News Headline Highlights
- Tether, the issuer of the largest crypto stablecoin (USDT), announced >$1b in operational profits during Q2. The primary source of profits was interest earned on the $72.5B of Treasuries held in reserves. Further, Tether announced they hold excess reserves (i.e. reserves above the required 100% collateralisation rate) of $3.3b. Magnet quick take: It's astonishing to us that Tether holds more treasuries than UAE, Australia, Mexico, Thailand, Philippines, Spain, etc.
- Amazon added new tools to Amazon Web Services designed to make it easier for developers to build blockchain-based Web3 software. The tools, called "Access" and "Query", were added to Amazon Managed Blockchain (AMB), a managed service that lets users build applications faster using provision blockchain infrastructure.
- Sequoia Capital has reduced the size of two of its major venture funds, including its crypto fund, in an effort to downsize. Sequoia has slashed its crypto fund by 65.8% to $200m, down from $585m, citing limited ways to deploy the original capital given the state of the market.
- The Bank of Italy’s innovation hub is exploring mechanisms to help financial institutions tokenise real world assets, leveraging Ethereum scaling network developer, Polygon Labs, and crypto infrastructure provider, Fireblocks, to do so.
- Quam Securities, a Hong Kong-based securities firm, announced its first successful crypto trade, fueling the bullish narrative of crypto adoption in China’s Special Administrative Region (SAR).
- A&G Funds, a subsidiary of the Spanish private bank A&G, launched an actively managed cryptocurrency fund. The fund will primarily invest in other financial instruments such as exchange traded notes or products rather than directly in cryptocurrencies. “We believe that it is an optimal solution for any professional European investor who wants to get closer to the world of cryptocurrencies, without forgetting that it is a very high risk fund,” said Diego Fernández Elices, Director General of Investments at A&G.
- Vladimir Putin, the President of Russia, signed the digital ruble bill into law last week, allowing the country's central bank to issue its own digital currency. The Bank of Russia digital ruble will be used for payments along with other methods, according to the new amendments to Russia's Civil Code.
- Department of Justice prosecutors filed to revoke Sam Bankman-Fried's bond after the disgraced FTX founder shared private diaries of former Alameda Research CEO Caroline Ellison with the New York Times.
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