Institutional Crypto Flows, El Salvador's Tax-Free BTC Profit + More News
Publikováno: 13.9.2021
now risen 143% since their lows in early July to USD 3.8bn. This rise in volumes and inflows indicates investors are now beginning to be more active following the seasonal summer doldrums, per CoinShares.MTD - month-to-date; YTD - year-to-date; AUM - assets under management. Source: CoinSharesSinga...
Payments newsBancoagrícola, the largest financial institution in El Salvador, announced that it has enabled bitcoin payments for consumers and merchants through a partnership with the digital payments network Flexa. Bancoagrícola is now “accepting bitcoin across its network for payments toward loans, credit cards, and merchant goods and services in compliance with the new "Bitcoin Law" effective September 7,” the announcement said.The blockchain-based micropayment network pingNpayis is aiming to become operational in 2022, with a focus on small payments of less than USD 20 per transaction, according to a report from PYMNTS.com. Transaction fees on the platform will reportedly make up less than 1%, and the network will use stablecoins in each country it operates that are “100 percent backed by liquid fiat assets.”NFTs newsA Degenerate Ape Academy non-fungible token (NFT) became the most expensive NFT sold on the Solana (SOL) blockchain. The NFT sold to the blockchain advisory and investment firm Moonrock Capital for SOL 5,980, worth around USD 1.1m at the time, the buyer announced on Twitter.Regulatory newsUS Government officials are discussing the possible launch of a formal review by the Financial Stability Oversight Council into whether stablecoins such as Tether (USDT) “threaten financial stability,” Bloomberg reported, citing three undisclosed people familiar with the matter. Being labeled a “systemic threat” by the council will typically set off “tough rules and aggressive monitoring by regulators,” the report said.The SEC announced today that it has charged two media companies with “conducting an illegal unregistered offering of a digital asset security” by selling tokens referred to as G-Coins or G-Dollars. New York City-based GTV Media Group Inc. and Saraca Media Group Inc., along with a third company charged with selling “unregistered common stock of GTV,” have agreed to pay more than USD 539m in a settlement.