ALSO: Ethereum delays testnet, SEC wants Binance investigation and more |

Sept. 18, 2023

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Welcome to The Node! This is Daniel Kuhn here to take you through the latest in crypto news and why it matters.

 

In today's news: U.S. SEC calls for urgent Binance investigation. Ethereum testnest delayed after failed launch. And Mark Cuban lost some $870,000 in phishing attack.

 

The takeaway: New York's top financial regulator doesn't want to move markets when delisting tokens.

 

Urgent Call

In a scathing Monday court filing, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) urged a D.C. court to approve an inspection into Binance.US, doubling down on previous accusations that the firm had failed to produce documents sought by the regulator in ongoing legal proceedings. In June, the watchdog sued Binance.US, the exchange's global parent Binance Holdings and founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, alleging they ran an unlicensed securities exchange. In calling for the probe, the SEC said Ceffu (formerly Binance Custody) may also be serving Binance.US, and can be used to shift U.S. customer funds out of the country.

 

Failure to Launch

The latest Ethereum test network Holesky failed to launch on Friday, marring a technological milestone that was supposed to serve as a celebration of the first anniversary of last year’s historic “Merge” upgrade. While some validators were able to manually start the test network, there was a misconfiguration in one of the genesis files of the network, according to Ethereum core developers. As a result, Ethereum core developers decided to postpone the launch for about two weeks, giving them time to regroup.

 

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Cuban, Sandwiched

Dallas Mavericks owner and billionaire technology investor Mark Cuban lost some $870,000 worth of tokens over the weekend after likely clicking on a phishing link after “months of inactivity.” He lost his U.S.-pegged stablecoins, staked ETH (stETH), SuperRare (RARE) tokens and some Ethereum Name Service (ENS) domains, after clicking a fake MetaMask wallet application, Cuban told DLNews. Phishing attacks trick users into divulging sensitive data, downloading malware, and exposing their private information and are extremely common in crypto.

 

JPEX Arrests

Authorities in Hong Kong have arrested six people, including two social media influencers, in conjunction with a probe into crypto exchange JPEX. Hong Kong-based JPEX has been operating in the territory without a license, Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission said. Further, police have received over 1,408 complaints about the platform with some estimating that towards of $128 million has been stolen from users. 

 

The Takeaway: Only Living Reg in NY

(CoinDesk)

The New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) is setting out to tackle a massive regulatory object: How crypto exchanges like Coinbase, Gemini and others list – and perhaps more importantly, delist – tokens. According to a new public service announcement, the call to update the agency’s guidance builds upon and will try to formalize existing working standards.

 

But the move is much more than just government incrementalism, and could have nationwide and even global implications. 

 

My colleague Jack Schickler does a good job breaking down today’s announcements. In short, the agency laid out three aims: set policy so NYDFS licensees are more proactive in assessing legal, reputational and market risks during the coin listing process, update the number of “greenlisted” coins (today limited to bitcoin, ether and stablecoins from PayPal and Gemini) and open a public comment period for industry participants to say their piece.

 

While “just” a state financial regulator, whatever the NYDFS does often makes an imprint worldwide. Even in an increasingly globalized world, New York remains a main hub for economic activity and capital formation, and so the agency is a leading organization in setting reporting and communication standards that echo across the financial landscape. If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.

 

So too for crypto, in an interesting way and despite The Blockchain’s globalized nature (some might say “geographical decentralization,” but you don’t have to). Take just the NYDFS’ track record when bringing regulatory enforcements: a few of these cases have quite literally reshaped the industry, like in the case of Tether that reset the bar for stablecoin transparency. 

 

It’s true the agency’s so-called BitLicense didn’t quite become the model for crypto oversight that its architect, the lawyer and former public servant Benjamin Lawsky, set out to achieve. But the collected bundle of rules, recommendations and guidance has been a major influence on the development of the digital asset industry in the U.S. – with many insiders thinking it set the pace for regulators to try to squeeze crypto inside the box of established rules, rather than address crypto’s particularities head on.

 

Its legacy is certainly mixed. It’s arguable the NYDFS has protected New Yorkers from countless crypto business failures and bankruptcies over the years, and especially during the year of pain in 2022 when now-defunct crypto lenders like Celsius and BlockFi imploded. These firms were barred from offering services in the state, and just anecdotally I know more than a few people who were attracted by the (now obvious) unsustainable interest rates, who are now thankful not to be a bankruptcy estate creditor.

 

But the highly restrictive Bitlicense system hasn’t always paid off, (even putting aside the hypothetical profits would be Celsius users might have seen riding the bubble up). Licensees including exchanges like Xapo, bitFlyer and the U.S. wing of Bitstamp, aren’t exactly known for their major foothold in the New York or U.S. crypto trading markets. 

 

Worse, despite the fact there are only 30-odd firms with a BitLicense, it doesn’t even have a 100% hit rate when it comes to protecting businesses and consumers. The now shuttered Genesis Global Trading unit of CoinDesk sister company Genesis operated under the aegis of New York State, for instance, with seemingly no practical benefit. 

 

Either way, measuring whether regulations are “worth the cost” is a futile act. Especially in the world of crypto, where all of the real use cases are essentially ungovernable and where all excitement takes place well outside of walled gardens like Coinbase and Gemini. Mass market crypto has so far come around on a four-year timetable, and it’s only during bull markets that centralized retail crypto lending, crypto credit cards, et cetera can sound like a good idea. 

 

The reason why the NYDFS’s recent announcement could have a global impact is because it deals with whitelisting and blacklisting tokens and because crypto trading is a global phenomenon. In the grand scheme of token prices, it doesn’t really matter whether this or that custody firm is awarded a BitLicense, but it sure does matter whether Coinbase will list or delist a token (even if the “Coinbase bump” is today muted).

 

The agency has seemingly taken a special concern for market stability when it comes to delisting tokens. In the announcement, NYDFS Superintendent Adrienne Harris noted that on occasion certain tokens will slip through or change, so that if they were once thought to be “OK” to list now need to be removed without further damaging consumers. 

 

To my mind, that seems challenging if not impossible – and not because crypto firms are unwilling to comply or that regulators are incompetent. Just in terms of market structure, when something is both globally distributed yet also illiquid (i.e. a cryptocurrency) it’ll be prone to price spikes. Token prices are abjectly tied to reputation and it seems hard to imagine a world where Coinbase being required to delist some such token wouldn’t be read as a death knell, if only temporarily. 

 

Further, changes to how companies “self certify” the tokens they list may mean fewer bad apples get in to begin with, but when it comes to spinning up regulatory working groups and delisting coins with an “Department-identified weakness or vulnerability,” it seems hard to imagine The Compliant will be able to move quick enough to delist tokens that are actually a problem. 

 

This is especially true because the process of delisting a token requires several steps to remain aboveboard, like announcing the announcement and giving the public appropriate time to react. 

 

Take BALD, the recent pump and dump token that inaugurated Coinbase’s L2 network, which launched on a Sunday, amassed a market cap of over $50 million by evening and then popped the following Monday morning. How could a regulator predict something like that? 

 

Well, the simple fact is that they’re not even going to try – instead they’re limiting their essentially limiting their purview to overseeing a supposed “greenlist” of pre-approved tokens rather than taking an actual swing at the on-chain tokens that pop into existence and can actually do harm.

 

By lengthening both the listing and delisting processes, consumers aren’t really being benefited. These rules will likely only mean domestic bucket shops like Coinbase continue to lose out to overseas bucket shops like Binance.

 

It just seems that, at least in this very narrow sense, the aims of regulations aren’t square with the realities of crypto trading. And that there’s a difference between good intentions and good policy. 

 

Read this article on the web.

 

– D.K.

@danielgkuhn

[email protected]

 

A message from Bitget

Bitget Marks 5 Years in Business by Looking Forward to the Next 5 – and Beyond

 

In 2018, the year Bitget launched, at least 23 other exchanges failed. The next year, that figure was 252, then 2020’s figure exceeded that. After that came FTX’s implosion. It’s no accident then that Bitget is still in business and is, in fact, thriving.

 

“In retrospect, 2018 marked the rise of Ethereum and the dawn of a cryptocurrency frenzy,” Bitget Managing Director Gracy Chen wrote in a letter to employees. “However, as crypto prices plummeted, most speculators fled, leaving only a resilient 10% still holding their ground. It was during this pivotal moment that Bitget emerged. We envisioned a crypto revolution that will reform the way finance works and people invest forever, creating a more equitable future.”

 

Bitget can be overlooked in the centralized exchange market.  Continue Reading

 
 

Off-Chain Signals 

  • A $3.4 Billion Crypto Market Splash? – Unchained
  • Justin ‘T-Bills’ Sun prints $800M to himself – Protos
  • Crypto Companies Aren't Banks, Hong Kong Warns Investors – Decrypt
  • The Ludicrous, Depressing Appeal of the Crypto Guy – The New Republic
 

No Scam Zone

 
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