SEC Has Approved Bitcoin for Investors
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  SEC Has Approved Bitcoin for Investors
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Frodo
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« on: January 10, 2024, 06:35:59 PM »

Cryptocurrencies are finally being mainstreamed, it seems:

SEC Approves Bitcoin ETFs for Everyday Investors

Quote
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission voted Wednesday to allow mainstream investors to buy and sell bitcoin as easily as stocks and mutual funds, a decision hailed by the industry as a game changer.

The SEC decision clears the way for the first U.S. exchange-traded funds that hold bitcoin to be sold to the public. Expectations of U.S. regulatory approval for such funds drove the price of bitcoin to the highest level in about two years. The digital currency fell to just below $46,000 late Wednesday, up from $17,000 in January 2023.

Until now, everyday investors who wanted to buy and sell digital currencies have had to either trade on crypto exchanges and incur hefty transaction fees or purchase products that track bitcoin in less direct ways. At least half a dozen bitcoin-futures ETFs are already on the market. Those funds use futures contracts to provide exposure to bitcoin price moves, though they have been criticized for often straying from bitcoin’s price.

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PSOL
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« Reply #1 on: January 10, 2024, 11:05:57 PM »

Biden has been the most deregulating and supportive president in the financial sector since Bush. His crypto policy, snubbing Warren, and letting the AI industry write their own regulations proves it.
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oldtimer
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« Reply #2 on: January 12, 2024, 07:50:47 AM »
« Edited: January 12, 2024, 02:17:29 PM by oldtimer »

Biden has been the most deregulating and supportive president in the financial sector since Bush. His crypto policy, snubbing Warren, and letting the AI industry write their own regulations proves it.

One of the negatives of deregulated speculative bubbles is that it sucks up money and time from more productive things.

In 1929 Durant spent almost his entire time and fortune playing on the stockmarket rather than his own Motor Company.

Look at the course of this bubble: The Whole Stockmarket -> Just the Nasdaq -> Just a few stocks on the Nasdaq -> Just NVIDIA -> Just Bitcoin.

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nerd73
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« Reply #3 on: January 26, 2024, 05:35:32 AM »
« Edited: January 26, 2024, 05:39:59 AM by nerd73 »

Oops. Shouldn't have let BlackRock run Biden's financial policy.

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Frodo
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« Reply #4 on: January 26, 2024, 06:37:45 PM »

Keep an eye on the courts, as the existential issue facing cryptocurrencies is whether they should be regarded as securities (as per the Howey Test) -and regulated accordingly:

Quote
For more than a decade, the pioneers of the cryptocurrency industry envisioned digital coins as an alternate branch of finance, a renegade sector that would operate outside the reach of big banks and government regulators.

But as digital currencies like Bitcoin and Ether became more mainstream, the crypto industry collided with a 1946 Supreme Court decision that created what is known as the Howey Test, a legal analysis that determines when a financial product becomes subject to the same strict rules as stocks and bonds.

In recent years, regulators have seized on that legal precedent to argue that cryptocurrencies are just another security, like shares of Apple or General Motors. The crypto industry has fought back, leaving it in a legal gray zone with an uncertain future in the United States.

Now the long-running dispute is edging closer to a resolution, as federal judges begin weighing in on a series of lawsuits by the nation’s top securities regulator against some of the largest crypto firms. This month, judges held hearings in two of the most consequential cases, which could dictate whether the multitrillion-dollar crypto industry can continue growing in the United States.

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