News Headline Highlights
- The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has been explicitly declaring that local banks can provide services to virtual asset companies amid complaints about the difficulty of opening bank accounts in the jurisdiction. “There is no legal and regulatory requirement prohibiting banks in Hong Kong from providing banking services to virtual assets (VA) related entities” the HKMA Deputy Chief Executive, Arthur Yuen, published on the regulator's website.
- Public sector workers in an eastern Chinese City, Changshu, are set to be paid their salary in digital yuan, in a push to popularise the currency. The new payment process will start in May, according to an official document widely posted on government websites. This is the biggest rollout of the currency, also known as the e-CNY, in China.
- Gemini, the U.S.-based crypto exchange, revealed plans to open an offshore derivatives platform. The decision follows Coinbase’s announcement to do similar in light of the difficult US regulatory environment. The first product will be a perpetual bitcoin (BTC) contract denominated in Gemini dollars (GUSD).
- DWS and Galaxy Digital Holdings have entered into a strategic alliance with the aim of initially developing a comprehensive suite of exchange-traded products (ETPs) on certain digital assets in Europe.
- Fidelity released additional insights from annual institutional investor study.
- Block, the company behind Cash App and Square, announced a partnership with Yellow Card, one of the largest crypto exchanges in Africa, to facilitate cross-border payments between 16 countries in Africa, including Nigeria, Ghana, and South Africa.
- Visa is hiring software engineers for its crypto division as it develops new products aimed at the space. "We have an ambitious crypto product roadmap at Visa and just opened a few reqs for senior software engineers to help us drive mainstream adoption of public blockchain networks and stablecoin payments," Cuy Sheffield, Head of Crypto at Visa, said on Twitter.
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