Showing posts with label crypto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crypto. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2022

The Bahamas Attorney General Addresses The Developments of FTX Digital Markets Limited in The Bahamas

National Address on Behalf of The Government of The Bahamas on the Developments of FTX in The Bahamas


Senator The Hon. L. Ryan Pinder, KC
Attorney General
Commonwealth of The Bahamas
November 27, 2022

As Attorney-General and Minister of Legal Affairs, I wish to start by asserting one of the most fundamental principles of our jurisdiction.  The Bahamas is a place of laws.  The rule of law, and the exercise of due process, characterise the integrity of our jurisdiction.



Good Evening, Ladies and Gentlemen.


Bahamian Attorney General Senator The Hon. L. Ryan Pinder, KC
Thank you for joining me this evening as I offer a National Statement on behalf of The Government of The Commonwealth of The Bahamas on the current situation regarding FTX Digital Markets Limited.

As Attorney-General and Minister of Legal Affairs, I wish to start by asserting one of the most fundamental principles of our jurisdiction.  The Bahamas is a place of laws.  The rule of law, and the exercise of due process, characterise the integrity of our jurisdiction.

As the third-oldest democracy in the western hemisphere, our legal, regulatory and financial sectors have stood the test of time.

Tonight, while I speak on behalf of The Government, it is in fact The Securities Commission of The Bahamas which is the lead actor in respect of the present situation, as they are the statutory regulator of companies like FTX Digital Markets, who operate in the digital asset space.

To date, The Securities Commission has issued two significant statements concerning the provisional liquidation proceedings involving FTX, and other related matters.  I encourage you all to read those statements for yourselves, as they are definitive accounts of the known facts, and the application, of the relevant laws and regulatory regime in relation to FTX.

These statements should be also read in conjunction with the Communication made to The House of Assembly by Prime Minister Davis on November 22 nd, also concerning FTX Digital Markets.

While cryptocurrency and digital assets are part of a new and complex industry, on a basic level, recent events involving the insolvency crisis experienced by the FTX group of companies have been experienced around the world in practically every sector.

To that extent, what happened can be more readily understood as a case of a very large business failure as a result of questionable internal management practices and corporate governance.


Recent Events


Given how quickly things have moved, it is hard to believe that it was only 25 days ago, on November 2nd, that an article first appeared on the news site CoinDesk, with the details of a leaked financial statement of Alameda Research, a trading company also founded by Sam Bankman-Fried.

I want to pause here to emphasize that among the over 100 companies located in dozens of jurisdictions around the world, FTX Digital Markets is the only entity regulated in The Bahamas.  Alameda Research is NOT regulated in The Bahamas.

To the extent Alameda Research is found to have committed any improprieties in The Bahamas, then of course it will be subject to our jurisdiction.

The balance sheet of Alameda Research, CoinDesk reported at that time, revealed that a large portion of their assets were held in FTT, a token issued by an FTX entity, that granted token holders a discount on trading fees.

Four days later, on November 6 th , Binance, a crypto exchange that is a major rival to FTX, announced that it was selling off all its substantial holdings in the FTT token.  This announcement prompted a large number of FTX investors to withdraw hundreds of millions of dollars in digital assets from FTX — causing a liquidity crunch.

In short, FTX was experiencing the equivalent of a “run on the bank”, when customers all rush to withdraw assets simultaneously.

Two days later, on November 8th , it was reported that Binance had entered a non- binding agreement to buy FTX.

However, the very next day, November 9th, Binance pulled out of the deal.  One day later, November 10 th 2022, the Securities Commission of The Bahamas, announced that it had taken action to freeze the assets of FTX Digital Markets, had suspended the registration of FTX Digital Markets as a licensee under The Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, also known as the “DARE Act”, and applied to the Supreme Court of The Bahamas, pursuant to its regulatory authority under the DARE Act, to place the company into provisional liquidation.

The speed with which the Securities Commission was able to move was remarkable by any standard.

Over the course of eight days, market confidence was lost in a company which at one point had a $32 billion valuation.  The Securities Commission deserves the highest praise for moving so swiftly and decisively to suspend FTX Digital Markets’ license and appoint provisional liquidators.

In addition, the Securities Commission recognized that given the nature of digital assets, and the risks associated with hacking and compromise, placing FTX Digital Markets into provisional liquidation was not sufficient to protect the customers and creditors of the company.

Therefore, pursuant to their authority under the DARE Act, and pursuant to an order of the Supreme Court of The Bahamas, the Securities Commission secured the assets of FTX Digital Markets to be held on behalf of and for the benefit and restitution of clients and creditors of FTX.

The Commission was the first regulator in the world to take significant steps with respect to the FTX group of companies, which has operations, and regulated activities throughout the world.

This was done for the purpose of protecting the interests of FTX’s customers and creditors, as well as the integrity of the Bahamian financial services industry.

The Securities Commission was able to move so quickly because of the strength of the legislative framework which was already in place in The Bahamas to regulate digital asset companies like FTX Digital Markets.

No other jurisdiction in the world moved or could have moved this quickly in circumstances such as these.  It is important for me to share this summary of what took place, because over the last few weeks, the basic facts have been obscured by guessing games and rumours.

We understand the enormous interest in this story.  But as a government, we decided right away that what was most important was not to engage with speculation or gossip, but instead to proceed methodically and deliberately, in accordance with the exercise of due process and the rule of law.

As we have stated, we are in the early stages of an active and ongoing investigation.  It is a very complex investigation: The structure and reach of FTX’s activities are truly global, as they consist of over 100 companies located in dozens of jurisdictions.

As with any active inquiry, we seek to share updates in a way that does not compromise or constrain investigators.

And tonight, I can underscore that we believe that faith in The Bahamas as a responsible jurisdiction will only be strengthened as events continue to unfold.


Legislative Framework:

The DARE Act


The digital assets industry is still in its infancy.  The emergence of any new industry will inevitably feature ups and downs, as innovators attempt to harness new technology to new applications.

Since the official launch of Bitcoin in January 2009 1, the possibilities that digital assets, smart contracts, distributed ledger technology (or DLT) and fintech represented piqued interest across the financial and technology worlds.

Despite the rapid growth in the industry, by 2018 many jurisdictions had not introduced any legal or regulatory framework that specifically addressed digital assets.  There are still no agreed-upon standards globally.

Regulators around the world are still grappling with the issue of how to regulate digital assets.  There are a number of reasons for this, including the complexity of regulating the digital assets space, but most regulators actually lack the broad statutory mandate or legal scope to provide any regulation, or even legal clarity, on cryptocurrencies, digital assets and related businesses.

Digital assets are in use in jurisdictions across the world - in North America, in Central and South America, in Europe, in the Middle East, in Asia, in Africa, in the South Pacific.  They are being utilized and traded in countries -- whether there is a regulatory framework in place or not.

The Bahamas decided that we needed to actively engage in this sector for two reasons: first, to take advantage of the strategic opportunity of this new sector; and second, to protect our existing financial services sector from the risks which unregulated activities connected with crypto-currency and other digital assets may bring about such as illicit financing.

The Bahamas, with significant expertise in international financial services regulation, decided we would not allow this activity in our jurisdiction without the establishment of a robust legal and regulatory framework, reflective of the best practices observed in the industry and in compliance with the recommendations of global standards setters.

In 2020, The Bahamas enacted ‘The Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act’.  It remains a pioneering piece of legislation, recognized internationally as innovative and forward-thinking.

One example: earlier this year, Assistant United States Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Brian Nichols, noted that: “The Bahamas has long been an important financial center globally and it is pioneering responsible cryptocurrency regulation.”


So how did we get to this moment with FTX Digital Markets?


In July 2021, FTX Digital Markets was incorporated in The Bahamas, and registered as a digital asset business under The DARE Act.  In September 2021, just over one year ago, the Securities Commission, after many months of prior engagement, approved FTX Digital Markets’ licence to operate.  FTX operated globally for over two years prior to coming to The Bahamas, having been headquartered previously in Hong Kong.

FTX Digital Markets quickly set about establishing a major presence in The Bahamas, buying properties, hiring and training Bahamian staff, and sponsoring a number of charitable and community ventures.

In many ways this behaviour was no different from that which we see from many of our corporate citizens.

Meanwhile, in the wider economy, inflation battered countries across the globe, leading to higher interest rates; the invasion of Ukraine added to the volatility of energy prices; and a road range of tech companies slumped in the stock market and laid off tens of thousands of workers.

The international digital assets industry experienced a major downturn as well.  As Prime Minister Davis pointed out in his statement to Parliament: “There have been both booms and busts in the world of crypto, and this year has been a significant bust — with total market capitalization falling from $3 trillion to $800 billion or lower.

The steep sell-offs and declining volumes have led analysts to describe this time as a “crypto winter’.   In the spring of this year, Terra/Luna, a stablecoin system collapsed, leading eventually to a wave of bankruptcies by crypto lending platforms, like Celsius, Three Arrows Capital and Voyager.

For a time, it appeared that FTX would bail out and acquire the assets of some of these distressed companies.  But instead, FTX itself could not avoid the cascading failures and faced its own severe insolvency crisis.


So where are we now?


As I said at the outset, there is an active and ongoing investigation of the affairs of FTX Digital Markets, involving both civil and criminal authorities.

As is provided for under our regulatory framework, we are already working with a number of specialists and experts, and will continue to do so as the need arises.

There are a number of protective measures which the regulator has taken under the authority conferred by the Supreme Court of The Bahamas.

For the time being, we will not set out those measures in any further detail, until we are confident that doing so will not jeopardise any aspect of the ongoing investigations.

We urge all authorities, here and abroad, at a minimum, to exercise at least the same amount of prudence and restraint in their public commentary as we do, so as not to prejudice the proceedings.

It is extremely regrettable that in Chapter 11 filings for bankruptcy protection made in New York last week, that the new Chief Executive of FTX Trading Ltd. — not the Bahamas-based FTX Digital Markets — but an affiliate company incorporated in Antigua and Barbuda -- misrepresented the timely action taken by the Securities Commission, and used inaccurate allegations lodged in the Transfer Motion to do so.

It is possible that the prospect of multi-million dollar legal and consultant fees is driving both their legal strategy and the intemperate statements.  In any case, we urge prudence and accuracy in all future filings.


As for what comes next:


The Securities Commission, Financial Intelligence Unit, and the Financial Crimes Unit of the Royal Bahamas Police Force will continue to investigate the facts and circumstances regarding FTX’s insolvency crisis, and any potential violations of Bahamian law.

They will hold accountable any responsible companies and individuals, and act in cooperation with other regulatory agencies and law enforcement bodies, both here in The Bahamas, and in other countries affected.

These events remind us of the lessons learned from securities and other financial regulation about the need for strong cross-border cooperation. The public worldwide will be best served by strong international regulatory cooperation.

That means more jurisdictions taking up the challenge, following our lead, and implementing strong regulatory frameworks. We will, as we always do, cooperate with international regulatory and enforcement agencies.


Ladies and Gentlemen:


While new facts emerge every day, there is still much to discover.  And while they may well be a number of personal tragedies associated with the fall of this company, there appears to be little contagion beyond the digital assets’ sphere, both here in The Bahamas and around the world.

In fact, Bahamians and other stakeholders in The Bahamas, should take great confidence from the Standard & Poor’s Ratings forecast for The Bahamas, issued last Tuesday, November 22nd.

They projected a stable outlook for our economy, resting in part on the assumption that there will be no material adverse impact on The Bahamas from the worldwide collapse of FTX.

But as our investigations continue, I must emphasise that ill-informed speculation is not helpful: neither to the customers of FTX, nor their creditors, nor their investors or the general public.

Any attempt to lay the entirety of this debacle at the feet of The Bahamas, because FTX is headquartered here, would be a gross oversimplification of reality.

The dozens and dozens of companies involved, registered in numerous jurisdictions across the world, the scope of related parties, including some of the world’s most sophisticated investors, demonstrate the cross-border, multi-jurisdictional nature of this event.

And it is deeply misguided to conclude that reluctance to communicate the details of an active investigation means that nothing is happening; in fact, the government's discretion stems from how seriously we take our commitment to the rule of law and the independence of the securities regulator.

We have been shocked at the ignorance of those who assert that FTX came to The Bahamas because they did not want to submit to regulatory scrutiny; in fact, the world is full of countries in which there is no legislative or regulatory authority over crypto, but The Bahamas is not one of them.

We have been able to assert our leadership in this new field because in the digital assets arena, what matters is not the size of your land mass, or the size of your GDP, but the ingenuity and rigour of your people and jurisdiction.

When a respected risk and market integrity firm ranked the world’s digital assets regulatory regimes earlier this year, our country was first, and for good reason.

The digital asset sector is a high profile, embryonic sector of the Bahamian financial services sector, an area where The Bahamas has demonstrated global leadership for decades.

As a world-leading destination for tourism, we have been audacious before in asserting that ‘it’s better in The Bahamas’.

We will not hesitate to do so again.


Conclusion


My Fellow Bahamians:

We know that the world is watching.

Insofar as these are matters of pressing global interest and concern, we welcome the attention.  We have every confidence that the world will see how our policies, laws and regulatory regime have so much to commend to others.

We have much to be proud of.

Global-Crypto-Regulation-Index

We do not apologise for our ambition for Bahamians to be at the forefront of this exciting innovative sector.  The Bahamas stands behind its decision to regulate digital assets and related businesses.  We stand behind the quality of the regulations that exist.

We continue to invite digital assets businesses to operate from this jurisdiction.  All told, we remain one of few countries in the world with such a complete and effective regulatory framework.

The actions the Securities Commission of The Bahamas took on 10th and 12" November were to protect the clients and creditors of FTX Digital Markets. This demonstrates why the DARE Act is among the world’s leading legislative frameworks for the regulation of digital assets and related businesses.

Like the dotcom boom and bust of the past, we believe that the turbulence currently being experienced by the digital asset sector will pass, and that there is still much potential for growth and opportunity ahead.

In fact, I am fully confident that, as matters progress, and the activities of the FTX group are either restructured or wound down, The Bahamas will emerge, held in even higher esteem.

A turbulent crypto-currency period on a global basis, and the downfall of a single Bahamian company, in no way threaten a bright future for The Bahamas.

Quite the opposite.

Those entrepreneurs who are ready to create new financial products that serve a broader range of consumers, remain welcome to come to The Bahamas.  They can be certain that we have in place a principled, fair, comprehensive and ethical regulatory regime.  They can also be certain we will act quickly and decisively to enforce it, if and when our laws and regulations are breached.

They will see that The Bahamas is a place of laws.

They will see that the rule of law, and the exercise of due process, characterise the integrity of our jurisdiction.

And they will have found yet another reason why, it’s better in The Bahamas.

Thank you.

Source

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

BAHAMIAN PRIME MINISTER'S Communication to The Bahamas Parliament Concerning THE FTX GROUP AND AFFILIATES

Bahamas Prime Minister's Communication to Parliament Concerning FTX


As you know, the FTX group has one entity which is regulated in The Bahamas, FTX Digital Markets Limited. This entity’s registration has been suspended and it was put in provisional liquidation.


HON. PHILIP DAVIS QC, MP
PRIME MINISTER & MINISTER OF FINANCE
COMMONWEALTH OF THE BAHAMAS
16 NOVEMBER 2022

Madam Speaker:

Bahamas PM Davis addresses THE FTX GROUP AND AFFILIATES in The Bahamian Parliament
Numerous crypto tokens and companies around the world have collapsed in the past few months, including Terra/Luna, Celsius, 3 Arrows Capital, and Voyager Digital, setting off a series of reverberations.
As you know, the FTX group has one entity which is regulated in The Bahamas, FTX Digital Markets Limited. This entity’s registration has been suspended and it was put in provisional liquidation.
The FTX group and affiliates all now appear to be subject to insolvency proceedings pending in Nassau and in the United States.

There are reports that FTX has mismanaged customer assets, and numerous investigations have begun into the reported actions and actors in several countries, including by our own Securities Commission and the Financial Crimes Investigation Branch. I note that The Bahamas did not have sole oversight of FTX’s worldwide operation.

I have given directions that these proceedings and investigations are to be of the highest order and given precedence, given the amounts involved and because committed and rigorous oversight is of national importance.

We will be coordinating these efforts with duly appointed authorities in other jurisdictions.
A key priority for us, of course, is the full and absolute protection of the rights and remedies of The Bahamas and our citizens, to minimize losses and to mitigate the overall impact caused by any misconduct.
Madam Speaker:
There have been both booms and busts in the world of crypto, and this year has been a significant bust – with total market capitalization falling from $3 trillion to $800 million or lower; the steep sell-offs and declining volumes have led analysts to describe this time as a “crypto winter”. (Meta and Amazon, not crypto companies, of course, but tech companies – have laid off thousands, and also shed significant market cap. These are challenging times.)
I believe, as do many others, that blockchain technology and smart contracts will continue to play an important and growing role in the world’s financial architecture, and further, I have every confidence that The Bahamas will emerge from the proceedings involving FTX – proceedings taking place here as well as in other jurisdictions -- with an enhanced reputation as a solid digital assets jurisdiction.
Based on the analysis and understanding of the FTX liquidity crisis to date, we have not identified any deficiencies in our regulatory framework that could have avoided this.
In fact, it was because The Bahamas already had in place a regulatory framework for digital assets and digital asset businesses, that the regulator was able to take immediate steps in order to protect the interests of clients, creditors, and other stakeholders globally.
The Bahamas was already on track to update the regulatory framework, before year’s end, to address lessons learned as a result of this year’s crypto winter.
No doubt, as the various jurisdictions involved unravel the actions that led to this moment, we will be among the first jurisdictions to gain and put to use valuable insights, allowing us to further strengthen our framework.
What I would ask, Madam Speaker, is for all those who care about our country’s reputation, to tread carefully when they speak about matters that are very complex and still unfolding.
There is a reason that The Bahamas won international praise for the approach we have taken to date on digital assets, and there is also plenty of room to have a healthy debate about the industry, but this is a story that has the world’s attention, and those who use it to mislead and score cheap political points are no patriots.

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Crypto Will Never Replace Fiat!

Crypto will always be a transactional adjunct to both reserve and non-reserve fiat


 
Sam Bankman
- FTX boss Sam Bankman-Fried believes bitcoin has no future as a payments network, because its 'proof of work' system means it can't scale up By Zahra Tayeb - BusinessInsider -


THIS YOUNG FELLOW IS PRECISELY RIGHT FOR CURRENT AND ANCIENT ECONOMIC REASONS!

By: Professor Gilbert Morris:
This should serve as a cold shower for crypto-evangelists who have deluded themselves into thinking that crypto-money can defy the laws of supply and demand, volatility versus stability or even raise the dead…if you listen to their ignorant blatherings!

The fiat of fiats is not because it’s fiat, but because it’s legal tender and stable.

You may ascertain at type of person who sits at the back of the class without listening: because they’re the ones who compare possibilities at the margins to events at the centre-scale. Such persons respond by saying ‘well, the US dollar fluctuates…’, as if they can’t grasp the difference of a legal tender currency, that fluctuates within a band in a system that is global, compared to narrowly distributed crypto-money, fluctuating wildly in value…driven by a few “crypto-whales”, in a niche transactional vortex.
When one explains these basic, obvious points, crypto-dolts launch into incessant crypto-barking about how people - even Warren Buffett - just doesn’t understand what they understand!
Today, I found just how delusional they are, because even as this young fellow - from FTX - expressed views held by Mark Cuban, Elon Musk and Vitalik Buterin (cofounder of Ethereum) and Warren Buffet, crypto-Talibans can be heard dismissing him; suggesting that he needs to read some article they know of to gain perspective on a product he dominates!

This is their generalised reaction to statements from a person who is a market-maker for crypto, and sits at one of the world’s largest transactional nexus between crypto and fiat and transacts nearly 100 times their country’s GDP!
To the thinking person, the least interesting thing about crypto is it’s price, which is driven by a “beggar-thy-neighbour” model. The most interesting thing is the technology substrata, blockchain, where the true transactional revolution will emerge.
Distributed ledgers running as blockchain ir holochains actually reflect the ancient jurisprudence of Solon (630-560BCE), the great law giver: in that, at last - also reflecting the notion of the commonwealth of humankind advanced by Nicolas of Cusa 1401-1464).
Blockchain in its basic formulation can remake human civilisation.

This is the reason young techs in The Bahamas must grow out of the fat delusion that The Bahamas will be a “crypto-centre”: rather it’s future - if we have the resolve to innovate at scale at the pace of the market - will be in digital asset custody; built on the substrate of distributed ledgers. That means all digital assets, including NFTs, Tokens of every sort, NK contracts - and the holy grail - interactive and interoperable smart contracts will be the trillion-dollar opportunity for The Bahamas now and in the foreseeable near-future.

Crypto will always be a transactional adjunct to both reserve and non-reserve fiat and any first year economics student or statistician can witness that crypto has lost its oppositional trajectory and basically “aligned” with conventional currencies/money and does not now move opposite to it as an alternative should.
Crypto is also not like Gold; as gold is a commodity and possesses inherent or intrinsic value as a conductor of electricity for instance; necessary for advanced electronics such as both this mobile I’m using and this airplane in which I am traversing the heavens.
It has a use function and value inherent to what it is. Crypto does not.
That does not mean crypto is useless: it provides a niche payments channel and more importantly - something which most economists miss - a “savings enclave”, which has been missing outside high savings economies such as Japan. That is, crypto - as a proxy for fiat - operates like a zero interest, ‘proxy savings bond’, with the widest range of yield possibilities for cash-outs because of its volatility; driven by its frenetic value model.
It will play this double proxy role indefinitely, but will never replace fiat; although, it’s flexibility will instigate the rise of CBDC with hybrid Stable Coin features, which will lead the the true and necessary revolution: the destruction of conventional banks!