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Digital Currency Group in spotlight over suspicious fund transfers

Digital Currency Group in spotlight over fishy fund transfers

In this issue

  1. DCG: End of empire?
  2. Lido DAO: Energized by Ethereum
  3. Hong Kong: Crypto mojo

From the Editor’s Desk

Dear Reader,

It’s often said that good things come in threes. Developments in the cryptocurrency industry in the past few days suggest that the reverse may also be true.

The murky goings-on around Barry Silbert-led crypto empire Digital Currency Group (DCG) may not have attained FTX- or Terra-like levels of gut-wrenching awfulness — at least not at the time of writing. But the news that U.S. federal prosecutors are digging into transfers between DCG and one of its subsidiaries may presage a third nausea-inducing twist in the shakeout that has convulsed the crypto industry in recent times.

If there’s a bright spot amid the potential for another big crypto collapse, it’s that authorities appear to have been paying attention to possible problems at DCG for at least two months — crucially, before the implosion of FTX. One can only hope that justice, should its application be required, be served swiftly and that crypto investors are spared yet more undue suffering.

Meanwhile, proof of the endurance of the digital asset industry continues to emerge, even amid its numerous recent woes — this time in the form of another eagerly-awaited Ethereum upgrade. The Shanghai hard fork, as it’s known, promises to address concerns among investors staking ETH over whether they can withdraw their assets, and it has prompted a spike in interest in ETH-linked products and services as well as sharp price upticks for a number of tokens.

And in good news for a city that has needed some for a while, financial authorities in Hong Kong have reiterated their determination to reclaim ground lost to other jurisdictions — chiefly Singapore — in the crypto hub rankings. Hong Kong has a long history of picking winners, despite the privations inflicted on the city and its people in recent years, and its bet on digital assets is not on a whim.

We welcome more of that confidence as the industry works through its issues.

Until the next time,

Angie Lau,
Founder and Editor-in-Chief
Forkast


1. Here we go again?

Digital Currency Group has been on the radar of U.S. authorities since the collapse of crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital last year. Image: DCG website/Canva

By the numbers: DCG — over 5,000% increase in Google search volume.

Crypto-focused conglomerate Digital Currency Group (DCG) is under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice as well as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over questionable transfers between DCG and a subsidiary, according to a Bloomberg report that cited unnamed sources. 

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

The crypto contagion is still spreading. Although much of the focus of the DCG story has been the very public spat between two of the crypto industry’s most Wall Street-friendly companies — and leaders — one key development is that authorities have stepped in quickly. 

According to Bloomberg, U.S. authorities have been looking into the practices of DCG since before the collapse of FTX. And even though no formal accusations of wrongdoing have (yet) been made, it’s heartening to know that regulators are becoming more active in the crypto industry and holding participants that break the law to account.   

But perhaps the biggest takeaway from the saga is how one of crypto’s founding ideals appears to be faltering. “WAGMI,” or “We’re all going to make it,” has been a maxim and rallying cry among crypto believers for years. It also became a slogan for a group of crypto enthusiasts that bought the English Football League club Crawley Town

More recently, the FTX collapse has led some companies in the sector to turn against one another for advantage and survival. For instance, Binance’s decision to call out FTX and dump the assets it held in FTX — a company it had previously nurtured — played a critical role in the now-defunct exchange’s implosion. 

As the Crypto Winter stubbornly refuses to thaw, expect the nastiness to continue.  


2. Upgrade uptick

Ethereum’s upcoming Shanghai hard fork is lifting the fortunes of Lido DAO. Image: Lido/Canva

By the numbers: Lido DAO — over 5,000% increase in Google search volume.

Liquidity staking protocol Lido DAO (LDO) has surged over 50% over the past week ahead of an Ethereum upgrade that is expected to enable Ether stakers to withdraw their assets and resolve other risks related to ETH. The upgrade, named the Shanghai hard fork, is expected to be implemented by March.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

As centralized exchanges and companies appear to be falling out of favor, DeFi has found itself once again in the ascendent. 

According to recent data, the total value locked in DeFi protocols has been slowly ticking up since it hit year-lows last December. Although the increase is small and just a fraction of where the DeFi market was in its heyday in November 2021, it’s a welcome sign of life in a market segment that’s still in the grip of the Crypto Winter. 

But DeFi is still a long way from replacing the role of centralized exchanges as the main conduit through which new crypto users enter the space. The user experience is cumbersome, and the lack of centralized entities to vet new tokens has made it a haven for funny business. 

Uniswap, one of the largest decentralized exchanges, was a hotbed of fraud, according to a recent study, with nearly 98% of all tokens listed on the platform being nothing more than scams designed to defraud investors.

Poorly run centralized companies are bad, but decentralized ones with no oversight or accountability aren’t any better. Developers and proponents of DeFi should take the crisis of confidence that has engulfed centralized crypto businesses as an opportunity to prove they represent a viable alternative. 


3. Hong Kong adds oil

Hong Kong’s plan to grow its cryptocurrency industry stands in stark contrast to how China has tried to stamp it out. Image: Canva

Hong Kong is pushing ahead with the development of its Web3 industry as part of a plan to re-establish itself as a global cryptocurrency hub, despite recent high-profile crypto exchange collapses, Paul Chan, the city’s financial secretary, told a forum in the city this week.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

The Hong Kong financial secretary’s speech this week underscores the city’s ambition to pursue a very different path from that taken by mainland China when it comes to the digital asset industry. Unlike China, which banned crypto transactions in 2021, Hong Kong is positioning itself to welcome a new licensing regime that will potentially open a market for retail cryptocurrency trading. Current regulations in Hong Kong, a special administrative region that is semi-independent from China, allow only institutions and professional investors with portfolios worth about US$1 million or more to trade digital assets. 

China opened its border with Hong Kong only this past Sunday. Under a new talent-recruiting scheme launched two weeks ago, Hong Kong authorities are now approving more than 200 work passes a day, in hopes of replacing some of the 140,000 members of its labor force — most of whom were highly-skilled workers — who have left the territory over the previous two years, according to a report by Singapore’s Straits Times.

The new talent scheme is expected to fuel the growth of Hong Kong’s Web3 industry. Adrian Wang, chief executive of Hong Kong-headquartered digital asset management platform Metalpha, told Forkast that the city’s existing talent pool in finance could also bring innovation and new ideas to bolster the crypto industry’s long-term success.

However, one issue regulators must work through is whether mainland Chinese citizens would be legally allowed to work for crypto companies in Hong Kong. Under China’s draconian 2021 crypto ban, Chinese nationals who work for crypto trading companies in other countries could find themselves in violation of Chinese law, and it is not yet clear how that would apply to crypto workers or investors in Hong Kong. 

To attract top talent, authorities will have to come up with clear rules for crypto employment in Hong Kong to avoid consigning Chinese nationals to work in a legally gray area, and Hong Kong officials in particular will also have to figure out a way to make the territory — which has experienced an exodus of young people over the past few years in the aftermath of — an attractive place to live and work again.

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