From
‘digital gold’ back to currency
Signs flourished
during Q3 2021 that Bitcoin is switching back to a currency after years of
narrative buildup that its utility lies in being ‘digital gold’.
More than a
decade after its debut rattled the world, and having amassed 100
million users, the prevailing
economic theory still holds that Bitcoin is a store of value in troubled
economic times but practically useless as a daily means of exchange, given
spikes in transaction fees and slow transaction confirmations.
Notably,
Bitcoin’s base layer can only complete around 7 transactions per second. And at
any one time there can be thousands of
unconfirmed
Bitcoin
transactions — ranging from $50 to several million — waiting to be added to the
digital ledger.
Figures compiled
by ETC Group show that in Q3 2021 Bitcoin transaction volumes soared by over
650% year on year, but interestingly enough, transaction fees fell from $90.8m
in Q3 2020 to $65.5m in Q3 2021.
Median
transaction fees — how much it costs to send the average BTC transaction — dropped
by 66% year on year, from $1.49 to just $0.50. Something crucial is happening
here: and one explanation is that the Bitcoin network has become more efficient
at processing transactions.
The rapid growth
of the Layer 2 technology Lightning Network — a way of netting payments off the
blockchain — is key to Bitcoin’s conversion back to the ‘peer to peer
electronic cash’ as described in the title
of its 2009 whitepaper.
The Lightning
Network is powered by smart contracts and employs micropayment channels to
carry out transactions near-instantaneously. It is generally seen as one of the
key methods of scaling Bitcoin as a currency. And because it moves transaction
processing away from the main Bitcoin blockchain, the Lightning Network makes
it much more feasible to carry out day-to-day payments and microtransactions
using Bitcoin.
In summary, Lightning Network
offers:
Instant payments: Transaction speeds are typically
measured in milliseconds. Lightning Network relies on smart contracts rather
than having to wait for confirmation on-chain.
Scale: Lightning Network can theoretically
process millions of transactions per second.
Low fees: Transactions are settled off-chain,
making Bitcoin micropayments practical.
Across Q3 2021
the number of unique Lightning Network channels rose by 45.5% to 70,403,
according to BitcoinVisuals.
The amount of
capacity on these Lightning Network channels is also seeing substantial
growth.
El Salvador tests Lightning Network in
the wild
In Q3 Bitcoin
gained the addition of several million new users in the form of El the
Salvadoran population: we now have a live experiment in Bitcoin currency use at
national level.
On 7 September
2021 El Salvador crossed the Rubicon to become the first country to adopt
Bitcoin as a legal means of
payment. And the country is using the Lightning Network to allow Bitcoin
payments to flow much more quickly between citizens and businesses than using
Bitcoin’s base layer.
By any metric,
user adoption has been rapid.
According to the
Salvadoran Foundation for Economic and Social Development, reported
by Reuters, 12% of the population
have used Bitcoin in the month since it became legal tender alongside the US
dollar.
National news
site ElSalvador.com adds
that by the end of Q3, 2.73
million people in El Salvador had downloaded Chivo, the country’s official
Bitcoin wallet. In a country of 6.4 million people, that’s a 42.6% adoption
rate. Contrast this with the latest available figures on bank account adoption.
Only
29% of people in El Salvador
have a bank or mobile e-money account.
Bitcoin is still
not proven in El Salvador. Most notably there are security
issues with the Chivo
wallet that cannot be ignored. But while some economists dispute that millions
will actually use Bitcoin as a payment method — instead withdrawing the $30
that the government gives away to promote the system ($81.9m
of public funds have already
been paid out to El Salvadorans to this end) — the country and the world are
one month into a multi-year experiment.
Bitcoin settles 40 times more value than Visa Europe
One additional
point to make is that more value has been settled on the Bitcoin network than
ever before.
Analysis by ETC
Group shows that in Q3 2021 $12.84 trillion passed back and forth using
Bitcoin, its largest figure to date. This is up 7.5x year-on-year.
One of the
less-reported outcomes of Bitcoin’s efficiency growth is in its transaction
volume, which is now outstripping Visa Europe by 35 to 1, according to the Bank
of England’s Real-Time Gross Settlement (RGTS) data.
RGTS is the
central bank’s infrastructure that holds accounts for banks, building societies
and other institutions, with balances used to move money in real time.
The bank’s
figures show that Visa Europe settled just over £2.4bn ($3.5bn) daily in
Q3 2021.
The Bitcoin
network settled $139.6bn daily in the same period, 39.88 times larger than the
credit card network.
Bitcoin’s
transaction throughput also reached all-time highs in Q3, according to on-chain
analysis by Woobull. On 18
September 2021
the network transmitted $183,082/sec, more than double its value of $82,296/sec
on 1 July 2021, and 7 times larger than the value transmitted a year before.
These figures
relate only to the Bitcoin base layer: transactions and value transmitted on
Layer 2 operations like sidechains and the Lightning Network are not included
in these calculations, adding weight to the conclusion that the network is
becoming more efficient over time.
Bitcoin’s Second Layer
Bitcoin is
arranged by miners securing the network, beavering away to help maintain the
correct copy of the digital ledger. For expending their processing power in this
manner they are rewarded in Bitcoin and are allowed to choose
which transactions they
include in a block. Miners will generally choose transactions that offer the
largest fee per byte, as it makes them the most money — simple economics.
Unprocessed transactions sit in a buffer called the ‘mempool’ waiting for
miners to pick them up.
If Lightning
Network can move more transactions away from Layer 1 — the base layer — the
main chain should become less congested, and provide a better user experience
at lower cost.
And if the
Lightning Network is really working as intended, we would be seeing more
transaction throughput on Bitcoin, and the size of this mempool should be
falling over time.
Data from Blockchain.com
confirms one part of this theory. The picture is complicated by the fact that
there is a very large amount of divergence on a daily basis, so we instead
looked at 180-day averages to draw out general trends.
At 1 July 2021,
the start of Q3, the Bitcoin mempool stood at an average size of 14.91 million
bytes. By the end of the financial quarter, it had dropped by 86.4% to 2.02
million bytes.
One conclusion
we can draw is that more transactions are being confirmed more quickly, and
hence the size of the mempool is falling. Bitcoin is being used — and is more
useful — as a currency.
Layer 2
solutions provide an elegant solution to the compromises inherent in Bitcoin’s
12-year old technology. In short: the data show that Bitcoin has become more
efficient and more cost-effective. We expect the Lightning Network to continue
contributing strongly to Bitcoin’s transaction volume growth going forward.
China
destroys its Bitcoin industry — USA wins
China’s
continuing mission to eviscerate its gigantic Bitcoin industry from both a
regulatory and financial perspective gathered significant pace in Q3.
In April 2021
China banned the approval of any new Bitcoin mining hubs in one of its largest
regions, Inner Mongolia, which at the time was responsible for over 8% of
global Bitcoin hashrate. Since the summer of enforcement, analysis by the South
China Morning Post shows that more than 20 major cryptocurrency companies have fled
the country, including digital
asset exchanges Binance and Huobi, and the largest Ethereum mining pool,
Sparkpool.
The People’s
Bank of China (PBoC) then announced via its website on 24 September that all
cryptocurrency related activities were now illegal.
The PBoC has not
only demanded that domestic companies stop financing cryptocurrency companies
— e-commerce giant Alibaba stopped
the sale of cryptocurrency
mining equipment to overseas users as the bank tightening its grip — but on 28
September 2021 extended
its embargo to foreign
businesses. Anyone providing support to offshore exchanges would be a target
for investigation, the central bank said, adding that digital currency
exchanges providing services to Chinese citizens would be engaging in illegal
activities.
Xi Jinping’s
government has long had an uneasy relationship with its formerly vast Bitcoin
mining industry. Mining pools Hashcow and BTC.TOP were among the first
operations when Beijing
called for shutdowns in May 2021, and enforcement has ramped up across Q3.
According to TheBlockCrypto
Asia editor Wolfie Zhao previous regulatory crackdowns were largely
orchestrated for the benefit of officials — with operations creeping back into
action as soon as delegations returned to Beijing.
Zhao told Frank
Chaparro’s 7 September podcast:
There were a lot of
talks in 2018-2019 but there wasn’t anything seriously enforced. But this time
it seems like there’s no way back
Along with banks
cutting funding channels for OTC trading desks, more recent regulatory actions
have been severe. In June 2021 the province of Sichuan began telling
electricity companies to cut power to any mining operations they discovered.
The Yunnan provincial government also told its power companies to stop making
side-deals with miners, The Verge reported
at the time.
Cryptocurrency
markets as a whole suffered a jittery period in the wake of such regulatory
strictures. After the 24 September announcement, the price of Bitcoin dipped 5.5%
to
$42,667, while Ether
gave up 8.4% to hit $2,824.
But Chinese
dominance of Bitcoin mining has been wiped away, and with little short or
medium term impact on market prices.
Since the ban,
and in the post-quarter period to 14 October 2021, Bitcoin has demonstrated its
resilience, climbing almost $15,000 to $57,588, while Ether has added 34.3% to
reach $3,794.
China’s (energy) crisis of confidence
One potential
reason for China’s dismantling of its Bitcoin industry is to do with industrial
demand for resources, which have been uptrending for years. According to the
International Energy Administration’s July 2021 Electricity Market report:
In the
second half of 2020, electricity demand significantly exceeded 2019 levels.
This trend continued in the first quarter of 2021, with industrial demand
exceeding the first quarter of 2019 by more than 15%. Commercial electricity
demand in the first quarter of 2021 exceeded 2019 demand for the same period by
16.5%.
Despite Xi
Jinping’s September 2020 pledge
at the UN General Assembly that China would achieve net-zero emissions by 2060,
coal still makes up more than 60% of domestic energy generation and rather than
falling, is on the rise.
And while
renewable energy production hit record rises in 2020 — to 210TWh — and coal’s
share of power generation fell to a record low of 58% in October 2020, in the
first four months of 2021, the share spiked
to 66.5%, higher than the
same periods in 2019 and 2020.
In early
May, the local grid operator issued a note asking companies to reduce power
consumption. In the southern province of Guangdong, a large manufacturing hub,
limited hydro availability, together with strong economic recovery and
associated high electricity demand, resulted in electricity shortages leading
to production halts
IEA, Electricity Market Report, July 2021
“In early
May, the local grid operator issued a note asking companies to reduce power
consumption. In the southern province of Guangdong, a large manufacturing hub,
limited hydro availability, together with strong economic recovery and
associated high electricity demand, resulted in electricity shortages leading
to production halts.”
China hands US the keys to Bitcoin
hashrate
Bitcoin hashrate
is a measure of the amount of computing power employed to secure the network
and mint new coins.
In general, the
higher the Bitcoin hashrate, the more resistant it is to attack. According to Crypto51, it would now cost an
attacker more than $1.8m per hour to rent enough hashpower to alter the Bitcoin
record of transactions or double-spend coins.
Higher hashrates
are also an indication of a healthier network, as well as being a determiner of
positive sentiment in cryptocurrency trading, in that miners continue to invest
in more powerful equipment. Both of these factors can be a frontrun indicator
of higher future Bitcoin values.
When China
announced its most recent aggressive major regulatory action in May, mining
pool Poolin — which at the time controlled around 13.8% of Bitcoin hashrate —
moved its operations to Texas, according to CEO Kevin Pan.
He told the BBC: “We decided to
move
out once [and] for all. [We’ll] never come back again.”
Time is money in
Bitcoin mining, and literally every second counts.
We also
witnessed the extraordinary situation of Chinese miners airlifting tonnes of
ASIC mining machinery out of the country. Guangzhou-based Fenghua International told
CNBC in June it would move 3,000 kg (6,600 lbs) of machines to
Maryland.
Shenzhen-based
BIT Mining has announced plans to invest $26 million in a 57-megawatt data
center to be built in Texas.
Western miners, too, have wasted little time in the hunt for
cheap energy and unrestrictive regulatory boundaries. London-listed miner Argo
Blockchain (LSE:ARB) began
construction in July on
its 200MW
Helio mining facility in Dickens County, adding on 30 September that it was purchasing
20,000 Antminer Pro
S19J rigs to extend its hashpower by more than 2 exahash.
By destroying
its vast Bitcoin mining industry, China has rescinded its first mover advantage
and effectively handed its greatest economic rival the keys to a
trillion-dollar industry.
There now exist
the statistics to prove this, via the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance
(CCAF).
US doubles its Bitcoin hashrate
Updated data from
CCAF shows figures up until the end of August
2021, cataloguing the wholesale shift in network hashrate.
The United
States now leads in global hashrate with 35.4% of the total. The US has doubled
its share of Bitcon mining in the four months since China began its
cryptocurrency clampdown.
Researchers
tracking Bitcoin mining activity partnered with mining pools BTC.com, ViaBTC
and Foundry USA to compile data, finding that mining operations in mainland
China have effectively dropped to zero, from a high of 75.53% when figures were
first recorded in September 2019.
As predicted in
ETC Group’s major research project: ‘Bitcoin ESG
and the Future’
countries that offer cheap electricity have also surged: Kazakhstan doubled its
share to 18.1% while Russia has moved up to third with 11% of global hashrate.
Industrial
electricity prices in the two countries commonly range from less than 1 cent to
5 cents per kilowatt hour. Data
from the US Energy Information
Administration show that industrial prices in West Texas, the country’s largest
oil, gas, and wind energy-producing state, are now 5.28 cents per kilowatt
hour.
The next largest
Bitcoin hashrate contributors are: Canada (9.55%), Ireland (4.68%), Malaysia
(4.59%) and Germany (4.48%).
Ongoing Chinese
crackdowns on both power operators directly, and Bitcoin miners indirectly, led
to a 38% drop in global Bitcoin hashrate in June 2021 but bounced back by 20%
in July and August, says the CCAF, adding weight to anecdotal observations that
Chinese mining equipment had been successfully moved overseas.
One of the major
beneficiaries will likely be the sprawling capital markets firm Digital
Currency Group, whose subsidiaries include Grayscale Investments, cross-border
settlements company Korbit, industry news site Coindesk, and Luno, and which has over
240 registered
investments in
everything from BitGo to Dapper Labs and Silvergate Bank.
It too owns
Foundry USA, North America’s largest Bitcoin mining pool, which since our Q2
report has more than doubled its Bitcoin hashrate share from 2.9% to 7.7%.
ETC analysis of
Q3 data shows that Bitcoin hashrate rebounded by 56% from a low of 89.03Th/s on
1 July 2021 to 139.09Th/s by 30 September 2021. This is still some way off the
all-time high of 180.66 of 14 May 2021, but the trend is clear.
[As] of
early October, the hashrate trajectory is indicating that all, or nearly all,
of that June downturn would be fully recovered soon. If the August data updates
are an indication for the future, then that recovery will likely be further
distributed predominantly between the largest share gainers — US, Kazakhstan
and the Russian Federation
Michel Rauchs, Rauchs, digital assets lead, Cambridge Center for
Alternative Finance.
The effect
of the Chinese crackdown is an increased geographic distribution of hashrate
across the world, which can be considered a positive development for the
decentralised principles of Bitcoin
Michel Rauchs, digital assets lead, Cambridge Center for Alternative
Finance.
Concerns over
data-sharing and transparency have long plagued Chinese international relations
and the same has been true throughout the Bitcon era. We would agree that the
reconfiguration of mining power in the hands of friendlier territories and
countries, most notably the United States, certainly bodes well for the future
of Bitcoin’s network security.
US policy favours Bitcoin mining
High-level
policymakers in the US are now starting to see more value in Bitcoin mining
than ever before. Speaking at the Texas
Blockchain Summit on 8 October 2021, Senator Ted Cruz noted the huge
opportunity base in
using renewable energy like wind, and stranded assets like flared gas to mine
Bitcoin on US soil.
“There were a
lot of things that went wrong [during the winter storm] that I think are
worthy of study, but I do think that Bitcoin has the potential to address a lot
of aspects of that. Number one, from the perspective of Bitcoin, Texas has
abundant energy. You look at wind, we’re the number one wind producer in the
country. Number two, I think there are massive opportunities. Fifty percent of
the natural gas in this country that is flared, is being flared in the Permian
[Basin] in West Texas right now. I think that is an enormous opportunity for
Bitcoin because right now, that is energy that is just being wasted.”
The comments
were reported via Twitter by Nic Carter, general partner at Castle Island
Ventures, co-founder of blockchain analysis firm Coin Metrics and an advisor to
the Bitcoin
Clean Energy Initiative.
Using stranded
natural gas is one way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while at the same
time producing revenue for industry to which it would otherwise not have
access.
Bitcoin miners
can take advantage of stranded renewable energy assets, mine off-grid by
utilising waste natural gas (a byproduct of oil extraction) and participate in
demand response by giving energy back to the grid when it is most needed, Cruz
concluded.
And as CBNC reported
in September, more
meetings are putting Bitcoin miners in touch with oil and gas executives keen
to exploit demand for cryptocurrency mining by recycling otherwise unproductive
energy usage.
Bitcoin
miners care most about finding cheap sources of electricity, so Texas – with
its crypto-friendly politicians, deregulated power grid, and crucially,
abundance of inexpensive power sources – is a virtually perfect fit. The union
becomes even more harmonious when miners connect their rigs to otherwise
stranded energy, like natural gas going to waste on oil fields across Texas
MacKenzie Sigalos, CNBC, 4 September 2021
Senator Cruz is
a member
of the US Congressional
Joint Economic Committee, which has a mandate to report on the economic
condition of the country and make suggestions for improvements to the economy.
The committee is chaired by Rep Don Beyer, who on 28 July 2021 put forward the
most comprehensive
cryptoasset regulatory proposals in the United States to date: the ‘Digital Asset
Market Structure and Investor
Protection Act’.
While experts
often do not often agree on how Bitcoin’s energy use is calculated — nor
whether such vehement censure should be applied when other industries like gold
mining are arguably more polluting — these options do offer an elegant solution
to Bitcoin’s main source of criticism.
Foundry
USA’s own dataset, released
on 9 September, shows that the majority of US Bitcoin mining hashrate
(19.9%) is currently concentrated in New York, with 18.7% in Kentucky, 17.3% in
Georgia, and 14% in Texas.
As
always, clear regulation is the key to growth. And after winning the signature
of Governor Greg Abbott in June, Texas House Bills 1576
and 4474
officially
came into effect on 1 September 2021. The latter alters the state’s Uniform
Commercial Code to recognise cryptocurrencies under commercial law.
With
the crypto-friendly regulation now in force in Texas, we would expect those
mining hashrate percentages to shift in favour of the US’s largest
energy-producing state.
And to conclude:
China had Bitcoin in the palm of its hand, and threw it all away. The
beneficiaries are its global economic rivals.
Crypto regulation comes of age
- El
Salvador makes Bitcoin legal tender
- Ukraine,
Cuba legalise Bitcoin
- US
attempts realistic regulation
- Rest of
World: Institutional, retail adoption booms while central banks seek refuge in
CBDCs
Since their
inception cryptocurrencies have been locked in a long-running turf war with
central bankers, governments and financial watchdogs. In Q3 2021 we watched as
era-defining regulations came into force. Ukraine, Cuba and El Salvador all
legally recognised cryptocurrencies. The United States is making realistic
efforts at categorising cryptocurrencies, and in the post-quarter period approved
its first Bitcoin ETF, albeit a futures product rather than spot-based.
From risk to opportunity
The same kinds
of fears have been peddled for many years: that cryptocurrencies pose financial
stability risks due to their unregulated status. Crypto businesses say: so
regulate! We would welcome it!
The Bank of
England’s deputy governor for financial stability laid out central banks’ terms
of engagement in one particularly useful speech.
Money, like
electricity and water, is crucial to the operation of a modern society. Our job
is to ensure it works safely and reliably, through ups and downs, so that
everyone in society can depend upon it. That means ensuring its value can be
depended upon.
Sir John Cunliffe, speech,
February 2020
Cunliffe has
backed up those comments recently, saying that crypto regulation needs to
happen in the UK “as a matter of urgency”.
The deputy
governor is by no means a crypto-sceptic or a Luddite. Speaking to global
financial conference SIBOS 2021 on 13 October he said:
Technology and innovation have driven improvement in finance throughout
history. Crypto technology offers great opportunity. As [Ralph Waldo] Emerson
said: ‘if you build a better mousetrap the world will beat a path to your
door’...bringing the crypto world effectively within the regulatory perimeter
will help ensure that the potentially very large benefits of the application of
this technology to finance can flourish in a sustainable way
It is not the
fault of cryptoasset issuers that regulators have been slow to move. The kind
of overhaul of financial systems that crypto proposes is labyrinthine in scope
and cross-border in nature. Painstaking detail and focus must be applied.
A $2 trillion+
market has grown up in stages: in some areas arguably without any legal clarity
at all. It is to everyone’s benefit, from private banks to pension funds and
the small retail investor to high net worth individuals if strong regulation is
applied.
EU Rules
The Washington
Post alleged back in 2018 that with the introduction and enforcement of GDPR
that it was in fact Europe
and not the US which was the
world’s most powerful tech regulator. The Europeans appear to be taking the
same lead in crypto.
The EU has
committed to introducing cross-border, bloc-wide regulations on cryptoassets by
2024 under the MiCA
legislation (Regulation in
Markets on Crypto Assets). This is a sprawling, complex, 168-page stack of laws
now going through their first readings in the European Council. MiCA offers 28
definitions for key terms in markets, including “crypto-assets”, “distributed
ledger technology” and “utility token”, as well as aiming to provide
comprehensive coverage for stablecoins and cryptoasset service providers.
The regulation
will supersede any rules imposed by the EU’s 27 member states, in favour of one
set of shared regulatory boundaries.
It is no wonder
then that Europe has quickly grown into the largest cryptoasset market in the
world, according to Chainalysis research published in Q3.
Central,
northern and western Europe (CNWE) received over $1 trillion of digital assets
across trade, investments and business dealings between July 2020 and June
2021, the research shows. That accounts for 25% of global crypto activity.
Transaction volume grew significantly across virtually all cryptocurrencies and
service types, including on-chain value, on-chain retail value and peer-to-peer
exchange trading. The region also became the biggest crypto trading partner for
every other area, sending at least 25% of all value received by other regions,
including 34% of value received by North America.
Large
institutional transactions — those valued at more than $10m apiece — grew from
$1.4bn in July 2020 to $46.3bn in July 2021.
News that
Europe is the world’s largest crypto economy comes as no surprise. Institutions
across the continent are funnelling ever greater amounts into cryptocurrencies,
with centrally-cleared ETPs the greatest beneficiaries.As the issuer of
the world’s most-traded crypto ETPs on regulated stock exchanges in London,
Paris, Amsterdam, Zurich and Frankfurt, we have witnessed first-hand seen the
power that strong regulation has had on the ability for innovation to
really flourish
Bradley Duke, CEO, ETC Group
As the biggest
counterparty to every other trading region globally, CNWE is a key source of
liquidity to cryptocurrency investors around the world, the research shows.
Researchers
found that activity really started to pick up in the middle of Q2 last year.
CNWE’s
cryptocurrency economy began growing faster in July 2020. At this time, we saw
a hige increase in large institutional-sized transactions, meaning transfers
above $10 million worth of cryptocurrency.
Chainalysis, research, 28 September 2021
ETC Group’s BTCE
is now
the world’s largest, at more
than $1.3bn AUM. It is also the most-traded physical single-asset
cryptocurrency ETP. Research published in Q3 by CryptoCompare found
that institutional investors
traded $26.3m of BTCE on average daily, a volume more than seven times higher
than its nearest competitor.
Clear regulation
always brings more opportunities for growth; or to put it another way: capital
always follows greater legal clarity. Companies
can conduct and grow their business without inadvertently falling foul of
grey-area uncertainty. As such, institutions who want exposure to Bitcoin no
longer have to deal with feeling exposed and vulnerable when the regulators
come knocking.
United States attempts regulatory unity
Studies and
surveys disagree on the exact proportion of the US population that owns
cryptocurrency in one form or another. NORC, a research group at the University
of Chicago, published findings
in July 2021 that 13% of
Americans bought or traded crypto in the last 12 months, from a sample of 1004
adults. Digital asset exchange Gemini claimed in May the figure was 14%, from a
survey of 3,000 people, and Gallup found that 6% of 1,037 people surveyed in
June owned Bitcoin.
Spun out to
national level, these figures represent anywhere from 25.8 million to 43
million people.
The lack of
national or even federal resources aimed at defining market participant size
has left private companies with relatively small sample sizes to fill the gaps.
But whatever the true number, it is clear that tens of millions of Americans own,
interact with, custody, trade and pay taxes on cryptocurrency holdings each
year.
And yet there is
no commitment set for national cryptaosset regulations in the US.
US rivals for
trade globally have set out their stall. Europe we already know about. China
has made its feelings clear across Q3 — it has scuppered its vast crypto
industry in favour of stricter controls and bans.
That’s why there
was so much excitement around one piece of proposed US legislation which landed
on the mat on 28 July 2021.
Digital Asset Market Structure and
Investor Protection Act
One of the most
ambitious efforts to date to provide US legal clarity arrived in Q3, on 28 July
2021. Representative Don Beyer, a Democratic Congressman for Virginia, published the
Digital Asset Market Structure and Investor Protection
Act (DAMSIP).
As
the world’s second-largest law firm by revenue, Latham & Watkins, noted
on publication, this proposed
regulation “casts a wide net, and could bring cryptoassets into the
mainstream regulatory fold”.
The
Act would
effectively sort
cryptocurrency projects into two separate and distinct baskets: securities, or
commodities. In doing so it would offer clear guidance as to which US regulator
would have jurisdiction over any past, present or future cryptocurrency
project.
Under
US law, the SEC deals with securities, while the CFTC rules over commodities
markets.
US
regulators and lawmakers have effectively already determined that the two main
digital assets, Bitcoin and Ether, are not securities. We have known this since
June 2018, from Bill Hinman’s famous
speech while he was head of
the SEC corporate finance division. That position has been supported
by SEC chair Jay Clayton
in recent years.
Decentralisation
is key to this definition: there is no central authority issuing Bitcoin or
Ether and therefore no third party offering purchasers an expectation of a
future return on investment.
The genie is
out of the bottle for Bitcoin and Ether. You cannot go back and say, well,
we’re going to make those securities. Industry would go wild over that. That’s
not going to happen. So I think it’s lesson learned
Patrick McCarty, former CFTC general counsel
However,
XRP, the $50bn cryptoasset created by Ripple, is being sued by
the
SEC for the sale of
unregistered securities. In that case, the SEC alleges, there is a centralised
authority (Ripple Labs) who issued digital asset tokens to investors who had
some expectation of a return.
Ripple
claims that XRP is a commodity, and therefore outside the SEC’s jurisdictional
mandate. The authority claims the opposite.
Interestingly
enough, Ether has been ‘de-securitised’, as per one of the provisions in Don
Beyer’s Act. Ethereum carried out an ICO in 2014, selling 50 million ETH in
exchange for $17.3 million in bitcoin. Future digital assets may be able to
de-securitise and become a commodity by becoming more decentralised, the Act
concedes. Token issuers could even deregister their product as a security,
similar to the provisions
under Section 12 (g) of the Securities Act of 1934.
It
would require that the tokens themselves not provide any equity or debt
interest, or any right to profits, voting rights or liquidation rights. It does
at least offer some replication of the Ether situation, if developers believe
the tokenomics of their projects will evolve over time.
Cryptoasset
issuers and developers arguably have no legal clarity from the US at all on who
should regulate them or how. This is an extraordinary situation to find
themselves in — particularly as these assets have found their way into the
hands of hundreds of millions of people worldwide — and this is an issue that
has become more urgent as the years roll on.
Crucially,
the Act has a Joint Rulemaking process for the CFTC and SEC to consider the top
25 cryptoassets by market cap and by average daily trading volume. Together
these projects, including Bitcoin, Ether, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash et al
formulate 90% of the total $2.4 trillion market value of cryptocurrencies.
Public rulemaking would force the two authorities to identify whether each of
the 25 are a security or a commodity.
Such
is the variance between the approximately 12,000 live cryptocurrencies
available to investors that an attempt to address them all would have
regulators stuck in years or even decades of Kafkaesque committees, sub-committees
and hearings. Beyer’s effort at least deals with the vast majority by trading
volume of these assets.
Former
CFTC general counsel Patrick McCarty has been working with Beyer’s office on
the legislation for the past 16 months. “Don Beyer is pro-innovation,
pro-digital assets,” he told Chris Brummer’s Fintech Beat podcast. As
Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee of Democrats, and a member of the
powerful Ways and Means Committee (the main tax-writing body in the US
legislature), Beyer certainly has US economic prowess on his watchlist.
Commodities or Securities, nothing else
Under Beyer’s
bill, digital assets have to fall into one of the two camps: commodities or
securities.
If Bitcoin and
Ether are not securities: and the SEC has already ruled that they are not, then
that means they must be commodities. That puts the authority in charge of them
as the CFTC.
“The
categories are A or B. Not A, B, C, D, or E, which would be confusing,“
says McCarty.
The closest
comparison for this kind of binary definition was in Dodd-Frank, the regulation
that came out of the US after the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Dodd-Frank ruled
that in the swaps market — all $542
trillion of it —
products
would either be cited under the CFTC as a swap, or under the SEC as a
security-based swap.
One final point
to make is that the Digital Asset Market
Structure and Investor Protection Act offers
regulators the ability to sanction, fine, or otherwise charge companies that
allow US citizens to use their products even if those companies are located
outside the US.
This
provision, too, sits in parallel with Dodd-Frank, where US judges have
repeatedly ruled
that the SEC has jurisdiction over
securities fraud occurring outside its national borders.
This is nothing
new. For example, the SEC reached a $24m civil settlement in 2019 with Cayman
Islands-based Block.one related to their $4.4bn EOS ICO. The regulator noted in
its filing that even while
Block.one
attempted to region-block US IP addresses from taking part, it made no effort
to block secondary market trading of EOS, nor did it stop promoting the ICO
through its website. The SEC concluded that “ERC-20 token purchasers would
reasonably have expected that they would profit from the efforts of Block.one.”
Similar
settlements with non-US businesses, like Russia’s ICORating
and even the $100m
fine levied on from BitMEX by
FinCEN and the CFTC during Q3 2021 show clearly that US regulators believe they
have jurisdiction over companies anywhere in the world, as long as they are
permitting US persons to carry out transactions with their products.
All that said,
the Digital Asset Market Structure and
Investor Protection Act is certainly, in the majority,
crypto-friendly legislation. Under the bill there is no mention of fines for
exchanges which are now trading what will turn out to be unregistered
securities. This suggests there would be a stay of execution period in which
service providers are given time to come into regulatory compliance.
Post Q3
What we didn’t
see during Q3, in terms of regulatory updates, is almost as interesting as what
we did see. Critics of recent attempts at crypto compliance complain that the
process is akin to smashing a square peg into a round hole.
The Howey Test,
from 1934, no less, still dominates American securities regulation. That’s not
to say it doesn’t work, but it’s clearly not designed from the ground up to
supply answers to the questions that the blockchain age throws up.
What we didn’t
see during Q3 was the proposal for a new market regulator that is designed with
cryptocurrency in mind.
In the
post-quarter period we did see that. Coinbase, now a public company valued at
$65.8bn, has been butting heads with the SEC over its yield-producing Lend
project, and ultimately withdrew it pending the threat of legal action from the
regulator. In response, it believes the best way forward is to dispense with
the traditional market oversight by any of the current authorities, namely the
SEC, CFTC, FinCEN or DoJ .
Instead?
The largest
US cryptocurrency exchange wants Congress to block the Securities and Exchange
Commission from overseeing the nascent industry and instead create a special
regulator for digital assets, according to a policy blueprint reviewed by The
Wall Street Journal
Paul Kiernan and Dave Michaels, WSJ, 14 October
2021
Such a move does
not appear to be high on the political to-do list. The DoJ is forming a specialist
crypto team, but that’s
intended to co-ordinate on ransomware investigations involving digital assets,
after at least 75 high profile infrastructure attacks globally across Q3.
US Bitcoin ETF finally arrives
Finally, perhaps
the most significant regulatory action for the US cryptocurrency industry
arrived in the post-quarter period.
The Proshares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) debuted
on the New York Stock Exchange on 19 October 2021. The United States has been
waiting for years to see its first Bitcoin ETF. It’s not quite what retail or
institutional investors wanted, but it is here.
Four days
earlier, Bitcoin crossed the $60,000 threshold for the first time since April
as investors bought the rumour and sent markets into overdrive.
Of course this ETF is important for Bitcoin adoption, since there are so many institutional
capital pools that are not allowed to invest directly in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies
but need regulator-approved structures by agencies such as the SEC. There is a huge pile of
capital waiting to gain Bitcoin exposure by means of those products.
Sebastian Markowsky, Chief Strategy Officer, Coinsource
Anticipating
that incoming “huge pile of capital” were existing investors, who helped
drive crypto market prices ever northwards and on to the edge of their all-time
highs.
Competition for
the first US Bitcoin ETF has been raging for years. The SEC has turned down
scores of applications from the largest asset managers in the world, citing
standard investor protections.
On a single day
in August 2018, the US securities regulator slapped down eight
ETF
proposals:
the first was Proshares’ Bitcoin futures ETF proposal, alongside one from
GraniteShares and five inverse and leveraged options from Direxion.
Bitwise has been
pursuing the issue since 2019, with all attempts for a pure Bitcoin ETF knocked
back, delayed or outright turned down. Seeing ProShares win the race has
spurred Bitwise back into action this week, as it applied
for an “actual” Bitcoin ETF
with NYSE Arca.
Bitcoin futures
ETFs are by their nature a more speculative tool than ETPs that accurately
track the price of Bitcoin directly, allow redemption in BTC and are centrally
cleared, such as ETP Group’s BTCE — now the most-traded
and largest of its kind
globally with $1.3bn AUM.
US retail
investors, specifically, are attracted to products with an ETF structure
because they are eligible to be traded through tax-exempt 401(k) plans,
offering direct bitcoin exposure through pension savings.
However, the
structure of the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF is likely to incur unwanted
costs for investors, experts agree. As one analyst told
Reuters:
There is no free lunch. An ETF based on futures is not ideal as there is a cost to rolling
into the futures contracts, given contango...translating into underperformance versus the
underlying asset.
Martha Reyes, head of research, Bequant
The final
quarter of the year is likely to see more US Bitcoin ETFs approved, with
decisions due from the SEC on four products from Global X, Kryptoin, Valkyrie
and WisdomTree.
Getting SEC approval on anything related to Bitcoin or cryptocurrencies has been an uphill
battle since bitcoin’s launch over 10 years ago. This is proof positive that regulators are
becoming less sceptical of crypto, and this gives the markets enormous encouragement. It
would appear that the SEC views Bitcoin futures ETFs as a safer investment vehicle for
investors, as they are filed under mutual fund rules. As mass adoption grows, so will the
demand for these types of products.
Josh Rogers, CEO, Minterest
Throughout Q3
there were other global regulatory actions that are particularly noteworthy.
Africa
Crypto adoption surged
1,200% in 2021, according to
Chainalysis research released on 14 September, and Kenyans lead the world in
peer to peer crypto trading, placed 1st out of 154 countries surveyed.
Many emerging markets face significant currency devaluation, driving residents to buy
cryptocurrency on P2P platforms in order to preserve their savings.
Geography
of Cryptocurrency 2021,
Chainalysis
Africa has the
smallest cryptocurrency economy in the world at $105.6bn, according to
researchers, but the region also boasts some of the highest
grassroots
adoption
globally, as Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania all rank in the top 20
countries.
The majority of
African fintech regulatory updates related to CBDCs during Q3, as the Bank of
Ghana announced
in August it would pilot
a central bank currency with German securities firm G+D, its pilot phase starting
in September as it seeks
to reduce reliance on cash. Nigeria’s securities regulator established a fintech
unit in September to study
crypto, but maintained its prime focus on issuing a CBDC, partnering
with Bitt Inc, with its launch
planned for October.
South Africa
beefed up its crypto
taxation regulations in Q3
while its Central Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago reiterated
the stance that it had
no plans to declare cryptocurrencies legal tender alongside the rand.
Europe
Billions of
institutional funds flows arrived in crypto products in Q3. New laws regarding
German Spezialfonds came into effect on
2 August, allowing these
institutional funds to hold up to 20% of their assets in crypto. Spezialfonds
are only accessible by institutions like insurers and pension funds, and
currently manage assets worth ˆ1.8
trillion ($2.1 trillion), according to Bloomberg.
Ukraine’s
Parliament signed
the ‘On Payment Services’
law in July, allowing it to issue a CBDC, while in September it made the
bombshell move to adopt
the draft law ‘On Digital
Assets’ which legally recognises cryptocurrencies, allows banks to open
accounts for crypto businesses, and provides judicial rights protections for
digital asset owners.
Some were more
circumspect, keeping cryptocurrencies at arms length. For example, the Bank of
Russia in July asked stock exchanges not
to list crypto companies (a
ruling which does not apply to a planned digital rouble CBDC), in September
began blocking
payments to
cryptoexchanges, and watched as one high-ranking Kremlin representative said
Russia was not
ready to accept Bitcoin as
legal tender.
Turkey’s
difficult relationship with crypto continued. In May a national scandal broke
out regarding an alleged $150m fraud involving a major exchange in the country,
Thodex. Turkish police detained
62 people in relation to
the alleged exit scam. Two weeks later, the Turkish Minister of Treasury and
Finance, Lufti Elvan, announced a policy shift live on CNN Turk: that the
central bank had defined crypto as a “non-monetary asset” and banned its use as
a form of payment.
And yet,
according to research published in Q3, Turkish crypto usage spiked
11x in a year.
The
Cryptocurrency Awareness and Perception Survey 2021 (available here)
by Akademetre
Research found that in 2020 only 0.7% of Turkish respondents had traded crypto
in some form. 84.1% had never heard of Bitcoin or cryptocurrencies before. By
2021, 7.7% of those surveyed had traded cryptocurrencies, while the number of
people who had never heard of Bitcoin fell to just 30.1%.
The
country’s largest cryptoexchange, Paribu, saw its userbase climb from 600,000
to over 4 million in the period surveyed. Average daily trading volume improved
from $34m in 2020 to $610m in 2021.
Trust in cryptocurrencies is increasing, but this research shows us one more time that we
need clear regulation to establish a complete trust for the userbase.
Yasin Oral,CEO, Paribu
In
July we also heard that Turkey’s draft bill on cryptocurrencies would be ready
to go to Parliament for
voting in October 2021.
But despite
significant and growing retail support for cryptocurrencies, the government
will likely take a hardline stance against them. Speaking to a national conference
of students on 18 September, President Erdoğan
argued
that its CBDC was far more
important and that the country was in a “war” against crypto.
We would never give [cryptocurrencies] that premium. Because we will continue on our way
with our money, which is our fundamental identity in this matter.
Turkey’s digital
lira has moved beyond the pilot phase and the Central Bank of Turkey reported
in Q3 it was being
tested in the wild, with the
first results likely to be reported in early 2022.
Caribbean
Few Caribbean
countries made regulatory moves on crypto in Q3: the Bank of Jamaica minted
its first $230m of CBDC
coins in August, while the East Caribbean Central Bank extended
its DCash expansion to St
Vincent and the Grenadines.
But Cuba’s
acceptance of Bitcoin was the regional highlight. A 26 August resolution
signed by the Banco
Central de Cuba President, Marta Sabina Wilson Gonzalez, notes that the central
bank will now be able to use cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin “for reasons of
socio-economic interest”, as long as all transactions are overseen by state
officials.
The
use of cryptocurrency is not mandatory, unlike in Cuba’s neighbour to the south
El Salvador, however the resolution does recognise cryptocurrencies as a means
of payment exchange for banks and institutions, and says the central bank will
grant licences to crypto service providers. The text of the law leaves the door open for the
adoption of a range of cryptocurrencies nationally, but local media reported
that both bitcoin and
ether will likely be accepted as the two most recognised and highest-value cryptocurrencies.
Cuba’s reasoning
is more nakedly political than most. The US embargo, and its associated
sanctions regime, has crippled industry for decades, and remittances to the
country are exorbitantly expensive, the World Bank says.
Everyone is watching if it goes well for El Salvador and if, for example, the cost of
remittances drops substantially...other countries will probably seek that advantage and
adopt it. Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador are the countries that would have the most to
gain if the adoption of bitcoin lowered the cost of sending remittances.
Dante Mossi, executive president, Central American Bank for Economic
Integration
Cuba’s move
indicates that grand experiments using crypto are now accelerating at an
international level.
Asia/Pacific
Chinese
officials shut down crypto mining in Anhui province in
July, marking the start of a
series of regulatory actions against the vast industry. The dominos started to
fall thereafter.
One high profile
court ruled
in August that cryptocurrency
was “not protected in law” and on 24 September the People’s Bank of China declared all
crypto-related
activities illegal. Exchanges like Huobi have since
blocked all mainland Chinese
accounts, with Binance ending
yuan trades in the
post-quarter period.
South Korea,
perhaps the most regulatorily-active country in the region, enacted
legislation in July to
allow it to seize crypto from tax evaders, and ramped up enforcement
against unregistered
exchanges with 40 venues expected to close by
August. Offshore crypto activity
that impacted domestic business would also be subject to Korean law and supervised
by the Korean Financial Intelligence Unit, authorities ruled
in Q3.
Japan
strengthened its scrutiny of crypto in Q3, beginning in July with diplomatic
efforts to block the use
of cryptocurrencies and additions to the oversight mandate of the Financial
Services Authority regulator.
Singapore
granted its first
license
to a cryptocurrency
exchange in August, in a bid to lure operators to the city-state, with retail
adoption booming as
high as 66%, according to
reports.
South America
El Salvador was
clearly the biggest story of Q3, with its Bitcoin Law coming into effect on 7
September. In the month since Bitcoin was introduced as legal tender in
parallel with the US dollar, 2.73
million Salvadorans — 42.6% of
the population and well above the number with bank accounts (see Theme 1) —
downloaded the government’s official Chivo wallet and its $30 of free bitcoin,
with more than 1 in 10 having since used the cryptocurrency as payment,
according to
Reuters. The law additionally
exempts foreign investors from tax on bitcoin
gains, a move designs to
spur crucial Foreign Direct Investment in the country.
The ripple
effects in South America have been noticeably broad, without any one country
putting its head over the parapet. Argentinian President Alberto Fernandez told
reporters in August he was
“open” to adopting bitcoin as legal tender in response to inflationary
pressures, while in the same month legislation arrived
on the docket in Uruguay to
legalise digital assets, allow banks to accept crypto payments and to provide a
regulatory framework to integrate crypto with the existing financial system.
Middle East/North Africa
Kazakhstan's
proportion of Bitcoin hashrate soared in the wake of China’s crackdown,
becoming the world’s second-largest after the United States. Its Bitcoin
hashrate share tripled to 18.1% in the year to August 2021, according to
recently-published data
from the
Cambridge Center for
Alternative Finance.
And its
government began
a one-year pilot in July to
allow banks to process payments in cryptocurrency. No further official
statements have emerged.
Iran continued
its back and forth with crypto mining, ordering
legal miners to halt
production in July in the wake of blackouts, then announcing the activity could
continue
from September.
Dubai’s free
zone became the Middle East’s latest regulatory test-bed, as UAE regulators
approved crypto trading in
September.
Important information:
This article does not constitute investment advice, nor does it constitute an offer or solicitation to buy financial products. This article is for general informational purposes only, and there is no explicit or implicit assurance or guarantee regarding the fairness, accuracy, completeness, or correctness of this article or the opinions contained therein. It is advised not to rely on the fairness, accuracy, completeness, or correctness of this article or the opinions contained therein. Please note that this article is neither investment advice nor an offer or solicitation to acquire financial products or cryptocurrencies.
Before investing in crypto ETPs, potentional investors should consider the following:
Potential investors should seek independent advice and consider relevant information contained in the base prospectus and the final terms for the ETPs, especially the risk factors mentioned therein. The invested capital is at risk, and losses up to the amount invested are possible. The product is subject to inherent counterparty risk with respect to the issuer of the ETPs and may incur losses up to a total loss if the issuer fails to fulfill its contractual obligations. The legal structure of ETPs is equivalent to that of a debt security. ETPs are treated like other securities.