CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Genesis Mining, which provides computer equipment to create bitcoins in the cloud, has launched the world’s first fund that invests in hardware used to create the digital currency, according to Reuters. The company said it registered the fund, called the Logos Fund, with the Securities and Exchange Commission and will invest $ 1 million in […] The post Genesis Mining Launches First Bitcoin Mining Fund appeared first on CCN: Financial Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency News. |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Zebpay, a bitcoin wallet with offices in India and Singapore, has added some innovative features to its app. Users can set their own bid/ask price when trading bitcoin, they can keep a rupee balance to instantly buy bitcoin, and they can check transaction status, according to the company website. Instead of having to do a […] The post Zebpay App Makes Bitcoin Transactions Faster, Automatically Finds Best Price appeared first on CCN: Financial Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency News. |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Bitcoin price is extending below target as the idiocy of Gav&MikeCoin becomes apparent. Not only is Gav a limited capacity coder, but Mike has run away – leaving bright-spark Brian “Buzz” Armstrong to fend for his Silicon Valley Bank licence alone. It’s all going to end in tears. This analysis is provided by xbt.social with […] The post Bitcoin Price Exceeds Downside Target appeared first on CCN: Financial Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency News. |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Business Law Magazine, a German publication, reviewed a European Court of Justice ruling exempting bitcoin from value added tax (VAT) which was hailed as a victory by bitcoin advocates. The article by attorney Heinz Zimmermann noted that bitcoin has seldom been the focus of analyses addressing taxes. In presenting the court’s decision, the article reviewed […] The post A Legal Perspective of the European Court Ruling Exempting Bitcoin from VAT Tax appeared first on CCN: Financial Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency News. |
Business Insider, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Wall Street banks are buzzing about blockchain. Goldman Sachs says the technology "has the potential to redefine transactions" and can change "everything." JPMorgan last month announced it was launching a trial project with the blockchain startup led by its former executive, Blythe Masters. Her company, Digital Asset Holdings, has secured funding from Goldman, Citi, ICAP, and a boatload of other financial firms. If you're wondering what a blockchain actually is, or how its works, you're not alone. Autonomous Research, which calls the technology a "game changer," has released a report to answer all of your blockchain questions. The important thing to understand is that it has nothing to do with bitcoin — at least for Wall Street's purposes. Blockchain is the technology behind bitcoin, but it has many other uses too. Wall Street wants to use blockchains to simplify the way it processes transactions. Here's how it works. Blockchains are ledgers (like Excel spreadsheets), but they accept inputs from lots of different parties. The ledger can only be changed when there is a consensus among the group. That makes them more secure, and it means there's no need for a central authority to approve transactions.![]() Blockchains control information and avoid duplication.![]() There's no need for a centralized authority to validate transactions when multiple banks, asset managers, or custodians can agree and validate them instead.![]() See the rest of the story at Business Insider |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST A U.S. court has charged Trevon Gross, the former chairman of a Jackson, N.J. federal credit union, with accepting $150,000 in bribes to turn the credit union’s functions over to the operators of Coin.mx, an illegal bitcoin exchange, according to NJ.com, a New Jersey news site. The office of Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney for […] The post Former Credit Union Official Charged With Taking Bribe From Illegal Bitcoin Exchange appeared first on CCN: Financial Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency News. |
Business Insider, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Former Bank of England Governor Lord Mervyn King believes Germany should consider leaving the European Union as the current set up "will lead to not only an economic but a political crisis." In the second extract from his new book published by The Telegraph, Lord King writes: "Put bluntly, monetary union has created a conflict between a centralised elite on the one hand, and the forces of democracy at the national level on the other." The solution, Lord King argues, is a breakup of the union altogether. As Governor of the Bank of England between 2003 and 2013, Lord King has first hand experience dealing with this monetary union as one of the "centralised elite." But the game keeper has turned poacher, so to speak, and Lord King is now highly critical of the European Union and believes that ultimately it is unworkable. By adopting a single currency, Lord King argues that differences between economies in Europe have been exacerbated because the normal monetary mechanisms used to make countries more competitive aren't available. This has created a situation where powerhouse Germany is supporting the underperforming southern European countries. This creates resentment among German voters, which leads to hash austerity measures for countries like Greece. That, in turn, creates resentment among Greeks. What's more, the debts imposed on the likes of Greece through bailouts are almost impossible to pay back and cripple the country's already struggling economy further. The austerity measures make it incredibly difficult to get back into a trade deficit and Greece therefore has to borrow money to pay back debts, creating a vicious cycle of debt. Lord King writes: It was more than a little depressing to see the countries of the euro area haggling over how much to lend to Greece so that it would be able to pay them back some of the earlier loans. Such a circular flow of payments made little difference to the health, or lack of it, of the Greek economy. This disconnect between finance ministers discussing deficits in Brussels and angry unemployed people on the streets of places like Spain has led to rising support for "extreme" parties such as the radical left-wing Syriza party in Greece or the National Front in France. In this way, the EU is fomenting not just economic problems but political ones too. Lord King writes: In pursuit of peace, the elites in Europe, the United States and international organisations such as the IMF, have, by pushing bailouts and a move to a transfer union as the solution to crises, simply sowed the seeds of divisions in Europe and created support for what were previously seen as extreme political parties and candidates. It will lead to not only an economic but a political crisis.
But, Lord King admits, debt forgiveness for underperforming southern nations in Europe is unlikely due to the politics within member states. Germans would never accept simply writing off debts to Greeks. To get out of this vicious cycle, Lord King proposes a radical solution — Germany should consider leaving the EU to bring about its demise. Lord King writes: The underlying differences among countries and the political costs of accepting defeat have become too great. Germany faces a terrible choice. Should it support the weaker brethren in the euro area at great and unending cost to its taxpayers, or should it call a halt to the project of monetary union across the whole of Europe? The attempt to find a middle course is not working. One day, German voters may rebel against the losses imposed on them by the need to support their weaker brethren, and undoubtedly the easiest way to divide the euro area would be for Germany itself to exit. It's a radical suggestion and one that Lord King admits is probably not the most likely. He says: "But the more likely cause of a break- up of the euro area is that voters in the south will tire of the grinding and relentless burden of mass unemployment and the emigration of talented young people." Lord King's anti-European argument comes at a pivotal time for Britain's future in Europe, with a referendum on membership of the EU set for June 23. It remains to be seen whether Lord King will do much to sway opinion. You can read the full extract from Lord King's book, The End of Alchemy, on The Telegraph. Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: The days of restaurant tipping are dying |
CoinDesk, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has issued new comments criticizing the Bitcoin Core development team, reiterating his support for Bitcoin Classic. |