Don’t invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. This is a high-risk investment and you should not expect to be protected if something goes wrong. Take 2 minutes to learn more

Unboxed image

Power outage for BTC, ETH

MOVERS

8am EST 27th July 2021

Crypto: Biggest price rise

UPEUR

0.02

Equities: Biggest price rise

TSLA

1.95

Bitcoin

$37,178.95

Crypto: Biggest price loss

THETA

-9.65

Equities: Biggest price loss

BABA

-4.61

XRP

$0.62

Crypto: Biggest vol increase*

LINK

741.29

Equities: Biggest vol increase*

BABA

907.97

Tesla

$664.60

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

WHAT'S UP

Yield Happy SwissBorg Spikes

Switzerland-based wealth management app SwissBorg (CHSB) has surged back into the Top 100 digital asset ranks (as measured by total market capitalization) with a 9% gain over a 24-hour period during which most of the other 99 coins were in the red.

As of Tuesday at 8 a.m. (EST), CHSB stood at $0.72. In early May, the coin was $1.64.

Details of a planned CHSB Yield 2.0 program recently emerged, teeing up premium staking tiers modeled after and flipping the script on income tax brackets. To exponentially amplify the entire ecosystem, SwissBorg, with its native asset now sitting prettier as CoinGecko’s 94th-largest, is fashioning a first-1,000-tokens-staked honey pot – throwing off an annual rate of as high as 43%.

WHAT'S DOWN

Majors Take An Icy Bath

Reports of Amazon's imminent and splashy crypto foray appear for now to have been greatly exaggerated. That there was for a time rampant (albeit unsubstantiated) speculative buzz over a giant retailer’s loving arms may or may not have played a part in yesterday's Bitcoin spot market volatility. As the story (that Amazon would be taking BTC as payment by year's end) made the rounds, BTC got above $40,000 but later, with a corporate spokesperson's bucket of ice cold water cascading throughout the community, spines shivered, seemingly.

As of Tuesday morning at 6:45 a.m., BTC, over 24 hours, declined 2% to roughly $37,400. During a seven-day stretch that wasn't entirely fueled by Amazon narratives, BTC has increased 21%.

Bullish on-chain data and a massive short squeeze were likely at play (CryptoPotato).

Ethereum, meanwhile, fell 4% to roughly $2,200 on Tuesday. ETH is up 22% over the past week.

WHAT'S NEXT

In Pursuit Of Past Glory, Polygon Pushes Past A Buck

India-based blockchain connector Polygon (MATIC) shot back over $1 on Sunday. It spent most of Monday trying on $1.10.

As of yesterday afternoon (EST), the Ethereum-scaling, side-chain framework provider was $1.09, having gained 17% over the prior 24 hours following a choppy couple of days that came in the wake of 20%-plus burst on Wednesday, July 21.

And to think it was only last Tuesday that MATIC was 64 cents. Then again, in January, the token, which can be staked and used to pay for gas, and, additionally, as a means of governance, was sub-two-cents. MATIC reached its all-time high of $2.68 on May 18; that represented at the time a year-to-date gain of more than 13,000%.

Reacquainted with a dollar, the question becomes, as we enter the second half of this year, will MATIC be able to return to ATH glory? Polkadot and Avalanche will have some say in whether MATIC comes to dominate the interconnected blockchain space, said Motley Fool. Plus, if the "Eth2" upgrade roll out succeeds in improving scalability, Polygon's raison d'être could wind up as a redundancy. One last check of MATIC at 8:30 a.m. (EST) revealed it clutching $1.03.

TANGENTS

What The Heck Just Happened?

Back in February, the crypto community went into a tizzy over a blockchain job posting from Amazon. It smelled like some digital currency project was afoot in Mexico City.

Three days ago, Bitcoinist.com noticed another similar posting on the Amazon Jobs website. "The Payments Acceptance & Experience team is seeking an experienced product leader to develop Amazon’s Digital Currency and Blockchain strategy and product roadmap." The Block followed up, prying this from an Amazon spokesperson: "We’re inspired by the innovation happening in the cryptocurrency space and are exploring what this could look like on Amazon."

Yesterday, City A.M., London's business news website, citing an anonymous insider, reported that Amazon was planning to accept Bitcoin by the end of this year as part of broader, full-on push into crypto payments that could possibly include issuance of its own native coin. Then Bitcoin spiked.

Several hours later, the retail giant issued this syntax-laden statement: "Notwithstanding our interest in the space, the speculation that has ensued around our specific plans for cryptocurrencies is not true. We remain focused on exploring what this could look like for customers shopping on Amazon."

By Monday night, BTC had fallen from nearly $40,000 to $37,300.

One of the City A.M. report’s unnamed source's not quite specific details regarding Amazon’s crypto plan: that it's "pretty much ready to roll.”

Analysts and pundits remain puzzled over whether Amazon speculation should be discarded entirely or taken with a big grain of salt; also being pondered – does the prospect of wider spread corporate crypto acceptance really have anything to do with anything whatsoever?


Previous newsletters


Wait, are you still not subscribed our daily newsletter?

What's all that about then, mate?

Please add a valid email address

Uphold works best on mobile, download our app now.

Uphold Europe Limited, Reg No. 09281410, Registered Office: Eastcastle House, 27/28 Eastcastle Street, London, United Kingdom, W1W 8DH

© Uphold 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Uphold (FRN: 938277) is registered with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for AML purposes and complies with the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer for Funds (Information on the Payer).

Uphold is also an EMD agent (FRN: 900577) of Optimus Cards UK Limited (FRN: 902034) which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority to issue e-money pursuant to the Electronic Money Regulations 2011.

The purchase, sale and custody of cryptoassets are regulated by the FCA for anti-money laundering purposes but this does not indicate any approval by the FCA of Uphold’s cryptoasset activities. Cryptoassets are very high risk and speculative.  When purchasing, selling and/or holding cryptoassets, you will not have access to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) or the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) if something goes wrong. You should be aware and prepared to potentially lose some or all of your money. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding cryptoassets is suitable for you in light of your financial circumstances.

Fiat money payments and balances (fiat is another name for traditional currencies, such as GBP, USD and EUR) constitute regulated e-money and payment services. In providing fiat balances, you are being issued with e-money by Optimus and Uphold is acting as its agent. See specific e-money terms. E-money is not a deposit or investment account which means that your e-money will not be protected by the FSCS. Your funds will be held in a designated safeguarding account with a regulated financial institution. E-money will not earn any interest.

Additional risk warnings are contained in Uphold’s Terms & Conditions