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Cumberland Earns Bitlicense, Bolstering Institutional and OTC Crypto Services

Cumberland Earns Bitlicense, Bolstering Institutional and OTC Crypto ServicesAccording to an X post on Monday, the cryptocurrency trading division of DRW Holdings, known as Cumberland, has been granted a Bitlicense by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS). Cumberland DRW Secures Bitlicense Cumberland, a trading desk that provides institutional over-the-counter (OTC) liquidity for numerous cryptocurrencies, now holds a Bitlicense. This business […]

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Paxos Lays Off 65 Employees Following Yield-Bearing Stablecoin Launch

Paxos Lays Off 65 Employees Following Yield-Bearing Stablecoin LaunchAccording to sources familiar with the matter, the stablecoin issuer Paxos is cutting 20% of its workforce. This development comes on the heels of Paxos International’s announcement of its yield-bearing stablecoin. Paxos Trims Workforce by 20% Bloomberg reports that Paxos has laid off 65 employees, which accounts for 20% of its staff. The information was […]

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

Coin-for-Coin Payback — Gemini Announces Full Recovery of Crypto Assets for Earn Users After Genesis Settlement

Coin-for-Coin Payback — Gemini Announces Full Recovery of Crypto Assets for Earn Users After Genesis SettlementGemini has reached a settlement with Genesis and other creditors within the Genesis bankruptcy proceedings, promising a full in-kind return of digital assets to Earn program users. This resolution, pending bankruptcy court approval, signifies a major victory for users, with over $1.8 billion in assets set to be returned. Potential Full Crypto Asset Recovery for […]

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

Gemini Agrees to Over $1 Billion Restoration in Settlement With New York Regulators

Gemini Agrees to Over  Billion Restoration in Settlement With New York RegulatorsIn an agreement with the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS), the Winklevoss-led cryptocurrency exchange Gemini has committed to returning over $1 billion to its customers. The settlement, which also includes a $37 million fine, comes as a significant development for the exchange amidst several ongoing legal challenges with big-name crypto firms and heightened […]

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

NYDFS calls for public feedback on proposed crypto regulatory guidance

The proposals included stricter standards on risk assessments for crypto firms as well as a framework for designating token projects to the NYDFS' greenlist

The New York State Department of Financial Services, or NYDFS, has called on the public to provide feedback to a proposal aiming to strengthen regulatory requirements for crypto firms operating in the state.

In a Sept. 18 notice, the NYDFS said Superintendent Adrienne Harris had released proposals on guidance for “enhanced criteria for coin-listing and delisting procedures” in addition to a framework "for designating coins or tokens” to the regulator’s greenlist. The proposal included recommendations for heightened standards focusing on illicit finance, legal, reputational, market and liquidity, and regulatory risks.

“Since joining DFS, I have made it a priority to ensure the Department’s regulatory and operational capabilities keep pace with industry developments to protect consumers and markets,” said Harris. “In less than two years, we’ve built our team to over sixty experienced professionals, created and enhanced consumer and industry safeguards, and engaged with policymakers around the world.”

Related: 19% of New Yorkers own cryptocurrency: Coinbase report

At the time of publication, the NYDFS greenlist for tokens included Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), and several stablecoins issued by Gemini and PayPal. The announcement also followed the adoption of rules allowing the NYDFS to assess supervisory costs from licensed crypto firms operating in New York.

Since 2015, crypto firms operating in New York have largely been required to apply for a BitLicense through the NYDFS. The regulator’s list showed trading platform eToro was the most recent to receive a license in February, making more than 30 firms licensed in the state.

Magazine: Crypto City: Guide to New York

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

Fed, NYDFS assess their supervisory performance after March’s big bank failures

Internal reviews of the supervision of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank have been released, showing weaknesses on the part of the banks’ regulators as well as management.

Bank regulators in the United States have turned from introspection to confession after the high-profile bank failures in March. The New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) published its internal review of Signature Bank supervision on April 28, the same day the U.S. Federal Reserve Board released its review of the handling of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB).

The banks closed within days of each other, with California regulators shuttering SVB on March 10, and the NYDFS moving against Signature Bank on March 12. Crypto-friendly Silvergate Bank had preceded them, announcing its voluntary liquidation on March 8 and setting off runs on the banks. The string of failures set off shockwaves serious enough that U.S. President Joe Biden felt the need to tweet a response.

The Fed review started with findings that had been noted by commentators: the bank’s management failed to manage its risks, and supervisors “did not fully appreciate the extent of the vulnerabilities” of the bank as it “grew in size and complexity, even though “SVB’s foundational problems were widespread and well-known.”

Furthermore, supervisors failed to act quickly enough on the vulnerabilities they did identify. Annual Capital, Asset Quality, Management, Earnings, Liquidity, and Sensitivity to Market Risk (CAMELS) exams had uncovered deficiencies in 2021 and 2022, but changes in the supervisory team and the bank’s rapid growth got in the way of handling them, and:

“The supervisory approach at Silicon Valley Bank was too deliberative and focused on the continued accumulation of supporting evidence in a consensus-driven environment.”

Regulatory easing due to the passage of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA) in 2019 led to a “tailoring approach” to regulating many large banks, including SVB. Supervisory policy was changed at the same time to place greater emphasis on due process, slowing down regulatory action, according to the report.

The Fed conceded, however, “While higher supervisory and regulatory requirements may not have prevented the firm’s failure, they would likely have bolstered the resilience of Silicon Valley Bank.”

The NYDFS noted that crypto-friendly Signature Bank had also experienced rapid growth in the years immediately before its closure. Like SVB, it had a high portion of deposits that were not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which caps its coverage at $250,000 per account.

Related: ‘Ludicrous’ to think Signature Bank’s collapse was connected to crypto, says NYDFS head

“The Bank’s growth outpaced the development of its risk control framework,” the New York regulators wrote. Risk management issues were identified at Signature Bank in annual reviews in 2018 and 2019, but they were only partially addressed.

There were problems relating to supervision as well. “Internal staff constraints limited DFS’s ability to staff examinations adequately,” the report said. Also “DFS’s internal processes need clearer guidelines for when examiners need to escalate regulatory concerns or instances in which a bank fails to remediate findings in a timely fashion.” In addition, the mechanisms of the review process within the NYDFS were “cumbersome” and lacked deadlines. In addition:

“[The NY]DFS will consider whether banks need to conduct table-top exercises demonstrating their operational readiness to collect and produce accurate financial data at a rapid pace and in a stress scenario.”

The NYDFS presented its decision to close down Signature Bank as the culmination of a process that began with the bankruptcy of crypto exchange FTX in November. Due to its crypto-friendly reputation, the NYDFS began requiring “provide periodic liquidity updates,” which were made daily in January and switched to monitoring calls on March 8.

The NYDFS worked with federal regulators over the weekend of March 11-12 to assess Signature Bank’s viability after it “narrowly survived the immediate deposit run” of the preceding week, and decided on March 12 that its liquidity was inadequate and its reporting was unreliable. So it possession of the bank and appointed the FDIC as receiver.

Related: Let First Republic and Credit Suisse burn

The instability in the banking sector did not stop with Signature Bank's closing. Swiss Credit Suisse was subject to a rescue buyout by UBS a week later. The U.S. bank First Republic, which also was characterized by a high volume of uninsured deposits, began to decline in share price in March as well. On April 28, its share price fell 43.3% to $3.51, from $119.74 on March 1, leading to speculation of an FDIC takeover of it as well.

Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

NYDFS adopts regulation to assess supervisory costs for licensed crypto firms

Since 2015, crypto firms operating in the state of New York have largely been required to apply for a BitLicense to offer services.

The New York State Department of Financial Services, or NYDFS, has adopted a regulation that will allow the government agency to assess supervisory costs from licensed crypto firms operating in the state.

In an April 16 announcement, the NYDFS said the supervisory costs enforced by the new regulation would be used for “adding top talent to its virtual currency team”. The government department will assess costs for the supervision and examination of crypto firms operating in the state with a BitLicense.

“This regulation provides the Department with additional tools and resources to regulate the virtual currency industry now and in the future as innovators create new products and use cases for digital assets,” said NYDFS Superintendent Adrienne Harris.

Crypto firms operating in the state of New York are largely required to apply for a BitLicense, a requirement for companies since 2015. The NYDFS proposed adopting the regulation to assess costs in December 2022, after which time it met with “key stakeholders” and received feedback. According to the regulator, the proposed rule was added in response to the state’s Financial Services Law not including such a provision on the assessment of operating costs.

Related: New York Assembly introduces crypto payments bill for fines, taxes

The NYDFS listed 33 companies involved in crypto and blockchain operating in the state under a virtual currency license, limited purpose trust charter, or money transmitter license as of Feb. 10. New York City Mayor Eric Adams suggested the state scrap the BitLicense regime in April 2022, claiming the requirements stifled innovation and economic growth.

Magazine: Crypto City: Guide to New York

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

With Close to 10 Billion Stablecoins Redeemed, BUSD’s Supply Drops to Lowest Level Since April 2021

With Close to 10 Billion Stablecoins Redeemed, BUSD’s Supply Drops to Lowest Level Since April 2021Statistics recorded on April 15, 2023, show that the number of coins in circulation for the stablecoin BUSD dropped below the 7 billion range to 6.68 billion, marking the lowest number of BUSD in circulation since April 2021. Furthermore, data indicates that the supply of BUSD has shrunk by 19.8% over the past 30 days. […]

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

Signature Bank Was Shuttered Due to Liquidity Issues, Not Crypto, Says Top New York Financial Regulator: Report

Signature Bank Was Shuttered Due to Liquidity Issues, Not Crypto, Says Top New York Financial Regulator: Report

Signature Bank’s high-profile closure last month happened due to liquidity issues rather than a regulatory agenda against crypto, according to Adrienne A. Harris, the superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS). Harris spoke at the Chainalysis Links Conference this week, and told onlookers that it is a “really ludicrous” idea that […]

The post Signature Bank Was Shuttered Due to Liquidity Issues, Not Crypto, Says Top New York Financial Regulator: Report appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States

‘Ludicrous’ idea that Signature Bank’s collapse was connected to crypto, says NYDFS head

The superintendent of the New York Department of Financial Services reportedly dismissed claims the U.S. government was working to implement ‘Operation Choke Point 2.0’.

Adrienne Harris, superintendent of the New York Department of Financial Services, or NYDFS, has reportedly said the closure of the crypto-friendly Signature Bank in March had nothing to do with exposure to digital assets.

According to an April 5 report from The Wall Street Journal, Harris made the remarks at the Chainalysis Links conference in New York City. She reportedly described the events leading up to the failure of Signature as a “new-fashioned bank run”, dismissing any relation to crypto exposure as “ludicrous.”

Harris also reportedly pushed back against the idea that the United States government was actively working to limit certain industries’ access to U.S. banking services in what many have dubbed ‘Operation Choke Point 2.0’. The original Operation Choke Point, implemented by the U.S. Department of Justice from 2013 to 2017, targeted banks suspected to have exposure to companies potentially involved in fraud or money laundering.

The NYDFS took control of Signature Bank on March 12, claiming it was protecting the U.S. economy from “system risk.” The bank was the latest failure following the collapse of the crypto-friendly Silvergate Bank and Silicon Valley Bank.

Related: Tether ‘unequivocally reiterates’ no exposure to Signature Bank

Former House of Representatives member and Signature board member Barney Frank said there had been no issue with the bank’s solvency at the time of the seizure, suggesting regulators were making a “very strong anti-crypto message.” Some lawmakers including Colorado Senator Michael Bennet said Signature did not make “prudentially sound” decisions by associating with crypto firms.

Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom

Latam Insights Encore: El Salvador Is Uniquely Positioned to Become the Microstrategy of Nation States