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While Global Markets Get Spooked by Covid and a Hawkish Fed, Stocks and Crypto Rebound After Musk Buys Twitter

While Global Markets Get Spooked by Covid and a Hawkish Fed, Stocks and Crypto Rebound After Musk Buys TwitterWall Street suffered Monday morning as the major U.S. stock indexes dropped further, building on losses gathered last week. Reports indicate that investors are concerned about the upcoming Federal Reserve rate hikes and China’s recent Covid-19 outbreak. As equities floundered on Monday, the crypto economy slid under the $2 trillion mark and gold prices dropped […]

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Bitcoin follows fresh US stocks dive as analysis ‘expects’ BTC price to take $37.5K liquidity

It's looking like a dismal end to the week for both crypto and equities alike with losses increasing.

Bitcoin (BTC) faced selling pressure at the Wall Street open on April 22 as markets began a rerun of April 21's losses.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

No let-up for stocks or crypto as losses mount

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD following a grimly familiar course on April 22, hitting lows of $39,197 on Bitstamp.

The previous day had cost bulls $40,000 support, a level tha had yet to cement itself as a meaningful line in the sand at the time of writing.

For analytics resource Material Indicators, it was now a case of watching bids getting filled lower down in exchange order books.

Between spot and $37,500, there was approximately $100 million in bids waiting on Binance, according to an accompanying chart.

"Expecting it to get filled, but watching to see if BTC/USDT liquidity moves to the active buy zone or the buy zone moves to the orders resting on the Binance order book," Material Indicators commented.

BTC/USD order book data chart. Source: Material Indicators/ Twitter

U.S. equities showed no signs of slowing their new rout, with the S&P 500 down 1.75% in the first ninety minutes' trading and the Nasdaq 100 shedding 1.43%.

In Europe, the picture was made worse by the bond market sell-off reaching what markets commentator Holger Zschaepitz called "historic proportions."

Traders "underestimating failed breakout" 

Traders were broadly also in a "wait and see" mode when it came to Bitcoin. Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe told Twitter followers that BTC/USD was now in a "crucial" area.

Related: Nasdaq has dotcom crash 'deja vu' says trader as Bitcoin correlation rises

"The level has hit. Let's see how the market will respond from this area on Bitcoin," he wrote in his latest update.

Meanwhile, popular trader Cheds took a more ominous line while examining multi-week price performance.

Due to failing to crack the 2022 trading range for good earlier this month, the outlook for Bitcoin may now be more ominous than many cared to believe, he warned on April 22.

Bitcoin has no shortage of bearish mid-term price predictions, among them that of former BitMEX CEO, Arthur Hayes, who expects $30,000 to return by June.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Bitcoin retests $40K after stocks sell-off meets Fed balance sheet bust

Macro-induced mayhem costs Bitcoin bulls dearly as Ethereum also loses key $3,000 support.

Bitcoin (BTC) headed toward $40,000 on April 22 after a major retracement in equities speared bulls' latest advance.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Bitcoin sheds $3,000 on U.S. stocks plunge

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD being kept firmly under $41,000 Friday after volatility during the latest Wall Street trading session.

Thursday had seen United States markets react sharply to "surging" Treasury yields, the Nasdaq 100 dropping 2% and taking highly-correlated crypto down with it.

With that, Bitcoin briefly lost over $3,000 in a matter of hours, wicking to around $39,800 before recovering.

Another macro trigger meanwhile came in the form of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet reduction finally getting underway. Also set to pressure stocks and risk assets, the move to combat forty-year record inflation was long priced in but was not visible in the data until now.

"Looks as if Fed balance sheet expansion has stopped shortly before the $9tn mark is reached," markets commentator Holger Zschaepitz summarized on the day.

"Fed's total assets have shrunk by $9.6bn to $8,955.9bn. The balance sheet is now equal to 37.3% of the US's GDP vs ECB's 83% and BoJ's 137%."
Fed balance sheet chart. Source: Holger Zschaepitz/ Twitter

As Cointelegraph reported, the European Central Bank (ECB) has yet to show signs of reducing its own balance sheet, itself near $10 trillion.

Comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell served to add additional angst to sentiment, hinting at further key interest rate hikes for May.

Crypto traders thus remained cautious, with several noting that the week's run to near $43,000 had not been accompanied by suitable volume, suggesting its validity was suspect from the start.

"Low volume pumps are not to be trusted. They are used for distribution or keeping sellers in control," popular Twitter trader Roman warned.

"We’ve seen many instances of low volume pumps over the last 6 months that all failed at major resistance. Be careful." 

That six-month period has seen Bitcoin bulls fail to shift a stiff trading range despite multiple surges within that range.

Ethereum risks return to $2,600

Thursday's rout meanwhile spelled additional pain for altcoins, with Ether (ETH) dropping under $3,000.

Related: GBTC premium nears 2022 high as SEC faces call to approve Bitcoin ETF

ETH/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

In classic style, the top ten cryptocurrencies by market cap copied Bitcoin's weakness with daily losses of around 4%.

For trader and analyst Rekt Capital, the Ethereum retest was of significance, opening up the door to a deeper comedown to $2,600.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

US dollar strength mimics 2020 Coronavirus crash — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

USD runs the show behind the scenes as the Easter weekend sparks pain for Bitcoin bulls.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week with all quiet on traditional markets but a storm brewing in crypto.

As the Easter long weekend continues for the United States and much of Europe, traders are keenly eyeing whether Bitcoin can stay stable for four days without professional investor involvement.

So far, the picture has not favored bulls — since Good Friday, BTC/USD has been characterized by sideways action punctuated by episodes of sudden volatility to the downside.

That continued overnight into Monday, and now, $40,000 is once again out of reach. What will the atmosphere be like in the coming days?

Cointelegraph takes a look at the potential market mover factors in line to influence Bitcoin price performance this week.

Holiday cheer costs Bitcoin $40,000

It’s a frustrating time for Bitcoin spot traders. Without traditional market guidance, Bitcoin faces four days of “out-of-hours” trading, meaning that liquidity is thinner than normal.

This has a habit of making any sudden price moves ripple out and cause large than normal knock-on effects.

Should buyer support at a specific price be pulled, for example, panic can set in more easily when there are fewer participants — and less cash — on hand to mitigate it.

Such a scenario has played out several times over the Easter weekend already. While mostly trading sideways, BTC/USD saw episodes of sudden downside from which it struggled to recover.

Overnight on Sunday, the market dived over $1,000 in a matter of minutes, including an $800 loss in a single one-minute candle.

With it came the loss of support at $39,000, data from on-chain monitoring resource Material Indicators confirms.

On Friday, Material Indicators noted the block of buyer support immediately below spot price, this now absent and potentially opening up the possibility of a much deeper retracement to come, involving Bitcoin’s 200-week moving average (200 WMA).

The 200 WMA currently sits at just above $21,000, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows. The level is highly significant, never being broken by spot price during bear markets and continually rising throughout Bitcoin’s history.

“50, 100 and 200 Weekly MA are key levels,” Material Indicators meanwhile continued in Twitter comments.

“Bull Markets happen when price is above the 50 WMA. The 100 may give a relief rally, but since 2011 it's never held in a downtrend. The 200 WMA has always marked the bottom + it has confluence with the lifetime support channel.”

The 100 WMA “relief rally” site is at $35,740 as of Monday.

BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp) with 100, 200 WMA. Source: TradingView

Despite the potentially unreliable holiday price performance, few appeared surprised by the idea that crypto markets en masse are primed for fresh losses.

Popular trader Pierre flagged multiple targets hit across altcoins Monday as BTC wobbled, having previously warned that such a downmove would be the “nail in the coffin” for weak tokens.

Macro has plenty of surprises up its sleeve

With Western markets closed until Tuesday, there is little scope for a macro-induced move on crypto.

Asian markets were mostly flat throughout Monday, with the Hong Kong Hang Seng up a modest 0.67% and the Shanghai Composite Index conversely down 0.67% at the time of writing.

Global financial markets, however, are anything but unremarkable this month, as uncharted territory defines the current setup. Surging inflation coupled with rock-bottom interest rates is one such novel feature.

For markets commentator Holger Zschaepitz, the focus was on the international bonds markets, these having wiped $6.4 trillion off their value since hitting all-time highs last year.

“The biggest bond bubble in 800yrs continues to deflate after rising US inflation data (CPI & PPI) shake up the bond markets. The value of global bonds has dropped by another $400bn this week, bringing total loss from ATH to $6.4tn,” he commented alongside a chart.

Global bonds chart. Source: Holger Zschaepitz/ Twitter

Japan’s central bank balance sheet expansion, which Zschaepitz previously called the greatest monetary policy experiment “in history,” is meanwhile delivering fresh phenomena in the form of spiking inflation.

Inflation is a double-edged sword for Bitcoiners, the tide of rising prices and central bank reactions set to put serious pressure on both stocks and risk assets at first. Only later on, various theories argue, will the tide turn in favor of Bitcoin as a store of value.

“The contrast between high equity prices and tame commodities on a 10-year basis may point to greater odds of decreases for stocks,” Bloomberg Intelligence senior commodities strategist Mike McGlone, a proponent of that perspective, wrote in his latest update last week.

“The S&P 500 was up about 280% as of the end of 2021, and our rate-of-change graphic shows the index as a top potential reversion risk vs. the Fed.”

DXY faces "do or die" decision

One yardstick for the traditional economy is meanwhile at what could turn out to be a crucial inflection point.

The U.S. dollar currency index (DXY), a key measure of dollar strength, is facing a choice between continued upside and a major correction as it lingers at the 100 points threshold.

DXY 1-week candle chart. Source: TradingView

It was a long time coming — the last time that DXY was so bullish was in April 2020 at the height of the coronavirus market shock.

DXY has a habit of running in opposition to Bitcoin price, and while that inverse correlation has broken down to some extent in the past year, the odds remain that a major drawdown for USD would be a benefit to BTC.

“If we see the DXY roll over again at this trendline be prepared for a strong send,” markets commentator Johal Miles summarized Sunday.

“Naturally the FED has key importance here, as any change of course will put pressure on the dollar.”

An accompanying chart highlighted the impact of DXY retracements on BTC/USD since late 2014.

DXY vs. BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Johal Miles/ Twitter

On Monday, however, there were no real signs of a reversal, and a brief dip in DXY last week — which coincided with an equally brief rally in BTC — was soon mitigated entirely.

“Many calling for corrections on DXY but still looking bullish,” popular chartist Jesse Olson added on the day.

Exchange balances lowest since mid-2018

What are the more bullish signals coming from Bitcoin in the current environment?

Look no further than exchanges for one, as their declining balances point to sustained determination to “hodl” BTC.

According to the latest data, not only are buyers continuing to move large tranches of coins off exchanges into cold storage, but those exchanges’ overall BTC balance is now at fresh multi-year lows.

Figures from on-chain analytics firm CyptoQuant confirm that the balance of 21 major exchanges was 2.274 million BTC as of Sunday. The last time that the level was so low was in July 2018.

Bitcoin exchange reserves chart. Source: CryptoQuant

The impact of such buyer trends has yet to be seen in practice. Despite the available supply declining, a real scramble for BTC has not yet occurred, while sellers have conversely sought to exit at levels approaching $50,000 in recent weeks.

The result is a narrow scope of movement for BTC price action as buyers and sellers act in a closely-guarded range. Ki Young Ju, CEO of CryptoQuant, noted the phenomenon playing out last week.

As Cointelegraph reported, meanwhile, the likely source of the exchange supply sapping is institutional, rather than retail investors.

Crypto sentiment diverges into "extreme fear"

Is crypto market sentiment truly indicative of a shock in the making?

Related: Top 5 cryptocurrencies to watch this week: BTC, XRP, LINK, BCH, FIL

Bitcoin has been praised as the “only” truly honest market available to investors, and its decline from all-time highs thus foreshadowed this year’s inflationary environment hostile to stocks, commodities and more.

Should that hold true, the current state of the Crypto Fear & Greed Index may give investors fresh pause for thought.

At 24/100 as of Monday, the Index is back in its “extreme fear” zone, having more than halved since the start of April.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

By contrast, the traditional market Fear & Greed Index is “neutral,” a zone in which it has stayed since exiting the “fear” zone late last month.

Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: CNN

While equally famous for its fickle nature, crypto market sentiment could nonetheless be a warning for those hoping that the good times will continue regardless.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Terra price key support level breaks after 30% weekly drop — more pain for LUNA ahead?

Macro, technicals and uncertainties concerning Terra's LUNA-burning mechanism could push the price further down in April.

Terra (LUNA) price slid on April 11 as a broader correction across crypto assets added to the uncertainties concerning its token burning mechanism.

Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) led to a decline in the rest of the cryptocurrency market, with LUNA's price dropping by over 8% to nearly $91.50, and about 30% from its record high of $120, set on April 6.

The overall drop tailed similar moves in the U.S. stock market last week after the Federal Reserve signaled its intentions to raise interest rates and shrink balance sheets sharply to curb rising inflation.

Arthur Hayes, the co-founder of BitMEX exchange, said Monday that Bitcoin's correlation with tech stocks could have it run for $30,000 next. In other words, LUNA's high correlation with BTC so far this year puts it at risk of more downside if BTC doesn't rebound. 

The correlation between LUNA and BTC has been largely positive in 2022. Source: TradingView

Tale of two exposés

LUNA picked additional downside cues from at least two "exposé" threads that went viral on Twitter over the weekend.

The first thread, penned by a pseudonymous analyst @DeFi_Made_Here on April 7, questioned LUNA's capability to maintain the peg of Terra's native stablecoin, TerraUSD (UST) since it is not backed by any tangible asset. 

The second thread, published on April 9 by Jack Niewold, an analyst at the Crypto Pragmatist — a DeFi newsletter, accused Terra co-founder Do Kwon of receiving all the LUNA tokens meant to be "burned" to mint UST. 

He also alleged that the Luna Foundation Guard, a nonprofit organization that backs the Terra ecosystem, has been using a percentage of burned LUNA supply to buy Bitcoin.

Kwon refuted the claims in a tweet-to-tweet response to Niewold, calling him a "made up clickbait." The self-proclaimed "master of stablecoin" asserted that Terra burns LUNA 1:1 to mint new UST, which can be seen by testing a swap on the Anchor Protocol dashboard.

Jose Maria Macedo, head of crypto research platform Delphi Digital, also rubbished Niewold's thread as "absolutely terrible."

Key LUNA price support breaks

The latest LUNA selloff also led its price below its key moving average support against the U.S. dollar.

Related: Bitcoin plumbs April lows as US dollar strength hits highest since May 2020

In detail, the Terra token dropped below its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave in the chart below), now near $90, almost two months after reclaiming it as support.

The latest support-to-resistance flip exposes LUNA to the possibility of extending its downtrend toward its 200-day EMA (the blue wave) around $67 (around 20% lower than April 11's price) in April. 

LUNA/USD daily price chart featuring 50-day EMA support. Source: TradingView

The 200-day EMA also coincides with the 0.382 Fib line of the Fibonacci retracement graph, drawn from the $4-swing low to the $106-swing high, thus offering LUNA double-layered support against bears.

Conversely, an early rebound from 0.236 Fib line (near $82) could have LUNA retest $106 as its interim upside target.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

BTC stocks correlation ‘not what we want’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Can anything save Bitcoin from a stocks-driven meltdown? Not everyone is bearish this week.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts the second week of April with a whimper as bulls struggle to retain support above $40,000.

After a refreshingly low-volatility weekend, the latest weekly close saw market nerves return, and in classic style, BTC/USD fell in the final hours of Sunday.

There is a feeling of being caught between two stools for the average hodler currently — macro forces promise major trend shifts but are being slow to play out, while “serious” buyer demand is also absent from cryptoassets more broadly.

At the same time, those on the inside show no hint of doubt about the future, as evidenced by all-time high Bitcoin network fundamentals and more.

The combination of these opposing factors is price action that simply does not seem to know where to go next. Can something change in the coming week?

Cointelegraph takes a look at five potential Bitcoin price cues as a retest of $40,000 looms closer.

No "massive drawdown" for BTC?

Monday is starting out with a reclaim of $42,000 for BTC/USD, which the pair briefly lost overnight as it dipped into the weekly close.

Hitting $41,771 on Bitstamp in the process, Bitcoin thus saw its lowest levels in weeks, matching those from March 23.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

In doing so, the largest cryptocurrency likewise gave up all of its gains from the intervening period to fall back to the top of its trading range from last month. This could end up being a retest of previous resistance as support, however, and instead of fearing the worst, many traders are hopeful that a reversal would soon kick in.

“Bullish retest of flipped weekly level, finex whale filling bids, I’m buying the dip. If you want to wait for confirmation you can wait for a monthly close to confirm,” popular Twitter user Credible Crypto wrote as part of comments overnight.

Credible Crypto was commenting on both Bitfinex whale buying and fresh chart data, which shows that Bitcoin’s Aroon indicator has flipped bullish in recent days.

Designed to identify uptrends or downtrend in an asset, Aroon has only delivered such bearish-to-bullish “crosses” six times since 2017 — the time of Bitcoin’s previous blow-off top.

As Cointelegraph reported, trader and analyst Rekt Capital also had plenty of reasons to adopt a bullish thesis for Bitcoin, but at around $42,150 the weekly close ultimately disappointed compared to his required $43,100.

“A BTC Weekly Candle Close like this and the retest of ~$43.100 as new support would be successful,” he explained alongside a chart Sunday.

“Therefore, BTC would be positioned for a move higher inside the ~$43100-$52000 range, as per the previous blue circle.”

Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe meanwhile also noted that the late dip Sunday had closed the potential for a CME futures gap to provide a short-term price target at the start of Monday trading.

Stocks pressured across the board

It’s a gloomy day for stocks so far as Asia leads with widespread losses thanks in no small part to China’s latest Coronavirus lockdowns.

Both the Shanghai Composite Index and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell over 2% in morning trading.

In Europe, markets were yet to open at the time of writing, but the ongoing geopolitical tensions focused on Russia showed no signs of change.

A glimmer of hope for the euro came in the form of a potential lead for incumbent French President Emmanuel Macron against far right rival Jean-Marie Le Pen in polls.

Beyond the short term, however, analysts are eyeing concerning trends: rapidly increasing inflation, bond market losses and a seeming inability for central banks to respond so far.

The European Central Bank (ECB) is due to meet this week with a key focus on inflation control — ending asset purchases and raising interest rates.

The situation underscores the difficulties faced by stocks and risk assets in the current climate. As commentators agree that the inflationary environment and associated central bank measures will reduce demand for Bitcoin and crypto, the true extent of the economic reality is already clear.

In a previous Twitter post last week, Holger Zschaepitz revealed that for all the gains in the S&P 500, for example, the Fed’s asset purchases mean that progress has in fact been flat since the Global Financial Crisis.

“Just to put things into perspective: The S&P 500 may have hit a new ATH today, but if you put the index in relation to the Fed's balance sheet, it is trading at the same level as in 2008, so equities have traded sideways since 2008, basically counteracting balance sheet expansion,” he wrote.

Down together?

For Arthur Hayes, ex-CEO of derivatives giant BitMEX, the bullish case for Bitcoin as a store of value in the face of failing fiat is still there.

The problem is that such a scenario is not reality — yet.

In his latest blog post released Monday, Hayes repeated warnings that pain would precede gain for the average investor with significant risk asset exposure.

The future could well see a shift away from U.S. dollar hegemony toward different assets, by nation states and individuals alike, but for the meantime, macro forces will continue taking their toll on crypto.

If stocks are due to dive as central banks act, notionally to combat inflation, crypto’s increasing correlation to them means only one thing.

“The short-term (10-day) correlation is high, and the medium term (30-day and 90-day) correlations are moving up and to the right. This is not what we want,” Hayes argued about crypto correlations with the Nasdaq 100 (NDX).

“For me to hoist the flag in support of selling fiat and buying crypto in advance of an NDX meltdown (30% to 50% drawdown), correlations across all time frames need to trend demonstratively lower.”

Could equities really see half their value removed as a result of the Fed and its actions? It would be anyone’s guess, Hayes said.

“Down 30%? … Down 50%? … your guess is as good as mine,” he added.

“But let’s be clear– the Fed isn’t planning to grow its balance sheet again any time soon, meaning equities ain’t going any higher.”
Federal Reserve balance sheet as of April 4 (screenshot). Source: Federal Reserve

Sentiment diverges from traditional markets

With the macro gloom on the horizon, it is no surprise that market sentiment is taking a beating.

Having sensed “greed” across crypto at the end of March, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index is now firmly back in “fear” territory.

An analog of the traditional market Fear & Greed Index, the metric has shed half its normalized score in under two weeks as cold feet return to traders.

On Monday, Crypto Fear & Greed measured 32/100, while its traditional market counterpart was higher at 46/100, defined as “neutral.”

Deserved or not, Van de Poppe meanwhile reminded readers not to trade based on sentiment cues.

“Everyone was super bullish on the markets, but now the markets start to correct, and the fear takes over,” he summarized.

“The sentiment isn't a great indicator of how you should trade usually.”
Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

Fundamentals keep the faith

A glimmer of hope comes from a familiar source this week — for all the price drawdowns, Bitcoin’s network difficulty is only due to decrease by 0.4% in the next few days.

Related: Top 5 cryptocurrencies to watch this week: BTC, NEAR, FTT, ETC, XMR

Arguably the most important aspect of the Bitcoin network’s self-maintaining paradigm, difficulty will adjust downward from all-time highs to reflect changes in mining composition.

The adjustment’s small size suggests that miners remain financially buoyant at current levels and are not struggling despite last week’s 10% BTC/USD dip.

Bitcoin difficulty 7-day average chart. Source: Blockchain

Further data supports the argument, with hash rate estimates from monitoring resource MiningPoolStats likewise lingering at record highs.

As Cointelegraph reported, mining continues to attract major investment, including from Blockstream, which last week announced a solar-powered farm set to generate 30 petahashes per second in hash rate once operational.

Bitcoin estimated hash rate chart (screenshot). Source: MiningPoolStats

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Bank of America Strategist Warns ‘Recession Shock’ Is Coming, Analyst Says Crypto Could Outperform Bonds

Bank of America Strategist Warns ‘Recession Shock’ Is Coming, Analyst Says Crypto Could Outperform BondsOn Friday, Bank of America’s (BOFA) chief investment strategist Michael Hartnett explained in a weekly financial note to clients that the U.S. economy could head into a recession. The BOFA strategist’s note further detailed that cryptocurrencies could outperform bonds and stocks. BOFA Strategist Notes inflation Shock Is Worsening, Cryptocurrencies Could Outperform Bonds and Stocks Bank […]

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

FTX US to invest in IEX stock exchange to launch digital securities

FTX US expects to finalize investment in the Investors Exchange in May 2022, subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory approval.

Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange FTX continues aggressively investing in traditional finance, with the United States-based affiliate FTX US investing in Investors Exchange (IEX), a U.S. national stock exchange.

FTX US has signed an agreement to make a strategic investment in the IEX’s operator IEX Group to jointly establish a market structure for buying, selling and trading digital asset securities, the firm announced to Cointelegraph on Tuesday.

IEX and FTX US expect to close the deal in May 2022, subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory approval.

The new collaboration aims to provide services for retail and institutional investors. IEX is planning to implement its existing market structure and regulatory principles.

FTX and FTX US CEO Bankman-Fried pointed out that the collaboration with IEX will further contribute to the establishment of the crypto market structure and cooperation with regulators. He noted that he has long been a fan of IEX CEO Brad Katsuyama’s vision to be a fair exchange, adding:

“Investing in IEX created a tremendous opportunity for FTX US. With this investment, we’re aligned with one of the most trusted and innovative companies in equities markets.”

IEX co-founder and CEO Katsuyama stressed that the partnership with FTX aims to help the U.S. be the largest player in digital assets globally through dialogue with regulators. He said:

“To unlock its full potential, the crypto and digital asset industry needs to engage with regulators and truly scale what has been built [...] We both see the regulators as important allies in providing a clear path forward and attaining the highest possible standards for investor protection.”

Apart from the strategic investment, FTX and IEX also plan to introduce a new initiative that would invite all investors to join the conversation with regulators regarding the future of the market structure for digital asset securities. The companies plan to provide more details about the project at a later date.

Both FTX and FTX US have been actively investing in traditional finance recently. Last month, FTX’s venture capital arm FTX Ventures invested $100 million in the mobile banking application, Dave, in conjunction with FTX US partnering with Dave for crypto payments.

Related: FTX crypto exchange wins license in Dubai to open local headquarters

According to a Sunday report by TechCrunch, FTX has also been in talks to invest in the Indian gaming startup Mobile Premier League as it prepares to make another push in the Web3 sector.

Cointelegraph reached out to FTX for additional information and will update the article pending new information.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Tech Influencer Gives Goldfish $50,000 To Trade Stocks in Viral Video – Here’s What Happened

Can a goldfish outperform the average investor when it comes to trading stocks? A popular YouTube creator and tech enthusiast just made it his mission to find out. Michael Reeves designed an automated system that turned his pet goldfish Frederick into a day trader. He went big, giving the fish $50,000 to deploy into the […]

The post Tech Influencer Gives Goldfish $50,000 To Trade Stocks in Viral Video – Here’s What Happened appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year

Galaxy Digital delays BitGo acquisition to later on in 2022

The acquisition is scheduled to follow Galaxy's domestication in Delaware, which is expected to become effective between Q2 and Q4 of 2022.

Cryptocurrency investment firm Galaxy Digital has not managed to finalize the acquisition of the digital asset custodian BitGo in the first quarter of 2022 as the firm originally planned.

Galaxy Digital has made some changes to the terms of its acquisition of BitGo, CEO Mike Novogratz announced in an earnings call on Thursday.

“We’ve adjusted the deal some, for progress that BitGo has made,” Novogratz said, noting that BitGo has hired about 150 people since the firms originally signed the deal in May last year.

He added that Galaxy remains committed to “integrating BitGo and becoming an institutional crypto platform” and the companies will continue to work on integration.

According to an official statement, Galaxy Digital and BitGo have renegotiated the acquisition to happen “immediately following” the domestication of Galaxy Digital as a Delaware corporation. The domestication will become effective between Q2 and Q4 of 2022 and is subject to a review process with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, the firm noted.

In case Galaxy fails to complete the transaction by the end of 2022, the firm undertakes to pay a fee significant fee, the statement reads:

“A reverse termination fee of $100 million will be payable by Galaxy Digital to BitGo in certain circumstances if the transaction has not been completed by December 31, 2022, subject to specific provisions.”

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, Galaxy was planning to close the BitGo acquisition by the end of Q1 2022, paying 33.8 million in newly issued Galaxy shares, or $1.2 billion, and additional $265 million in cash to settle the deal.

The new acquisition terms include 44.8 million newly issued shares and $265 million in cash, implying an aggregate transaction value of approximately $1,158 million based on Galaxy Digital’s closing price on March 30.

In conjunction with the BitGo acquisition, Galaxy also planned to go public in the U.S. in the first three months of 2022. The company previously debuted its first-ever listing on Toronto's TSX Venture Exchange in August 2018.

Galaxy shares significantly tumbled since the company announced the BitGo acquisition, dropping from about $30 to below $12 in January 2022. At the time of writing, the stock is trading at $17, down 14% over the past 24 hours, according to data from TradingView.

Galaxy stock one-year price chart in USD. Source: TradingView

Related: Goldman Sachs completes first OTC crypto options trade with Galaxy

Galaxy also reported that its net comprehensive income increased 55% from around $336 million in Q3 2021 to $521 million in Q4 2021. At the same time, net comprehensive income is expected to be a loss of $110 million to $130 million, bringing the to approximately $2.45 billion, the firm added.

The company is known for posting significant losses several times in recent years. In Q2 2021, Galaxy posted a loss of nearly $176 million, with Novogratz stating that the company remained “significantly profitable” in the first half of 2021 as net comprehensive income totaled $684 million.

Hong Kong to license more crypto exchanges by end of year