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Ethereum uncorks ahead of reboot

MOVERS

8am EST 11th November 2020

Crypto: Biggest price rise

OMG

6.42

Equities: Biggest price rise

BA

2.70

Bitcoin

$15,435.61

Crypto: Biggest price loss

DCR

-6.71

Equities: Biggest price loss

BABA

-5.47

XRP

$0.25

Crypto: Biggest vol increase*

DOGE

260.97

Equities: Biggest vol increase*

BABA

199.58

Tesla

$410.65

*Volume bought in USD over the past 24 hours on the Uphold platform

WHAT'S UP

An Overnight Jump For Ethereum; Stock Market Merrily Goes 'Round

Ethereum is sleeping peacefully after being up all night. As of the wee hours of Wednesday, ETH was up 3.7% over 24 hours, letting it all hang out after midnight, hitting $460. By 8 a.m. (EST), it was $459.

Over the past 12 months, ETH is up 142%. The Ethereum blockchain, a DeFi spawning ground, is one-tenth of the way there in terms of ongoing efforts to upgrade its network which'll sport a brand new model, changing from proof-of-work to a model that supports a "proof-of-stake" approach involving not miners but, rather, "validators" who stake minimum amounts of ETH and earn block yield rewards of up to 15% (CoinDesk).

European stocks, meanwhile, rose on Wednesday as the Covid-19 vaccine rally, not unlike infection and death rates, continued unabated. This party in a pandemic has some noticeably absent merrymakers i.e. tech stocks have, in a rotation trend, fallen out of favor.

Since Monday morning, traders have exchanged more than $2 trillion worth of assets, according to Reuters.

Bitcoin trading volumes have increased this week and BTC price-direction futures contracts are gaining (Decrypt).

WHAT'S DOWN

Vaccine Rally Forgets FAANGs

NASDAQ futures were down early Wednesday morning but by sunrise they were flat after a hurtful Tuesday for FAANG stocks. They were cast aside like trash on the sidewalk, even as global markets threw a moonshine-infused, hillbilly-style whoop-dee-doo on reports of strides made toward a successful Covid-19 vaccine.

Amazon lost 3.5%; Facebook lost 2.3%; Google, 1.3%; Apple, 0.3%. Thank-you, FAANGs, for carrying us all this time, but now it's bargain-hunting season, traders seem to be saying.

WHAT'S NEXT

Ripple's Plan To Open A New Regional Office In Dubai Signals Kiss-Off Possibly To Come

Gold is a metal, and a most precious one at that. But, really, what is gold? Currency or commodity? Both?

The same philosophical debate surrounds Bitcoin, although, legally speaking, don't call it a security. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission doesn't, explicitly acknowledging the Bitcoin blockchain's decentralized nature, but perhaps not fully grasping the buying/selling/swapping/wrapping marketplaces for bitcoin the digital coin and myriad derivatives.

Whether XRP is a security is a fiercely debated question. The Daily Chain took a stab at settling it, citing a tweet from trader Peter Brandt. If the SEC understood cryptos, XRP would be classified as a security, Brandt said.

The SEC has not formally weighed in on the legal status of XRP, not in the same expressive way it has with Bitcoin.

Some written guidance from the regulatory agency – framing how XRP might be construed as a security – has been invoked in class-action lawsuits filed against San Francisco-based Ripple Labs, a private company and a large holder of XRP.

Price-wise, XRP has been flatter than hammered cheese. Its community is getting anxious. These lawsuits assert that Ripple sold XRP tokens in an unregistered securities offering. Ripple has insisted it is not a security; that it's a payments infrastructure entity. Which bears a tangential utilitarian fruit. That also happens to be tradable.

On Nov. 7, Ripple announced it is opening a new regional office in Dubai. This is potentially a signal of things to come, not just in terms of XRP but other major digital currency players leaving the U.S. because of regulatory ambiguity.

FOCUS

Blockchain-Based Market For Physical Commodities Goes Live

Swiss developer Cerealia SA last week said that its blockchain-based physical agricultural commodities trading platform has gone live after several years in beta. Trial transactions, involving grains, have settled between arrays of international counterparties, from Japan to Ukraine.  The platform initially is focused on exported Russian wheat. GrainChain is also promoting blockchain-abetted efficiency in the physical grain markets.

 

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