difference from what Nansen focuses on:

“So, Chainalysis tends to focus on illicit use of funds. What you might consider ‘bad labels.’ This is sanctioned, this is a scam, and so on. Whereas Nansen tends to focus on ‘good labels.’ This is a smart money address that you might want to follow because they made good investment decisions in the past, that this is a fund you might want to know about and so on.”

Given that 99% of cryptocurrency transactions are above board, Nansen chose to focus on crypto-native investors and operators while market participants like Chainalysis, Elliptic and PRM Labs cater more toward public institutions and government agencies.

Nevertheless, Nansen has played its part in analyzing major cryptocurrency events, including its role in tracing token movements linked to major firms during the infamous Terra crash in April 2022:

“Luna is one example where we had the labeled Terra data and we had Ethereum data to complement it because of the wrapping of Luna and the curve pools which actually triggered the collapse of Terra USD. But, also things like Hodlnaut and their involvement in it and our ability to look into that.”

Nansen’s tools and its recently launched research department helped journalists at Tech in Asia to piece together questionable practices by Hodlnaut, one of a number of cryptocurrency lending firms that shuttered in the wake of the Terra collapse in 2022.

Settled in Singapore

Cointelegraph’s in-depth conversation with Svanevik concluded with his take on Singapore as a cryptocurrency hub of Asia. Token2049 attracted thousands of attendees and certainly left the impression that the island nation, with its towering skyscrapers and futuristic buildings, is a center for the ecosystem.

Svanevik believes Singapore is in a unique position to be one of the world’s crypto hubs for a few different reasons. First and foremost, the country is “a place where finance meets tech,” which is in contrast to its closest Asian contender, Hong Kong, which Svanevik highlights as more finance-oriented.

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Regulators in Singapore are also aware of this fact and having participated as a panelist at a recent Monetary Authority of Singapore event, Svanevik highlighted tight controls having both positive and negative effects:

“In the time I’ve lived here, they have become more strict. They are not with open arms, inviting in everyone who does anything with crypto. So it is quite difficult to get a license here. There’s a long queue, they’ve received quite a fair amount of criticism for that.”

While it’s a tough environment to set up shop, the Nansen CEO believes it puts the country in a good position to be a respected jurisdiction to operate out of.

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64% of staked ETH controlled by five entities — Nansen

New report by Nansen delves into the distribution of staked ETH, respective holders and possible ramifications as The Merge looms.

A report from blockchain analytics platform Nansen highlights five entities that hold 64% of staked Ether (ETH) ahead of Ethereum’s highly anticipated Merge with the Beacon chain.

Ethereum’s shift from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake is set to take place in the coming days after final updates and shadow forks were completed in early September. The key component of The Merge sees miners no longer used as validators, replaced by stakers that commit ETH to maintain the network.

Nansen’s report highlights that just over 11% of the total circulating ETH is staked, with 65% liquid and 35% illiquid. There are a total of 426,000 validators and some 80,000 depositors, while the report also highlights a small group of entities that command a significant portion of staked ETH.

Three major cryptocurrency exchanges account for nearly 30% of staked ETH, namely Coinbase, Kraken and Binance. Lido DAO, the biggest Merge staking provider, accounts for the largest amount of staked ETH with a 31% share, while a fifth unlabelled group of validators holds 23% of staked ETH.

Lido and other decentralized on-chain liquid staking protocols were initially set up as a counter-risk to centralized exchanges accumulating the majority of staked ETH, given that these firms are required to comply with jurisdictional regulations.

Related: Experts weigh in on the Ethereum vulnerabilities after Merge: Finance Redefined

Nansen’s report stresses the need for Lido to be sufficiently decentralized in order to remain censorship resistant. Onchain data shows that ownership of Lido’s governance token (LDO) is concentrated, with groups of large token holders potentially carrying censorship risk.

“For example, the top 9 addresses (excl. treasury) hold ~46% of governance power, and a small number of addresses typically dominate proposals. The stakes for proper decentralization are very high for an entity with a potential majority share of staked ETH.”

Nansen also concedes that the LIDO community is actively seeking solutions to the potential risk of over-centralization, with initiatives including dual governance as well as a legally and physically distributed validator set proposed.

Given the ongoing slump in cryptocurrency markets, the majority of staked ETH is currently out of profit - down by ~71%. Meanwhile 18% of all staked ETH is held by illiquid stakers that are in-profit.

Nansen suggests that this category of stakers is the most likely to sell their ETH once withdrawals are enabled at the Shanghai upgrade. Fears of a major sell-off at The Merge are unwarranted, though, as ETH withdrawals will only be possible six to 12 months after The Merge.

“Even then, not everyone can withdraw their stake at once as there is an exit queue in place for validators similar to the activation queue of around six validators (usually 32 ETH each) per epoch (~6.4 min).”

Nansen notes that if all validators withdrew their staked ETH and stopped being validators, this would take around 300 days with over 13 million ETH staked.

The blockchain and analytics platform announced the launch of a new research and education arm alongside its Merge report, aimed at marrying its on-chain data analytics with masterclasses and research papers. Nansen Research Portal will also publish industry-expert research reports from various partners in the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry.

Sony’s Soneium Might Be the Answer to Mass Web3 Adoption

Crypto users spent $2.7B minting NFTs in first half of 2022: Report

Over 1 million unique wallet addresses were involved in the minting process, signaling that nonfungible token market activity remained strong.

According to new market research published by blockchain data firm Nansen, crypto users spent 963,227 Ether (ETH), worth $2.7 billion, minting nonfungible tokens (NFTs) on the Ethereum blockchain in the first half of 2022. An overwhelming majority of minting took place on OpenSea.io. 

Minting occurred across 1.088 million unique wallet addresses on Ethereum during this period, Nansen said. In comparison, about $107 million worth of NFTs were minted on BNB Chain and $77 million for Avalanche. A total of 263,800 unique wallet addresses were involved in NFT minting on the two blockchains.

Sixty-nine NFT collections launched on May 22 alone, resulting in daily minting volume surpassing 120,000 ETH. The total number of NFT collections minted and sold on Ethereum during the first half of the year was 28,986. Over two-thirds of the NFT projects raised less than 5 ETH, although 140 collections raised well over 1,000 ETH. Cumulatively, the top five NFT collections on Ethereum accounted for 8.4% of overall minting. These include Pixelmon-Generation 1, Moonbirds, VeeFriends Series 2, Genesis Box and World of Women Galaxy. 

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About half the amount raised stayed with NFT projects, while the other half circulated to non-entity wallets. However, Nansen could only trace direct transfers from the NFT projects’ addresses to the immediate transaction addresses. Subsequent transactions to other counterparties were not captured, thus limiting possible conclusions on how funds were used after NFT drops.

Aside from research, Nansen is also known for index aggregates, such as the NFT-500, that track the performance of the top 500 NFT collections on Ethereum for both the ERC-721 and ERC-1155 token standards. The firm secured $12 million in investments from Andreessen Horowitz last year. 

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NFT volume sees yearly low in June, but first-time buyers remain consistent

Nansen's NFT analysis draws into focus the numbers behind the market's first bearish cycle.

Blockchain analytics service Nansen has published its NFT Indexes Report for the second quarter of 2022, showing the market dynamics and quantitative performance of nonfungible tokens (NFTs) over the last three months. 

The report identifies and determines key factors contributing to the well-documented NFT bear market, including Ethereum-based volume and transactional metrics, as well as market capitalization, among others. 

Commencing with an analysis of NFT volume statistics on Ethereum measured per week across a monthly time frame, the report found that June recorded the lowest figure of the calendar year. 

Calculated across six marketplaces — OpenSea, LooksRare, Mints, X2Y2, 0x, and CryptoPunks — the NFT space, at least on an economic level, experienced a considerable depreciation throughout June to close to approximately 600,000 Ether (ETH) in trading per week.

In stark comparison, the previous month of May recorded around 1.3 million in weekly ETH volume, circa 900,000 of which occurred on OpenSea alone.

Monthly NFT volume. Source: Nansen

Despite this short-mid term deflationary environment, beacons of long-term optimism and assurances as to the long-term demand of the space flicker when looking at the charts of returning monthly users, and first-time buyers.

Related: NFT markets slump as weekly sales volume dives 30%

The former has encountered sizeable fluctuations since the turn of the year, from 55,000 returning monthly users in February to 35,000 in May, before rising once again to around 48,000 in June. 

First-time buyers on the other hand have remained relatively consistent at the 5,000 user mark since March this year, suggesting that the appetite for NFTs on Ethereum as a speculative mechanism, and medium of entertainment, has sustained a modest appeal.

Monthly NFT returning vs. first-time buyers. Source: Nansen

This long-term bullish thesis is corroborated by the monthly user count, which remains at the 650,000 level albeit a small decrease from last month's 700,000.

Related: Ethereum analytics firm Nansen acquires DeFi tracker Ape Board

Assessing indexes across the breadth of the NFT space, the report stated that all "recorded a bounce in June (when measured in ETH), except for Gaming NFTs at the end of Q2 2022."

Blue Chip-10, Social-100, and Metaverse-20 were the highest performance NFT ETH indexes across the month of June, with the latter making the most notable strides to reach in excess of 1,000 on the index scoring system.

Upon witnessing this slight uptick in index performance across June, Nansen stated, “NFTs’ trend reversal started earlier than the broad cryptocurrency market," before noting that a "risk-off sentiment is still highly evident in the NFT market and the limited liquidity [...] hints that this uptrend might not sustain.”

NFT indexes performance year-to-date ending in Q2. Source: Nansen

Sony’s Soneium Might Be the Answer to Mass Web3 Adoption

Seven Wallets Could Have Initiated TerraUSD (UST) De-Peg, According to Crypto Analytics Platform Nansen

Seven Wallets Could Have Initiated TerraUSD (UST) De-Peg, According to Crypto Analytics Platform Nansen

A market intelligence firm says seven crypto wallets may have been involved in the depegging of algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST) from the US dollar. According to digital assets insights firm Nansen, seven crypto wallets were spotted swapping large amounts of UST on the automated market-making platform Curve (CRV) on May 7th, right before the stablecoin […]

The post Seven Wallets Could Have Initiated TerraUSD (UST) De-Peg, According to Crypto Analytics Platform Nansen appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Sony’s Soneium Might Be the Answer to Mass Web3 Adoption

Nansen’s indexes reveal insightful trends in the NFT space

The platform's newly-introduced NFT-500:ETH index reports a 68.5% growth for the top-500 Ethereum NFT’s since the beginning of the year, despite experiencing a corrective 28.8% decline over the course of the past 30-days.

The research branch of Nansen, a popular blockchain data firm, has published a meticulous twelve-page report quantifying the performance of Ethereum-based nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, since the turn of the year, unveiling a number of compelling indications as to the economic and cultural future of the ecosystem.

Citing the profound impact of traditional financial indexes such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite, the report contemplates the vast potential for comparable models focusing on NFT's, arguing that both education and adoption could be significantly enhanced through their wide-scale utilization.

Last month, Nansen released six NFT indexes: Nansen NFT-500, Nansen Blue Chip-10, Nansen Social-100, Nansen Gaming-50, Nansen Art-20, Nansen Metaverse-20, all which according to the accompanying blog post, were designed to “raises the bar for quality financial infrastructure that supports the growing depth of the NFT industry.”

Nansen’s NFT-500 index aggregates the performance of the leading 500 NFT collections on Ethereum for both ERC-721 and ERC-1155, across ETH and USD market capitalization. These collections equate to 85.4% of the daily market volume since 1 January 2022.

Assessing the performance of the NFT-500 index across the period Jan 1st to March 9th 2022, it is revealed that the price of assets increased by 68.5% when denominated in ETH, and gained 20.9% when measured in USD.

In contrast, the performance of the ETH index of the last 30-days — as illustrated in the line graph below — stands in stark contrast, recording -28.8% and -38.5% in ETH and USD, respectively.

Upon our request for specific clarification as to the calculation method for the numerical figure seen on the y-axis, research analyst at Nansen, Louisa Choe stated that “the index level is the value of an investment relative to its value at one fixed point in time. The index started at 1,000 on 1/1/2022.”

Source: Nansen. NFT-500 Line Chart

Cointelegraph conversed with Choe to ascertain a deeper understanding into how Nansen anticipates the impending influx of quantitative data sources, such as NFT indexes, positively influencing the industry.

Choe stated that “we believe that reliable data (both on a broad market level, like through the index, and micro level on a wallet basis) can help market participants to better navigate this space”, before sharing their intended purpose for the service.

“A key motivation behind the index was to enable users to separate the hype from reality, or to enhance their due diligence process.”

Related: Blockchain analytics firm Nansen secures $12M in Andreessen Horowitz-led raise

In addition to providing NFT analytic dashboards and trend metrics for both retail and institutional investors across multiple timeframes, Nansen is also well-regarded for their decentralized finance (DeFi) services. In Nov 2021, the platform integrated data from Solana, Arbitrum, Fantom, and Avalanche, among others. 

In June 2021, the company raised $75 million in a Series B round led by early-growth venture capital firm Accel, alongside further participation from the likes of Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) and Tiger Global, among others, and succeeding their $12 million Series A just six months prior.

Sony’s Soneium Might Be the Answer to Mass Web3 Adoption