News Headline Highlights
- National Australia Bank (NAB) announced the completion of an intra-bank cross-border layer-one public blockchain transaction using its self-issued stablecoins, claiming to be the first financial institution to do so. NAB hopes to roll out a solution for corporate and institutional clients by the end of 2023.
- Fidelity Crypto, which 37.1m retail customer accounts, quietly went live with their retail crypto product, giving millions of customers access to commission-free trading of bitcoin and ether.
- BlackRock CEO Larry Fink earmarked several trends in digital assets in his annual letter to shareholders. Amongst them are advances in digital payments across emerging markets and the promise of tokenization were among the topics addressed.
- Brevan Howard, a global asset management firm with ~$30 billion in assets under management, has entered into an agreement to take over a long-short hedge fund run by Dragonfly Capital, a 10yr old crypto asset manager.
- Metamask, the most popular web3 browser wallet provider, reported that swap volumes it an all-time high last weekend as the fall of top crypto-friendly banks Silvergate and Signature sent shockwaves through the sector.
- Crypto exchange-traded products issuer 21Shares is closing down five funds (S&P Risk Controlled Bitcoin Index, S&P Risk Controlled Ethereum Index, DeFi 10 Infrastructure, Crypto Layer 1 ETP and USD Yield ETP) and delisting another (Terra Classic ETP). Combined these products have less than $1m in assets.
- The FTX administrator released a report detailing the fraudulent transfers between SBF and other senior FTX employees. Employees took the following sums in payments and loans from FTX:
- SBF, the CEO of FTX, took $2.2B
- Nishad Singh, ex-FTX director of engineering, took $587m
- Gary Wang, an FTX co-founder, took $246m
- Ryan Salame, former co-chief executive officer of FTX Digital Markets, took $87m
- Sam Trabucco, former co-head of Alameda, took $25m
- Caroline Ellison, ex-chief executive officer of Alameda, took $6m
- Meta is cutting off support for digital collectibles or NFTs on its platforms (e.g. Instagram) less than a year after rolling it out.
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