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đľď¸ The Iran-Crypto affair
Congressâ latest crypto discourse
đ More crypto powers, please
If there is one thing Congress can get done, itâs a crypto hearing.
The Treasury Departmentâs number two guy â deputy secretary Wally Adeyemo â faced the Senate Banking Committee yesterday to discuss keeping money out of illicit actorsâ pockets.
Crypto, of course, was a main topic of conversation.
The hearing only lasted 90 minutes. Or, in other words, it ended as soon as it started, as far as Congressional gatherings go.
Adeyemo began with a plea, asking for Congress to give his agency power to oversee more of the crypto ecosystem, namely through additional secondary sanctions tools and laws that make dealing with crypto actors overseas easier.
The Treasury Department canât sufficiently stop terrorists and illicit actors from using cryptocurrencies to evade sanctions and fund their crimes because they donât have the tools, Adeyemo said.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, whoâs been spearheading a bipartisan effort to expand anti-money laundering requirements around the crypto industry for years, took the hearing as an opportunity to double down on one of her more controversial takes.
Warren wants to see validators subject to the same rules as banks, and to make her point, she used a hypothetical that seemed to be designed to speak to Republicans, many of whom have vastly different opinions when it comes to regulating crypto.
The exchange went like this:
Warren: If I wanted to send $1,000 worth of crypto to you, Mr. Secretary, is it possible that, when I just send it, just to send this, that Iran could be our validator and would be collecting a fee for processing our crypto, all of that without either one of us knowing?
Adeyemo: That is certainly possible.
Warren: So Iran â which is subject to all kinds of sanctions â is moving money through crypto and actually making millions of dollars validating crypto transactions for Americans and for everyone else, all because we don't have the right money laundering rules in place.
Warren was getting at a key point she made in the Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act (DAAMLA) of 2023, which she reintroduced last summer alongside Republican Roger Marshall. The legislation seeks to bring âcrypto participants'' â defined in the bill as wallet providers, miners and validators â under compliance requirements.
The language has many crypto advocates and industry members nervous. They say the bill will have little impact on actual bad actors; itâs more likely to send crypto firms overseas where they donât have to face these strict (and oftentimes impossible, many say) requirements.
Plus, anti-DAAMLA advocates say, illicit actors using digital assets is not nearly as big of a problem as many Dems claim.
Republican Senator Tim Scott during the hearing expressed frustration that the conversation had morphed into one solely about crypto as opposed to illicit financing as a whole. Crypto has become the âscapegoat,â he said.
All the spicy comments aside, Tuesdayâs hearing â the second the committee has held on the subject in the past six months â was just that: a hearing.
Even as high-power Dems make crypto legislation a cornerstone of their platforms, DAAMLA is not currently on the agenda to be marked up, let alone voted on.
Plus, itâs an election year, so the already-tight agenda is even more narrow.
â Casey Wagner
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Ethereum L2 transaction counts are up almost 200% since Dencunâs blobs made them much cheaper last month.
Crypto-enabled mobile network Helium has gained 80,000 subscribers since August.
Base DEX volumes have cooled by more than 20% over the past seven days compared to the previous period.
BTC is down 2% over the past day, hovering at $69K after falling short of a fresh all-time high
ETH is trading 27% below its own price record, down 3% to $3.5K.
âď¸ No more dial-up tones, please
Honey, weâre hitting our broadband moment.
The team at Pantera Capital put together some thoughts on the market and where the tech stands yesterday.
L2âs have achieved lower costs and better speeds, which is reminiscent of the transition from dial-up (remember that iconic sound?) to broadband.
The seven-day transaction count has jumped 20% on Ethereum, and the same metric for L2s went to 163 million from 8.6 million, marking an 850% increase.
Specifically, the team praises Arbitrum, noting: âOver the last 30 days, the Arbitrum network has processed four times as many transactions as Ethereum.â
Pantera believes that not only is Arbitrum set to âaccelerate further,â but that itâs the âlayer-2 of choice for leading Web3 projects and developers.â
Arbitrum has 565 projects, 349 more than Optimism, which is the next closest L2. It also dominates in terms of monthly active developers, with over 1,800. Putting that into perspective, Optimism has almost 1,300.
But I donât want to just talk about how Arbitrumâs dedication to developers sets the L2 up for future success over competitors because Pantera also penned some thoughts on bitcoin.
Bitcoinâs currently on a streak â and not just in mentions in this newsletter â but also in terms of its positive performance. It's month seven of positive performance (from September to March). In October, bitcoin jumped 29% and then, in February, it jumped 44%. The last time bitcoin saw this kind of streak was in 2017 which lasted six months.
The performance within the larger market is beginning to prove that the landscape is not just a zero-interest rate policy (ZIRP) phenomenon, as critics claimed it was back in 2021 and 2022.
So while traders on Wall Street fret about the Federal Reserveâs next rate decision, cryptoland is seeing record rallies and technological expansion.
â Katherine Ross
âď¸ a16z vs. bitcoin
Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) is one of the most prolific and largest venture capital firms in the blockchain space â if not number one â operating four crypto-focused funds with more than $7.6 billion in assets under management.
Gauging exactly how its investments have performed is difficult, considering details of its portfolio, both equity in the startups it backs and the token allocations it manages, arenât publicly available.
What we do know is that of the 95 crypto companies listed in its portfolio, 38 have issued their own cryptocurrencies. And of those, six have outperformed bitcoin since it bottomed out at the end of 2022, which, depending on how you measure market cycles, marked the earliest days of our current bull run.
As it turns out, RON, the native token for the Ronin Network â the gaming-focused blockchain developed by Axie Infinity creator Sky Mavis â is by far the best performing token tied to a16z portfolio companies over that period, having rallied nearly 1,700%. For scale, bitcoin (BTC) has gained 340%.
Solana (SOL) is next with about 1,100%, followed by GFI, the governance token for decentralized credit protocol Goldfinch, which is up about 720%.
While most cryptocurrencies from a16z portfolio companies have underperformed bitcoin during this bull market to date, more than half have doubled in price and only six have shed value.
The worst performers are privacy coin Iron Fish (IRON), down 78%, Web3 social token Friends With Benefits (FWB), down 52%, while payments token ECO and metaverse crypto Apecoin (APE) have each lost about 40%.
Zooming out to encompass each tokenâs total trading history, though, shows more than half of the analyzed cryptocurrencies are in the red and most of those have to date sunk by more than 50%.
Solana (SOL) is the best performer by far, multiplying in price almost 180 times. Axie Infinity (AXS) is second-best with 6,700%, then DePIN darlings helium (4,200%) and arweave (3,300%).
Of course, token returns donât exactly paint a complete picture of the health of those particular projects. Charts like these only really gauge market sentiment, which as we know rarely follows fundamentals.
In any case, if we consider âsuccessâ to be tokens gaining value since they first hit crypto markets, a16zâs portfolio companies currently have just under 50% strike rate.
Sounds about right for venture capital.
â David Canellis
Former TechCrunch reporter (and Blockworks alum) Jacquelyn Melinek and investor Anthony Pompliano have launched Token Relations, a new startup focused on crypto community comms.
Hong Kong is on the cusp of approving a slate of spot bitcoin ETFs, Reuters reports.
Worldcoin is now allowing people to delete their eyeball scans.
Krakenâs Jesse Powell is suing a Republican recall committee focused on recalling California Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to Politico, with Powell alleging that the committee tricked him into donating.
Chip giant TSMCâs revenues are booming thanks to demand from AI companies, CNBC reports.
The Securities and Exchange Commissionâs case against crypto influencer Richard Heart should be dismissed, Heartâs legal team argued in a motion shared with Blockworks.
The 69-page document makes a number of arguments though one stands out: âThe SECâs complaint is an impermissible effort to penalize and retrain Mr. Heartâs speech.â
Heartâs team argued that heâs a âfree-speech pioneerâ and that the SEC failed to show securities fraud or establish proper jurisdiction because Heart lives in a foreign country.
To refresh your memory: The SEC filed a suit against Heart in July of last year claiming that Hex, PusleChain and PulseX are securities and that Heart purchased luxury vehicles and other items after he allegedly misappropriated over $12 million in investor funds.
âHex, PulseChain, and PulseX constitute twenty-first century âpublic squaresâ in which individuals enjoy a First Amendment right to share their ideas and make their voices Heard,â Heartâs lawyers argued.
Meanwhile, Heart is asking others to consider filing amicus briefs in the case on another âpublic square.â
Putting aside the securities allegations â the SECâs number-one argument in most of these crypto cases â the First Amendment arguments make this case, and potential future filings, far more exciting than some of the other enforcement actions from the SEC within this space.
â Katherine Ross