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Bitcoin Cash Price Posts Strong Return as Market Trades Sideways

Bitcoin cash price posts strong return as market trades sideways

Bitcoin Cash Price Posts Strong Return as Market Trades Sideways

Bitcoin cash price posts strong return as market trades sideways
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The cryptocurrency markets were mixed on Thursday, with the index more or less trading sideways after recovering from an early morning dip. Against this backdrop, though, the bitcoin Cash price achieved a strong return, enabling it to lead the large-cap index by a comfortable margin.

Bitcoin cash price
Source: coinmarketcap

The cryptocurrency market cap had entered the day at $449.6 billion — the product of yet another midweek slump — and declined further heading into Wednesday evening. After bottoming out below $440 billion, the index experienced a moderate recovery on Thursday morning. At present, the market is valued at just below $453 billion, representing a 24-hour increase of increase of about three-quarters-of-one percent.

bitcoin Price Holds Near $10,700

The Bitcoin price managed to achieve a one percent increase for the day, placing it at a present value of $10,695 on cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex. The flagship cryptocurrency now has a $181.4 billion market cap, which translates into a 40 percent share of the total cryptocurrency market cap.

Bitcoin price
bitcoin Price Chart

Notably, the market does not appear to have moved on the news that digital payment processor Square wants to build out its cryptocurrency-related product line. Square CEO Jack Dorsey — who also leads social media giant Twitter — said that the company believes bitcoin is a “transformational technology,” and analysts predict that the company could launch a Coinbase-style brokerage platform and cryptocurrency exchange.

Ethereum Price Treads Water Despite ICO Probe

The Ethereum price experienced a moderate hiccup last night, briefly sinking below $850 before recovering to a present value of $869. This leaves the second-largest cryptocurrency’s market cap at $85.5 billion, a single-day increase of about one-half-of-one percent.

Ethereum price
Ethereum price chart

Ethereum’s temporary stumble was likely connected to the news that the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had issued subpoenas to “scores” of initial coin offering (ICO) operators in what represents the agency’s widest ever probe into the nascent fundraising model.

Because the majority of ICO tokens are built as ERC20 tokens that run on top of the Ethereum blockchain, ICO regulations can often have an outsized effect on Ethereum, even though they also generally impact the market as a whole.

At present, the probe does not appear to be having a sustained effect on the Ethereum price, but this could change if the SEC probe results in fraud suits being brought against ICO operators.

bitcoin Cash Price Leads the Large-Cap Index

The altcoin markets were choppy, with several large-cap coins achieving solid advances but the majority sinking into the red.

Bitcoin cash price
Altcoin price chart

Ripple was the most stable large-cap cryptocurrency, with its price fluctuating less than one-fifth-of-one percent for the day and holding at a present value of $0.90.

The bitcoin Cash price, meanwhile, led the index with a five percent advance to $1,285. bitcoin Cash currently has a $21.8 billion market cap, leaving it approximately $13 billion behind Ripple on the charts.

Litecoin, ranked fifth, declined by about one percent to $208, while NEO’s three percent pullback dropped its price to just above $130.

The EOS price declined by one percent, but eighth-ranked Cardano saw its value sink by a top 10-worst six percent to a present value of $0.29.

The Stellar price declined by three percent, and IOTA rounded out the top 10 with a four percent increase to $1.98.

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Published at Thu, 01 Mar 2018 13:30:07 +0000

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NextBlock CEO Alex Tapscott Cancels Plans to Go Public and Will Return Money to Investors

Tapscott

Alex Tapscott, CEO of NextBlock Global, a venture capital company investing in blockchain technologies, announced in a press release yesterday that he is canceling their plans to go public through a reverse takeover (RTO) of Nobelium Tech Corp., a company listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX).

Tapscott said the young company had “stumbled” in falsely listing some crypto and blockchain experts as members of the firm’s advisory board. He is currently talking to NextBlock investors to work out how to return their original investments and to “rebuild the trust of those [they] have disappointed.”

NextBlock Global raised $20 million in their initial oversubscribed fundraising in July 2017 and had hoped to raise $100 million in the public offering. They planned to invest in digital currencies, blockchain hosting platforms and blockchain-based applications.

CIBC and investment bank Canaccord Genuity (a former employer of Tapscott’s) were underwriters on the deal, but CIBC pulled its support from the young venture capital firm amid the allegations.

According to BNN, clients of CIBC received an email saying, “CIBC has withdrawn as an agent from the NextBlock Global Limited private placement.” CIBC was not available for comment.

Sources have told BNN that Canaccord Genuity remained in the deal.

An article in Forbes last week detailed complaints from Kathryn Haun, Vinny Lingham, Dmitry Buterin and Karen Gifford that Tapscott had circulated an investor deck that incorrectly listed them as members of the NextBlock advisory board.

Dmitry Buterin, co-founder of Blockgeeks and father of Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin, was included in at least one draft of the investor deck. He told bitcoin Magazine in a recent interview what had happened. He recounted:

“It’s pretty simple. Alex asked me to be an advisor, I declined. Then I got a deck forwarded to me which listed me as an advisor. It was forwarded to me by investors who received it from Alex.”

Buterin said he had met with Tapscott to let him know he wouldn’t be on the advisory board:

“We had a meeting and I was not convinced that they have the right resources to pull this off.”

When Is an Advisory Board Not an Advisory Board?

A thread on Twitter about NextBlock recently included some comments about how advisory boards have become routine and are often used as window dressing for making ICO pitches and, therefore, they aren’t really “advising” as such.

One user commented that likely only 50 to 60 percent of advisory boards are legitimate anymore, and put the NextBlock situation in a different light, implying that it’s become common practice to dress up a proposal with photos of known experts.

Amber D. Scott, CEO of Outlier Solutions, told bitcoin Magazine that she gets several requests a week to sit on ICO advisory boards. Scott explained that the conversation often goes like this:

ICO rep: “We saw you speak at an event and would love to add you as an advisor.”

Scott: “I’ve looked at your website/white paper and I’m not sure where you need compliance advice. Could you please elaborate on that?”


ICO rep: “You don’t actually have to do anything. We’ll just put your picture and bio on the website. You have a great name in the community.”


Andreas Antonopoulos, well-known author of “Mastering bitcoin,” says on his website that he does not accept invitations to sit on advisory boards and that he will not discuss projects publicly if he does work as an advisor.


Vitalik Buterin has also had to make it clear several times on Twitter that he is not an advisor for a number of firms that have touted his advice.


What could have been a major scandal for both the Tapscotts (father Don and son Alex) has been averted by this move, but how much long-term damage both NextBlock and the Blockchain Research Institute will sustain to their reputation remains to be seen.


The father-son Tapscott team co-founded the Toronto-based think tank Blockchain Research Institute, and co-authored the book “Blockchain Revolution: How the Technology Behind bitcoin Is Changing Money, Business and the World,” which has been translated into more than 20 languages.

The Blockchain Research Institute is holding a Members Summit this week in Toronto. Members of the think tank include CIBC, Microsoft, IBM, Fujitsu, Accenture, Tencent, Bell, Nasdaq, FedEx, Interac and the Governments of Canada and Ontario.

The post NextBlock CEO Alex Tapscott Cancels Plans to Go Public and Will Return Money to Investors appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

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