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Why Did Bitcoin Bears Fail Miserably in Stopping Huge Institutional Demand For Crypto? 🐻🛑₿

Why Did bitcoin Bears Fail Miserably in Stopping Huge Institutional Demand For Crypto? 🐻🛑₿

As much as some cynics, such as traditional investor Mark Dow, like to paint it, institutions are heavily invested in the crypto space already. Sure, the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) recently divulged that it intends to put its bitcoin (BTC) futures vehicle on the backburner, but investment statistics accentuate that big names are flooding into this space.
Related Reading: Binance Research Report Claims That Less Than 7% of Crypto is Owned by Institutions
Institutions Are Still Throwing Money At Crypto
Business Insider reports that “major financial institutions,” coupled with prominent venture capital groups and technology powerhouses, are continuing to catapult money at the cryptocurrency and blockchain space. Data suggests that in the past four months alone, startups in this embryonic space have secured $850 million in 13 large deals.
Lesser-known yet respected crypto exchange Liquid, for instance, just closed its Series C funding round, which saw its private value rise to over $1 billion. Liquid saw cheques written from IDG Capital, a prominent Asia-centric venture fund, and Bitmain, the bitcoin mining space’s most prominent yet controversial player. In the same vein, Bakkt, the cryptocurrency initiative/platform backed by NYSE’s owner, the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), saw a casual $182.5 million fly its way, kicking off 2019 with a bang.
This influx of funding comes in spite of “finance execs’” worries that blockchain as a technological advancement still has an array of drawbacks: lack of regulatory clarity, failure to interoperate, a lack of network continuity, intellectual property concerns, and an inherent inability to scale.

If the level of investment keeps its pace for the rest of fiscal 2019, annual funding for blockchain and crypto asset startups will have seen its “second consecutive annual record,” as last year saw $2.4 billion raised in 117 different deals.
Interestingly, this figure cited by Business Insider contradicts the $1.6 billion of 2018 funding mentioned by industry analytics unit Diar, but the point is clear nonetheless: big names in finance, tech, and investment are still interested in this industry, 80% collapse aside.
bitcoin Markets Already Have Heavy Institutional Influence
Not only does the financing side of the cryptocurrency space have a heavy institutional atmosphere, but so does the bitcoin markets themselves. In fact, on Tuesday, Matt Hougan, the head of research at bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) hopeful Bitwise, revealed that as his firm’s trade volume provider revealed that the volume of the CME’s BTC futures passed that of the largest legitimate spot exchange, Binance.

Yesterday, the volume of CME bitcoin futures exceeded the volume on the single largest spot bitcoin exchange (Binance): $379m vs. $257m. https://t.co/8luckTr0s8
— Matt Hougan (@Matt_Hougan) April 23, 2019

While the CME’s futures are paper-based, meaning that there is no physical collateral in the form of BTC backing them, this does show that institutions do play a bigger role in cryptocurrency than some think.
April 1st’s jaw-dropping surge would confirm this. As reported by NewsBTC previously, analysts and researchers are adamant that bitcoin’s sudden $1,000 candle was the byproduct of a single trader/entity, rumored to be an institution or large fund located in Hong Kong. Research group CoinMetrics further suggests that the “committed actor,” implying that it was a well-connected whale or institution, played the market like a violin to their advantage, orchestrating trades on multiple exchanges, at times when liquidity was scant, to “maximize price impact.” 
And this concerted effort to boost bitcoin’s spot value might just be the catalyst that brings the genie out of its proverbial bottle, as institutional ramps are soon expected to launch en-masse.
More Institutional Involvement To Come
Although Bloomberg, citing those familiar with Bakkt’s operations, recently wrote that the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) isn’t all too excited with its bitcoin futures proposal, the platform is purportedly still chugging along. The sources explained that instead of a green light from the CFTC, Bakkt is looking for a stamp of approval from New York’s regulators, which have historically been stringent, albeit still cautiously amicable towards bitcoin-related ventures.
If the exchange secures this approval, Bakkt will soon launch its futures product, which many pundits expect to be a hit with institutional players waiting on the sidelines with millions, if not billions of dry powder.

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Coinbase BCash Scandal: Ver Says Insider Trading A ‘Non-Crime’

bitcoin.com owner and bitcoin Cash (BCash) proponent Roger Ver has described Coinbase’s insider trading scandal as a “non-crime.”


Ver: Advance Trading Would Have Been Better

Speaking in a new interview with CNBC, which this week also came under scrutiny for its sudden BCash support, Ver implied it was up to users to “be careful” when using cryptocurrency exchanges.

“I think insider trading is a non-crime… If a bunch of people had traded in advance, then the price wouldn’t have been nearly as volatile,” he told hosts including pro-bitcoin Brian Kelly.

Coinbase

Ver’s previous appearance on the network ignited a storm on social media, with figures such as Max Keiser opposing the network’s choice of guest for mainstream viewers. Keiser described BCash as “borderline fraud” and CNBC as “fake news.”

Responding to Kelly’s query as to whether BCash’s increased popularity would cause it the same challenges as bitcoin currently faces, Ver continued that bigger blocks would avoid issues such as network congestion.

Reddit User Says ‘Mate At Coinbase’ Confirmed BCash Launch

Yet the ties between Ver and the media giant run deeper.

As Bitcoinist reported Wednesday, an out-of-character spate of pro-BCash tweets from CNBC revealed the work of Gaby and Paul Wasenstein, a husband-wife team which worked both as its director of marketing and organized BCash events.

A photograph of Paul Wasenstein with Ver holding a CNBC logo has been circulating around cryptocurrency social media circles.

Predictably, the backlash from bitcoin users angered by the sudden BCash promotion continues to mount.

Slush, creator of the first bitcoin mining pool and Trezor hardware wallet  CEO, wrote on Twitter that the matter of BCash, along with the ongoing insider trading scandal at Coinbase, was a “decentralization matter.”

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“Avoid both,” he added, with ShapeShift CEO Erik Voorhees describing his own objections as “politicized propaganda.”

On Coinbase’s promised investigation into the insider trading, analyst Tone Vays meanwhile unearthed what he considers evidence staff broke rules about BCash prior to the release.

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A Reddit thread Vays found shows user u/mukiwa2 tell users he “has a mate at (Coinbase),” which allowed them to know it would shortly add bitcoin Cash.

u/mukiwa2 has since deleted the comment.

What do you think about the latest comments from Roger Ver about insider trading? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Twitter, Shutterstock

The post Coinbase BCash Scandal: Ver Says Insider Trading A ‘Non-Crime’ appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

6 weeks intense Nashville blockchain development bootcamp for beginners – ethereum blockchain developer training for beginners, how to develop ethereum blockchain application, smart contract, solidity programming, DAaps

6 weeks intense Nashville blockchain development bootcamp for beginners – ethereum blockchain developer training for beginners, how to develop ethereum blockchain application, smart contract, solidity programming, DAaps This is the most comprehensive blockchain course for […]