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A new round of SEC cryptocurrency regulations? SEC starts fighting cryptocurrency companies

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SEC cryptocurrency regulations

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said it has just started fighting and taking tougher action against cryptocurrency firms that refuse to follow its rules. Is this a new phase of SEC cryptocurrency regulations? 

SEC Chairman Gary Gensler stressed that the commission’s patience with digital asset exchanges and other firms that evade its rules is running out. Just hours earlier, the watchdog, which had already sued FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried, had sued two other prominent cryptocurrency executives for their alleged role in the collapse of the digital asset exchange. What will happen to the current value of bitcoin against this backdrop? 

SEC cryptocurrency securities

According to Gensler, companies now have less time to accelerate – they need to start following the rules and register with the agency as soon as possible.

While he declined to name the firms to be audited or comment on where the FTX investigation might go, Gensler warned of a lot of practices that are widespread in the industry. He also rebuked the platforms for often failing to properly segregate client funds, a problem that drew a lot of attention after the FTX collapse.

The SEC spokesperson also criticized reserve confirmation reports that crypto exchanges publish. The practice, he said, is consistent with the disclosures needed to protect investors.

“Confirmation of reserves is neither a full accounting of a company’s assets and liabilities nor a separation of customer funds under securities laws,” Gensler said.

Also, the SEC intends to increase oversight of accounting firms for cryptocurrency companies. The increased regulatory scrutiny has already led to at least one accounting firm turning away cryptocurrency clients.

The SEC has been paying particular attention to cryptocurrency companies since the FTX collapse in November. The problems began after the publication of an investigation into the possible insolvency of one of Bankman-Frieda Research’s companies, Alameda Research, as well as liquidity problems with the exchange.

We previously reported that Ripple XRP whales overtook 1 billion XRP.

Cryptocurrency

Cryptotraders lost more than $250,000,000 in liquidations after Fed rate hike

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Crypto traders lost

Cryptotraders had a tough day: almost 68,000 positions were liquidated on exchanges in the last 24 hours, and the total volume of liquidations exceeded $257,000,000. All this happened against the news of the US Federal Reserve’s rate hike and another Securities and Exchange Commission regulatory action against cryptocurrencies.

Cryptotraders lost $132,000,000 in BTC

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple were the leaders in the number of forcibly closed positions. BTC liquidations totaled almost $132,000,000; Ethereum traders lost $51,000,000. XRP positions accounted for about $8,000,000 of liquidations. Bitmex exchange executed the largest order of $7.39,000,000.

Cryptocurrency market capitalization has declined 2% in the last 24 hours, but is still above the $1 trillion mark.

The weekly CoinShares report also recorded a massive outflow of funds for six consecutive weeks. During that period, nearly $500,000,000 was withdrawn from cryptocurrency platforms, with $113,000,000 coming from bitcoin. Analysts at the company believe the outflow is due to liquidity needs during the banking crisis rather than a negative outlook. The company mentions that a similar scenario was seen in March 2020 amid a COVID-19-induced panic.

Regulators continue to hunt the cryptobusiness

Another reason for the increased volatility in the market has been harsh action from U.S. regulators. Last night it became known that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued cryptomagnate Justin Sun, accusing him of fraud and market manipulation.

The SEC also issued a notice of wrongdoing against Coinbase, the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange. The securities regulator sued Coinbase Global Inc, for some of the products it offers.

We previously reported that Bitcoin (BTC) tests $28,000, but onchain metrics urge caution.

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Binance was caught circumventing KYC to register Chinese clients

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Binance China customer registrations

Employees of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance help clients from China to bypass compliance and verification. CNBC writes about it, citing hundreds of corporate emails from exchange employees on Discord and Telegram. It is reported that Binance has helped over 200,000 users register, bypassing its own security system. One case describes correspondence between a user from China and a Binance employee.

The employee under the pseudonym yaya.z suggested the user from China turn on a VPN, register as a Taiwanese resident and then return the location to China. Binance employees also advise customers not to use VPN services from the U.S., Hong Kong and Singapore, because the exchange does not provide services in those regions, writes CNBC. At the same time, Binance freely processes applications from U.S. email providers like Gmail or Outlook for registration.

The exchange even offers specialized mobile applications for customers from China. A CNBC reporter could download a special mobile application from Binance via email. At the same time, no VPN was needed to download the app, as the download was conducted through the domain of binance[.]com. It is also alleged that the exchange still verifies users with Chinese phone numbers.

An exchange spokesperson denied the existence of a special Chinese version of the mobile application. The exchange also added that it has improved the system to identify users from banned regions. CNBC notes that after providing evidence, Binance removed employee messages from corporate chats to circumvent KYC.

We previously reported that the Ethereum (ETH) price crossed the $1,800 mark, opening the way to $2,000.

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Why cryptoanalysts expect bitcoin to fall

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cryptoanalysts expect bitcoin to fall

The market remains in a bearish trend and bitcoin (BTC) will resume its fall and test $16,000. There are two reasons:

  • Altcoins are near serious resistance;

  • The BUSD and USDC stablecoins are manipulating the market.

The first statement can be confirmed or disproved by a technical analysis of the cryptocurrency market, but there is not enough additional information for the second.

The market capitalization of altcoins (ALTCAP) does hold nearly $605 billion of resistance. Although ALTCAP has risen above it several times, it didn’t develop above this area.

However, the daily RSI has broken through the bearish divergence trendline (green line). Such a breakout often precedes significant reversals into a bullish trendline. As a result, ALTCAP will move higher towards the $680B resistance area. If not, ALTCAP could fall back to the $518B support area.

There are also those who argue that bitcoin will test the $10000-$11000 area because there is a CME price gap that needs to be filled. The gap refers to the difference between the closing price of bitcoin futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) on Friday and the opening price on the following Monday.

We previously reported that Hong Kong has allocated another $50,000,000 to the crypto industry.

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