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Bitcoin remains ‘primary focus’ for investors amid year highs: CoinShares

Bitcoin investment products have experienced $310.6 million in inflows over the last two weeks.

Bitcoin (BTC) has been the “primary focus” for institutional investors over the last two weeks, according to Coinshares, as the cryptocurrency continues to hit new prihighs for 2023.

In a July 3 report from CoinShares’ Head of Research James Butterfill, the analyst noted that Bitcoin-related products saw $310.6 million of inflows over the last two weeks, representing the vast majority of crypto product inflows.

“Bitcoin remained the primary focus of investors [...] with the last 2 weeks inflows representing 98% of all digital asset flows,” said Butterfill.

Bitcoin weekly inflows. Source: CoinShares

The last two weeks of inflows are a reversal from the previous nine consecutive weeks of outflows. Short Bitcoin products also experienced a minor outflow of $0.9 million over the last week.

It’s the second time this year that Bitcoin products have accounted for 98% of inflows into cryptocurrency investment products, and comes amid a surge in Bitcoin’s price and dominance.

Bitcoin accounted for 98% of digital asset investment product inflows over the last fortnight. Source: CoinShares.

Much of this surge has been pinned on BlackRock’s June 15 spot Bitcoin ETF application, followed by similar filings from the likes of Fidelity, Invesco, Wisdom Tree and Valkyrie.

Since the filing, the price of Bitcoin has increased 25.2% to $31,131 at the time of writing. Bitcoin's dominance — which is a measure of its market cap relative to the total market cap of all cryptocurrencies — has risen to 51.46%, according to data.

Meanwhile, Ethereum investment products inflows came in at $2.7 million last week, the second week of inflows that have reversed a lengthy outflow trend.

Related: Why approving a Bitcoin ETF might unleash $18B in sell-pressure

Speaking to Cointelegraph on June 26, Fireblocks CEO Michael Shaulov said there has been a “fair amount of interest” from institutional investors in core assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, but less so in alternate cryptocurrencies.

“The narrative around Ethereum is pretty much the understanding that future ecosystems of tokenizeation are likely to be EVM-based. And if they’re EVM based, then Ethereum is going to play out as utility.”

Shaulov said the narrative around Bitcoin has been less specific, but notes that most investors see the need to hold the cryptocurrency.

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BIS, 3 central banks look at DeFi technology for wCBDC FX in interim project report

Project Mariana uses an automated market maker to reduce settlement risk and to create a liquidity pool in place of order books.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Innovation Hub published an interim report on Project Mariana, its collaboration with the central banks of France, Singapore and Switzerland, on the use of wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC) in tokenized foreign exchange trading. The project is a proof-of-concept that considers questions relating to credit and settlement risk and interoperability.

Specifically, the project looks at automated market makers (AMMs), token standards and network bridges as it “explores the feasibility of an international FX interbank market using wCBDCs on a blockchain-based network.”

An AMM — a smart contract used in decentralized finance — can implement trading and settlement of tokenized assets in a single step, thus reducing risk. For that to happen, technical specifications have to be developed for the wCBDCs and AMMs themselves, as well as the bridges that serve as the on- and off-ramps between the international network and domestic platforms.

Related: Singapore MAS proposes digital money standards with major industry players

The liquidity pool and a bonding curve are integral parts of the proposed AMM design. A bonding curve is simply the price-fixing function for the assets traded. A liquidity pool can replace the traditional use of order books to match buyers and sellers. In this model, the liquidity pool would be formed by commercial banks with all the currencies involved in the project. Access to the trading system would be controlled by whitelists maintained by the central banks.

A different approach to liquidity can be seen in the Singapore Monetary Authority and Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Project Cedar Phase II x Ubin+, which used a “vehicle currency” in trades between non-tokenized currencies of differing liquidities.

Project Mariana was launched in November. It released its interim report on schedule and promises to release a final report by the end of the year.

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Swiss central bank announces plans for wholesale CBDC pilot with ‘real money’: Report

Thomas Jordan, head of the Swiss National Bank, announced the project at a conference in Zurich; bank still feels “prudent” about a retail CBDC, though.

The head of the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has announced that the bank will launch a wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC) pilot project, according to a report. Reuters quoted bank chair Thomas Jordan as saying the project would begin “soon.” 

The wCBDC will be issued on the Swiss SIX digital exchange and run for a limited time, Jordan was quoted as saying at the Point Zero Forum in Zurich on June 26. The SIX Group also runs Switzerland’s largest stock exchange. Jordan said, according to the report:

"This is not just an experiment, it will be real money equivalent to bank reserves and the objective is to test real transactions with market participants."

SNB governing board member Thomas Moser told Cointelegraph last year that CBDCs could work well with decentralized finance. The SNB integrated a wCBDC into the back-office systems of five banks early last year as part of its Project Helvetia, which had previously completed a proof of concept for wCBDC.

That was a pivot from the position expressed a year prior by SNB chief economist Carlos Lenz, who said blockchain was not a suitable platform for CBDC, and the country had not intention of issuing one.

Related: BIS joins France and Switzerland's central banks on cross-border CBDC project

Thomas said of retail CBDC that “we are a little bit prudent at the moment,” but he did not rule out its introduction.

SNB governing board member Andréa Maechler, speaking at a different event from Jordan at the Point Zero Forum this year, said that the central bank does not foresee the replacement of cash in the country. Maechler said last year that SNB officials “believe the risks outweigh the benefits” in regard to a retail CBDC.

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Systemic Swiss Banks Not Ready for Crisis, Regulator Says

Systemic Swiss Banks Not Ready for Crisis, Regulator SaysSwitzerland’s financial regulator is not satisfied with the emergency plans of two of the Alpine nation’s five major banks. The assessment refers to a period prior to the rescue of Credit Suisse by UBS when the authority viewed the troubled giant’s preparedness in positive terms. 2 Swiss Banks Unable to Implement Recovery Plans, Finma Finds […]

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Google Trends Data Shows Bitcoin Search Interest Surged This Week Amid 10-Month Price High

Google Trends Data Shows Bitcoin Search Interest Surged This Week Amid 10-Month Price HighAccording to worldwide data from Google Trends, the search term “bitcoin” has reached a score of 93 out of 100 in the last seven days. Additionally, the price of bitcoin rose above the $30,000 range for the first time in ten months, or since June 2022. Bitcoin Search Interest Rises as Leading Crypto Asset Taps […]

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Swiss State-Owned Banking Giant Postfinance to Offer Crypto Services

Swiss State-Owned Banking Giant Postfinance to Offer Crypto ServicesPostfinance, one of Switzerland’s largest retail banks, will offer customers access to major cryptocurrencies and related services. The state-owned financial institution will be using the banking platform developed by the Swiss-licensed digital asset bank Sygnum. Postfinance Partners With Sygnum to Provide Digital Asset Products and Services The financial services unit of the national postal service […]

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Swiss state-owned bank Postfinance to offer Bitcoin trading

PostFinance’s parent firm Swiss Post is known for its pro-crypto stance, working on its own crypto custody services and issuing crypto stamp collectibles.

PostFinance, a retail bank fully owned by the Swiss government, is preparing to offer cryptocurrency trading and storage services to its customers.

The PostFinance bank has partnered with the local cryptocurrency bank Sygnum to offer its customers a range of regulated digital asset banking services, the firms announced on April 5.

The partnership will specifically allow PostFinance customers to buy, store and sell major cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH).

The crypto services are enabled through Sygnum’s institutional business-to-business offering that provides banks with market entry to regulated and compliant digital products. The B2B network includes more than 15 partner banks and supports a “range of cryptocurrencies,” also featuring revenue-generating services like staking.

PostFinance’s move into crypto comes in response to a growing demand from its customers, the bank’s chief investment officer Philipp Merkt noted, stating:

“Digital assets have become an integral part of the financial world, and our customers want access to this market at PostFinance, their trusted principal bank.”

Founded in 1906, PostFinance is the financial services unit of Swiss Post, which is the national postal service of Switzerland. The public company is known for its pro-crypto stance, building its own crypto custody platform and issuing digital collectibles linked to physical stamps in 2021.

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The announcement on PostFinance’s crypto trading services comes shortly after Swiss Post announced the launch of Crypto Stamp 3.0, a new crypto stamp iteration featuring physical and non-fungible token versions integrated with the artificial intelligence technology. Swiss Post’s new crypto stamp is scheduled to go on sale on May 2, 2023.

PostFinance did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

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UBS’s acquisition of Credit Suisse brings some good and bad for crypto

Many in Switzerland have said that UBS’ takeover of Credit Suisse was necessary to avoid a calamitous banking crisis like that seen in 2008.

On Sunday, March 19, the 167-year history of banking giant Credit Suisse ended with a takeover by the largest Swiss bank, UBS. Under pressure from the Swiss government, UBS took over its ailing competitor for 3 billion Swiss francs ($3.25 billion) — less than half the $8 billion market value of Credit Suisse just two days before, on Friday, March 17. 

A day later, on March 20, shares in Credit Suisse plunged more than 60% in European trading, with UBS down 9%.

To cover any losses UBS may incur in the deal, the Swiss government will provide $10 billion. The Swiss central bank will also make a $108 billion bankruptcy loan available to the banks.

Swiss publication, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung, called the takeover the “biggest economic earthquake in Switzerland since the rescue of UBS in 2008 and the grounding of Swissair in 2001.” A rescue should prevent a crisis that spreads to other banks, akin to what happened 15 years ago after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in the United States. The takeover of Credit Suisse was “necessary” not only for Switzerland but for the stability of the entire global financial system, argued Swiss Confederation President Alain Berset.

Billion-dollar merger over a weekend

The deal spurred mixed reactions in the Swiss political arena. The Free Democratic Party of Switzerland (FDP) praised it, stating that the takeover was necessary to avoid severe damage to Switzerland as a financial and economic center.

Criticism came from the co-president of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, Cédric Wermuth, who tweeted that nothing had changed since the 2008 financial crisis. “The whole financial system is sick and absurd,” he said, adding that the state must step in again and save it.

The “Occupy” movement at Paradeplatz in Zurich, where UBS and Credit Suisse branches are located next to each other. Source: Ronald Zh

Marcel Fratzscher, president of the German Institute for Economic Research, believes the takeover could lead to one giant bank, which would provoke instability across the board in the event of a notional collapse.

In an interview with Die Tageszeitung, the German economist said the current situation is nowhere near as worrying as before the global financial crisis of 2008. “Today, it is the sharp increases in interest rates by the central banks that have taken many financial institutions by surprise and have led to massive losses.”

In other words, the problem today is “not systemic interdependence between financial institutions or inadequate provisioning in terms of liquidity and capital, but unusually aggressive monetary policy.”

‘Regulatory pressure is likely to increase’

“This takeover of Credit Suisse by UBS has sent many into a deep shock,” said Olga Feldmeier, co-founder of Swiss investment platform Smart Valor, speaking to Cointelegraph. Until 2014, she was an executive director and head of sales in the wealth management business at UBS.

“It had been known for a long time that things were not going so well at the bank. But who would have thought that the bank, which was once worth $80 billion, would be the subject of a $3 billion takeover by its arch-rival UBS?” According to Feldmeier, it’s not just the 50,000 employees who are shocked. The lenders have been hit even harder, especially those with a special high-grade bond type — the so-called Additional Tier 1 Capital.

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But when asked what the alternative would be, Feldmeier agreed that without this takeover, the consequences would be catastrophic. “After all, where is it safe if one of the top 30 systemically important — and Swiss — banks go bankrupt? In a systemic bank run, neither the European Central Bank nor the Fed would be able to help.”

Mauro Casellini, board member at CCA Trustless Technologies Association and, until January 2023, CEO at Bitcoin Suisse Liechtenstein and head of Bitcoin Suisse Europe, shared a similar view.

He told Cointelegraph that it was right that the government and regulators in Switzerland acted quickly to find a solution with the least possible negative impact on the market.

“Although there had been signs for some time that things were not going smoothly at Credit Suisse, it was difficult for outsiders to see just how critical the situation was. It is too early to say whether this was the right solution, but the sheer size of this new ‘super bank’ is impressive and regulatory pressure is likely to increase,” Casellini said.

The good and the bad

The banking crisis has brought some good and some bad for crypto. Despite negative macroeconomic developments, the crypto market performed well when news broke that UBS would take over Credit Suisse. Bitcoin (BTC) won the crypto rally with a gain of 15.5% (reaching $28,671 on March 22). Ether (ETH) gained 3.9%. Driven by the BTC price rally, the share prices of listed Bitcoin mining companies have risen by as much as 120% since the beginning of the year.

According to Feldmeier, it’s a positive phenomenon for crypto exchanges, both big and small. “More trading, higher sales, some of the long missed tailwind would not hurt our industry,” said Feldmeier. “This also increases the certainty that the Bitcoin cycle keeps what it promises — namely, the next bull run around Bitcoin halving in March 2024”.

The loss from clients and investors in traditional financial institutions could positively affect the crypto market as investors turn to alternative assets, such as cryptocurrencies.

However, the Credit Suisse acquisition and the fact that the banking industry faces many different risks and challenges worldwide also has a negative side. Banks are still important partners for crypto companies. If banks are not doing well, they will be even less willing to work with crypto companies or raise fees, which will not make life easier for the crypto industry.

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The recent closures of fiat on- and off-ramp banks such as Silvergate and Signature, followed by the collapse of Credit Suisse, have created “significant risks for the crypto market,” said Casellini. According to the expert, it was necessary “to address issues such as regulation, security, and transparency to build trust with investors and ensure the long-term viability of the market. Regulation will help our industry in the long run to build a successful and more decentralized alternative to the traditional financial system.”

Casellini also expects to see more challenges and risks in the future due to the changing interest rate landscape and additional requirements on banks.

“It will be interesting to see how governments and especially national banks react, and whether they will save struggling banks or let them fail.”

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Credit Suisse, UBS, Other Banks Facing Russia Sanctions Probe in US, Report

Credit Suisse, UBS, Other Banks Facing Russia Sanctions Probe in US, ReportSwitzerland’s troubled Credit Suisse and its rescuer, USB, are subject to an investigation into whether bankers helped Russian oligarchs evade Western sanctions, according to a media report. Some major U.S. banking institutions are also under scrutiny within the probe initiated by the Justice Department, sources say. Credit Suisse, US Banks Investigated for Suspected Sanctions Violations […]

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UBS Group doubles offer and acquires Credit Suisse for $2B

Swiss authorities agreed to change the country's regulations to bypass a shareholder vote and announce the deal over the weekend.

UBS Group doubled its initial offer and agreed to buy its competitor Credit Suisse for nearly $2 billion on March 19, in a historical deal for the two biggest banks in Switzerland, the Financial Times reported.

UBS previously put a $1 billion offer on the table on March 18, but the deal was rejected by the Credit Suisse board, FT sources said. The $1 billion offer was a considerable discount under the bank's market value on March 17 of nearly $8 billion, according to data from Companies Market Cap.

To close the deal, Swiss authorities also agreed to change the country's regulations to bypass a shareholder vote and announce the deal over the weekend, ahead of the markets opening.

Also, as part of the deal, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) committed to provide over $100 billion in liquidity line to USB. According to the FT, the deal was heavily influenced by the SNB and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA). United States and European regulators are said to have approved the deal, with coordinated statements to be released later on Sunday.

Swiss authorities considered alternatives to Credit Suisse in case the deal with UBS failed over the weekend, including a full or partial nationalization of the bank as an emergency option.

Credit Suisse's rescue plan would also include losses to bondholders. The move prompted European regulator's concerns that it would undermine investor confidence in Europe's financial sector.

UBS and Credit Suisse have been locked in talks with regulators since March 15, after Credit Suisse largest shareholder, Saudi National Bank, said during an interview that it wouldn't increase its investment in the Swiss bank due to regulations. Concerns about the bank's ability to profit were heightened by the comments, raising fears about possible shareholder financing.

Credit Suisse was founded in 1856 to finance the expansion of Swiss railroads. It was considered the second-largest bank in the country.

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