4 Years Ago

Written by Jonny Fry
Writers linkdin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonnyfry/

In June 2021 in the US state of Texas, Governor Greg Abbott signed a new law known as the Virtual Currency Bill which came into force as of 1st September 2021. The impact of this is that Texas will now recognise virtual currencies, including digital currencies, into law. It makes Texas the second state after Wyoming to recognise cryptos. The fact that Texas now legally recognises cryptos is more evidence of how Digital Assets are being embraced and possibly helps to partially explain, along with Texas’s cheap power supplies, why so many of the Bitcoin mining firms which have fled China are now moving to Texas. However, companies engaged with crypto activities very much remain in the ‘cross hairs’ of US regulators. According to the Wall Street Journal ,the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is alleged to be investigating Uniswap Labs, the organisation behind one of the world's largest DeFi platforms. Some publications, such as Coinidol, have indeed posed the question: “Is the US SEC in a War Against Cryptocurrency Business?”. No doubt this is off the back of the SEC investigations into some of the key crypto businesses such as Binance, Coinbase and Ripple.



Meanwhile, DeFi platforms are potentially challenging many of the traditional financial services - for instance lending, borrowing and insurance as well as investing, and have proved to be very popular for retail investors. In order to gain institutional appeal, DeFi platforms ideally need to be authorised and this is the route taken by Swarm Markets, itself having been regulated by the German regulator BaFin since 1st July 2021. Here in the UK, much frustration has existed regarding the time it is taking for the FCA to review firms’ applications to be listed on the FCA crypto register. As of 10th...


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Written by Jonny Fry
Writers linkdin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonnyfry/

There has been considerable coverage about how companies are able to use Blockchain technology to raise capital via tokens and while tokens are still being used as a funding mechanism - see here for a list of recent projects. The reality is that, until the volatility (the amount that the price of tokens zigs and zags up and down) declines and until we see real institutional buying of this new asset class, investors would be wise to commit a relatively small amount (3% to 5%) of their portfolio into tokens/cryptos. This leaves at least 95% and, arguably, this 95% of investors’ monies is where we could indeed see most disruption. The use of Blockchain technology to help improve the efficiency of issuing equity and debt by using smart contracts to report to compliance staff on an exceptions basis (by being able to monitor data that has been stored in a structured format) could prove to be a game changer for the financial markets.



The traditional ways of issuing debt and being tied to one jurisdiction (therefore needing to comply with certain tax requirements) may well not hold true for the issue of digital debt instruments. It is claimed by the German firm, Cash link, that over the life cycle of a bond, by using Blockchain technology it is possible to save 35% of costs by automating many of the current manual processes such as updating bond documentation. The use of blockchain could also reduce the number of intermediaries involved since bonds may no longer need to be registered with a central securities depository....


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