Monday, January 19, 2015

Singapore Government Sponsors Bitcoin Firm to Attend SXSW Event

Singapore Government Sponsors Bitcoin Firm to Attend SXSW Event

 (@southtopia) | Published on January 19, 2015 at 11:15 GMT
Singapore-based bitcoin startup CoinPip is one of 10 technology companies selected by a government agency to represent the country at this year's South by Southwest (SXSW) event in the US in March.
Notably, this is the first time a national government has shown such support for bitcoin enterprise development.
Participating companies are being sponsored to attend by Infocomm Investments, the investment arm of Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA), a government agency and regulator.
CoinPip CEO Anson Zeall told CoinDesk he aims to use the appearance at SXSW to raise awareness of CoinPip and its services, and to show that bitcoin is not only a currency, but a technology capable of many different things.
It is also an opportunity to show off Singapore itself, he indicated, saying:
"Singapore is a great place for bitcoin startups. And having us showcased by Infocomm Investments is proof."

The story so far

CoinPip began as a bitcoin merchant services provider and has begun expanding into new territory as a money payroll transfer business. The latest service sends money end-to-end to employees, freelancers and contractors around the world in under 48 hours, using bitcoin as an invisible medium.
The company also recently became a Ripple Gateway. Although that protocol will "take time to develop", Zeall said, users who want to participate in the Ripple network or buy its currency, XRP, with Singapore dollars, can sign up now.
This is not the first time CoinPip's efforts in bitcoin have been recognized. The company joined 'Batch 11' of 500 Startups' accelerator program in Mountain View, California, starting last November.
Whether or not CoinPip's involvement in 500 Startups influenced Infocomm Investments' decision is uncertain, but Zeall said the experience definitely changed the company's trajectory for the better.
"500 allowed us to delve deep into our analytics, get the right insights and take action. It does look like a leap-of-faith pivot, however there were a lot of learnings involved to get to where we are now."
The company's merchant services will continue with the addition of a new and more user-friendly dashboard soon. While declining to provide figures on merchant numbers or volumes, Zeall said the company serves a number of "very loyal" businesses who are dedicated to accepting bitcoin.
CoinPip has operated mainly in the Singapore/Hong Kong market, but also processes transactions to and from the UK, Indonesia, Kenya and Australia. The firm also expressed plans to expand into South America and the US in the near future.

Criteria for selection

Director of Infocomm Investments' San Francisco office, Victor Tan, said that the companies chosen span a variety of verticals, including e-commerce, ad-tech, big data and even space, in one instance.
Startups chosen for sponsorship needed to show they have a ready product or service to show the public, and also that they have plans to expand into or do business with the US. The selection team also looked for companies that would be most relevant and interesting to the SXSW audience.

Singapore government initiative

According to its website, Infocomm Investment operates its accelerator program to "stimulate the growth of home-grown, innovation driven tech startups" at the early stage, by working with corporations, universities and professional accelerators.
It also seeks to identify and invest in Singaporean (or Singapore-based) companies with an international presence, investing alongside venture capitalists and engaging in outreach programs, such as participation in trade shows.
Together with the IDA, it forms part of Singapore's Intelligent Nation 2015 (iN2015) initiative – a 10-year plan to further develop Singapore's information technology economy.
SXSW is a series of annual festivals held in Austin, Texas, that incorporates music, film and interactive technology. The latter component has grown markedly in recent years to become one of the biggest tech startup events in the world.
SXSW will take place from 13th to 17th March.
South by Southwest image via Shutterstock
500 StartupsAsiaChinaHong KongSingapore

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Sunday, January 18, 2015

Federal Reserve Bank VP: We’re a Protocol Just Like Bitcoin

Federal Reserve Bank VP: We’re a Protocol Just Like Bitcoin

 (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on January 18, 2015 at 19:25 GMT
David AndolfattoSt Louis Fed VP and research director David Andolfatto is rare among Federal Reserve officials in his interest in bitcoin and digital currency. However, while he may see the technology’s big picture, why he believes bitcoin is potentially transformative doesn’t exactly fall in line with the common mantras of the community.
Take, for instance, the claim that bitcoin is part of a long-term trend toward “digital money”, one Andolfatto delights in debunking.
Today, virtually all money used by the private banking sector, and all the money in modern economies, he asserts, is digital.
In a conversation with CoinDesk, Andolfatto went so far as to suggest that the bitcoin network isn’t that much different from the Federal Reserve, and that while ideologically opposed, both are highly similar in their structure and goals. The St Louis Fed is just one of 12 banks that make up the US Federal Reserve System, which supervises state-member banks, bank holding companies and loan holding companies, and provides educational outreach.
Andolfatto said:
“The way I view the Fed, and any institution, is it’s basically a computer program. Just like bitcoin, it’s an open-source computer program. You ask yourself, ‘What is bitcoin?’ It’s a protocol, it’s a computer program, it’s a constitution, it’s a law, it’s a legal code, it’s basically a constitution that governs the supply of its money and that governs the processing of payments.”
Still, Andolfatto does believe bitcoin has one key advantage that he has called its “stroke of genius” in past presentations – its open-source decentralized ledger known as the blockchain.
In contrast to the Federal Reserve Wire Network (Fedwire), the US central bank’s real-time settlement system, Andolfatto believes bitcoin, or a similar blockchain-based system could pose real benefits for centralised financial institutions like the Fed.
The comments come as part of a wide-ranging interview that sought to gather Andolfatto’s opinion on bitcoin as a currency, payment network and financial tool that could grow in relevance to the global economy.

Bitcoin's competitive edge

With digital money out of the running as the big innovation behind bitcoin, Andolfatto has turned his interest to another often-cited aspect of the technology – its public ledger system, the blockchain.
Still, he questions whether the bitcoin network will prove to be more cost-effective than other available payment systems, and whether another similar system might ultimately solve the key problems he still sees in its design.
“The amount of money and resources you have to pay bitcoin miners is like 3% of all transactions,” he said. “That’s kind of like what Visa charges.”
With these often-cited benefits out of the running, however, Adolfatto is still interested in bitcoin because of one key benefit it has over the current system used by the Federal Reserve.
By using a distributed ledger, he said, every bank in the Federal Reserve system could have a copy of all transactions in the system, thereby guarding against potential problems inherent with a centralized approach.
“What would happen on the distributed ledger is all the books would be kept simultaneously in every one of these member banks, the same way that the blockchain is on everybody’s computer,” he said. “If any one computer goes down, that doesn’t in any way violate the integrity of the blockchain because the records still exist on all these copies of this ledger.”
Andolfatto indicated that such a feature could add a “robustness” to the Fed’s existing system, potentially even allowing the public more transparency during times of economic turmoil.
“You could actually see which bank is sending money to which bank on this ‘Fedcoin blockchain’, so if the Fed was to make an emergency loan to one of these entities you’d be able to observe who is the recipient of the loan and how much,” he theorized.
But if the bitcoin system has advantages, Andolfatto isn’t ready to make the case that they should be embraced by the Fed. Andolfatto cautioned that he doesn’t see the immediate need for financial institutions to migrate to public ledgers.
“To the extent that people would value that transparency – and I have to say that it’s not immediately clear you want that type of transparency – that would be another benefit," he said.

Bitcoin as a currency

In the past, Andolfatto has been bearish on bitcoin as a currency, arguing that distributed payment systems like Ripple come closest to unlocking the full power of bitcoin’s original ledger.
Unsurprisingly, he indicated that he doesn’t see the uptick in the merchant adoption of bitcoin as payment a sign that this conjecture might be wrong.
“People use all sorts of stuff as currency,” Andolfatto said. “There’s many, many currencies out there and the bitcoin currency is just one.”
Andolfatto countered with the assertion that, rather than a currency, bitcoin is considered by most to be an investment vehicle, a development he suggested might limit its ability to function more broadly as money.
“People see that in the long run the supply of bitcoin is capped and they see it’s demand growing, so in the long run you have to expect that it might be a good investment vehicle,” he said. “You might think the same about gold, but just because something’s a good investment vehicle does not make it a good currency.”
Andolfatto ended by citing the volatile exchange rate between bitcoin and US dollars, a subject that has been the subject of increasing attention in recent weeks.
“What makes a good currency is its ability to hold its value for very, very short periods of time,” he said, adding the caveat that developing markets where money is managed poorly might come to contradict his theory.
He continued, “I think there might be a big scope for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin to replace or at least take a good market share of currency transactions [in these areas]."

Comparisons to Fedwire

Perhaps most surprising was Andolfatto’s assertion that the bitcoin network is similar to the Federal Reserve, but he elaborated at length on the subject and why he believes all money is just a ledger.
In this context, he explained that all money attempts to perform a simple function, debiting an account and crediting another.
“Fedwire uses the US dollar as the currency unit and the Fed serves as the third party that does the accounting,” he said. “The key difference with bitcoin is that there’s no trusted third party to do the accounting. The accounting is done by this community of miners, this decentralized system. It’s a completely different philosophy.”
Still, he sees the Federal Reserve as an evolving system, one that is also “open source” due to its reliance of foundational laws.
“The Fed is a set of rules that evolved over time, much like the open-source bitcoin protocol does. It takes feedback from the community, in this case the community votes, represented by the Congress. Congress is the creator of the Fed, and so there are amendments to the way the fed might operate. As long as this occurs, I see the Fed as an open-source evolving protocol, much like bitcoin,” he said.

More pressing issues

While Andolfatto admits that he has followed the development of the bitcoin ecosystem, it wasn’t an intellectual curiosity that first lead him to speak out as part of his institution’s “Dialogue With the Fed” series. Rather, it was the work of a savvy PR team.
“This is an earlier in [2014] and public interest in the phenomenon was really cresting. It was one of those things our public affairs team identified as something we wanted to know more about,” Andolfatto recalled.
He indicated that, while the darling of the mainstream tech and finance press, most Federal Reserve economists aren’t thinking about bitcoin. Of the 1,000 or more on staff, he said that he is aware of just “pockets of researchers” that have looked at the issue.
“The thing to keep in mind is that there’s a lot on the minds of fed economists these days,” he added.
Still, he said he is encouraged by what he’s seen of the bitcoin ecosystem, particularly the technology’s enthusiastic fan base, which he cites as key to his never-say-never view of developments in the industry.
“My experience with meeting people [in the industry] has been highly, highly positive,” Andolfatto said. “They might not have a good understanding of money, monetary policy and macroeconomics and stuff like that, but they have a very, very good idea of the payment system, of how it works, the plumbing, and moreover and I've come away marveling at the energy and the ingenuity that these people have.”
He added: “I mean the entrepreneurs in this space, I am just in awe of.”
Images courtesy of the St Louis Fed
Federal Reserve

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Euro stays on edge as crucial ECB meeting looms

Euro stays on edge as crucial ECB meeting looms


[SYDNEY] The euro flirted with 11-year lows early on Monday as investors braced for the European Central Bank to take its boldest steps yet to combat deflation and revive the euro zone economy.
The common currency last traded at US$1.1561, not far from a trough of US$1.14595 hit on Friday. Against the yen, it fetched 135.71, near a three-month low of 134.70.
That the ECB will launch a large-scale sovereign bond-buying program at its Jan. 22 meeting is no longer in question, but what is unknown is how the plan will be designed and whether it will be seen as credible and sufficient. "There will no doubt be a lot of wire traffic after Thursday's meeting about these details and such structural shortcomings, but the total QE to be announced will get prime attention," said David de Garis, senior economist at National Australia Bank, adding the market was now looking for quantitative easing of 1 trillion euros.
The common currency struggled near a four-month trough against the Australian dollar and a record low on the New Zealand currency. On the Canadian dollar, the euro remained within reach of a 16-month trough of C$1.3749 set on Friday.




Pressure on the euro intensified last week after the Swiss National Bank shocked markets by abandoning its three-year-old currency cap, effective removing a pillar of support for the euro.
The SNB had been buying billions of euros in order to keep the franc from strengthening above the 1.20 per euro cap it had implemented back in September 2011.
The abrupt policy U-turn sparked speculation the SNB was forced to do so ahead of bold moves from the ECB. The Swiss franc rocketed across the board, although it seemed to have stabilised around 0.99365 francs per euro.
Further stirring expectations for imminent action, media reports suggested ECB President Mario Draghi met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel last week to smooth the path for quantitative easing, which is staunchly opposed by the Bundesbank.
Whatever the outcome, traders said there is sure to be plenty of volatility at the end of this week.
But for now, with the US markets shut on Monday for a public holiday and little in the way of market-moving economic data, currency markets could be in for a relatively slow session.
On Tuesday, investors will get an update on China's fourth-quarter growth numbers.
REUTERS


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Saturday, January 17, 2015

Falling oil's next victim: banks

Falling oil's next victim: banks

January 16, 2015: 8:11 AM ET

The story behind oil's plunge
NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Big energy companies aren't the only ones losing out on the dramatic fall in oil prices. Banks are in the hot seat, too.

Hundreds of banks were forced to shut down in Texas when the state fell into a recession in 1986 during a steep decline in oil prices. That 1980s meltdown mirrors the current drop in prices that carried oil below $45 a barrel this week.
Cheap credit helped fuel the U.S. shale boom, allowing countless energy companies to find oil in new places. Banks also capitalized on economic booms in oil-rich regions like Texas and North Dakota. It would only make sense for these same banks to feel some pain from oil's downward spiral.
Drilling projects that made sense at $100 may now be losing money, creating headaches for the lenders that financed the expansions. Some highly-leveraged shale companies may even go belly up due to the plunge in oil prices.

oil stocks hurting banks

But there's also the economic fallout of the energy meltdown. It's great for consumerssaving money on gas, but Texas is bracing for a wave of layoffs and a possible oil-fueled recession. Other big energy regions like North Dakota, Oklahoma and Alaska are also facing economic headwinds.
Bank losses likely to grow: If the oil plunge causes certain economies to stumble, banks are likely to be hit by higher credit losses and a slowdown or even decline in loan growth. Likewise, fees for wealth management and customer activity could be dented.
"If you're a small bank in Texas or North Dakota, the risk goes well beyond drilling for oil or gas. You funded the mobile homes that workers live in, the doctor's office and other facilities that live off the energy industry," said Dick Bove, a banking analyst at Rafferty Capital Markets.
"There's no question about the fact that energy is going to be a big issue for banks, particularly the ones closely associated with production areas," he said.
Can stocks thrive when oil's cheap? Yes.
Banks feeling the energy heat: So which banks are most at risk to the current oil plunge? Morgan Stanley says to look at the ones with a significant chunk of their deposits located around previously-hot shale regions, including the Bakken, Eagle Ford, Niobrara and Permian plays.
The U.S. banks with at least $1 billion in assets that have the greatest percentage of deposits in these regions are International Bancshares (IBOC) (42.4%), Guaranty Bancorp(GBNK) (39.7%), Cullen/Frost Bankers (CFR) (35.9%), CoBiz Financial (COBZ) (26.6%),First Interstate (FIBK) (17.3%) and National Bank Holdings (NBHC) (16.3%), according to Morgan Stanley.
Exposures for certain banks mount if the analysis includes Houston and Dallas, two metro areas that may experience oil fallout as well.
Including Houston and Dallas, Cullen/Frost's exposure soars to 78%, while Prosperity Bancshares (PB) comes in at 37% and Zions Bancorp (ZION) hits 24%, according to Morgan Stanley.
Too big to feel oil tumble? Even Wall Street banks are facing questions about the impact of falling oil prices.
While just a small fraction of their total loan portfolio is directly tied to energy lending, Bove estimates around 20% of their investment banking revenue comes from energy.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon, in a call with analysts this week, acknowledged there may be "slight negatives" for the bank related to commercial and real estate trouble in Dallas, Denver and Houston.
Yet the big banks are well diversified. That means they should benefit from the anticipated boost to consumer spending caused by lower oil prices.
The oil price slide is "not going to be a big deal" for JPMorgan, Dimon said. 

ECB compromises with Germany over QE programme: FT

ECB compromises with Germany over QE programme: FT

PUBLISHED ON JAN 17, 2015 11:35 PM
European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi (left) talks to Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel during an EU meet in Brussels in this 2012 file photo. The ECB will next week announce plans to directly buy government bonds, creating new money to fight off possible deflation despite German objections, according to Saturday's FT. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
LONDON (AFP) - The European Central Bank (ECB) will next week announce plans to directly buy government bonds, creating new money to fight off possible deflation despite German objections, according to Saturday's FT.
The ECB holds its first policy meeting of the year on Thursday and is widely expected to announce some sort of programme of sovereign bond purchases - or quantitive easing - to try to kick-start the eurozone's sluggish economy.
Germany is concerned such a programme amounts to direct fiscal support for profligate states, taking away the pressure to push through tough economic reforms.
Conscious of German objections, the bonds will be underwritten by individual states in order to reassure German taxpayers that they will not be on the hook in the event of a default, according to the FT, raising separate issues about the principle of risk sharing.
"There are a series of trade-offs involved in (designing QE) and whatever is announced will probably not satisfy everyone," Ken Wattret, economist at BNP Paribas, told the FT.
"Any adverse impact stemming from a reluctance to mutualise risk could be offset by a strong signal that the ECB is willing to buy in large scale in order to raise inflation expectations."
German news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Friday that national central banks would only be allowed to buy the sovereign debt of their respective countries, to ensure they alone carried the risk of a possible default by their government.
The weekly said that ECB chief Mario Draghi had presented the scheme to German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in a meeting on Wednesday.
The central bank widely reported to be considering purchases worth at least €500 billion (S$760 billion) or to pledge to buy sovereign debt until inflation approaches 2 per cent, said the FT report.
Euro-zone inflation fell into negative territory in December, with consumer prices down 0.2 per cent.
On a year-over-year basis, inflation was the weakest since September 2009, at 0.8 per cent, well below the ECB's target of close to 2.0 per cent.
Falling prices could prove damaging for EU firms as consumers put off purchasing goods and for governments ladened with fixed-rate debt.


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Bitcoin Will Fix Remittances With Or Without The Western Unions Of The World


Bitcoin Will Fix Remittances With Or Without The Western Unions Of The World

Next Story


Editor’s note: Ken Miller is the COO of Gem. Previously he was VP of risk management at PayPal executive and adviser to Square.
In the late 90s, as personal computers and the Internet were increasingly finding their way into American homes, there were those who either didn’t recognize the disruptive power or potential they would have, or they felt threatened by their emergence (e.g “I’ll never quit reading the newspaper!”).
We saw this again in the early 2000s, as companies like PayPal emerged and forever changed our willingness to pay people over the Internet – including paying complete strangers. As PayPal quickly became ubiquitous and was changing the payments industry and commerce, most of the big banks and credit card associations stood pat and instead chose to fire off public lasers at PayPal, citing security, protections and regulatory hurdles as reasons PayPal would falter and was a risky proposition.
Unfortunately for them, what they should have been doing during that time was innovating and improving customers’ lives; doing so could have very likely eliminated the need for a PayPal to even exist.
Today we’re seeing this story again. Same movie, same suit-and-tie wardrobe, same dialogue, and what appears to be a fast track to the same ending. Western Union, which discontinued the use of telegrams in 2006, has fired several shots in recent weeks aimed squarely at bitcoin specifically and digital currency generally.
It started with its CIO saying that bitcoin wasn’t trustworthy and was ‘a solution looking for a problem to solve,’ and was soon followed by the filing of legal claims around copyright infringement after a spoof ad went viral on Facebook poking fun at the cost of remitting money through Western Union versus bitcoin.
Most recently, details of Western Union’s feedback on New York’s proposed BitLicense regulation were revealed, wherein Western Union insisted bitcoin be regulated more, while in the same breath requesting “could you please also leave us alone on some stuff?”
There are many problems for which bitcoin technology presents a solution, but one that quickly comes to mind is the over $5 billion annually that Western Union takes from individuals trying to send remittance funds to family members in need both at home and in other parts of the world. Fees charged to remit funds tend to be inconsistent and exploitive, ranging anywhere from 5-28 percent depending on the city/country pairing.
Given the inherent near-zero cost of bitcoin, if it never had any other application in the world other than to eliminate these double-digit fees and get most of that $5 billion in the hands of people whose lives would be dramatically improved, then that’s a problem worth eradicating with this solution.
But when you’re a publicly traded company, with flat growth and shareholder pressures, you often do and say things that are, at best, naïve in terms of where the world is heading, and, at worst, conflict with the best interest of your organization and customers. A great example of this is Blockbuster in the 2000s, which frequently liked to sound the alarm on why video streaming was a niche business, and even spurned the opportunity to acquire Netflix for $50 million.
Today, Netflix has a market cap of $21 billion and Blockbuster has gone out of business, trying to take the Dish Network to the bottom of the ocean with it. Blockbuster clearly overshot how much we would pine for the days of racing in the car at 11:56 p.m. in our pajamas to reach the drop-off bin and avoid late fees.
But much like Blockbuster’s (and banks’) short-sightedness and defensive posturing in the 2000s, Western Union runs the risk of soon evolving into nothing more than a Wikipedia entry. Bitcoin is a technology like video streaming, not a company like Netflix. It’s not trying to preserve revenue or please shareholders. And it won’t fall victim to leadership pulling it into odd markets on a whim.
Bitcoin is a technology that, other than Internet and mobile, could very well end up being the most important we’ve seen in the last several decades.
The drum beating that bitcoin is not safe or trustworthy is, again, an incomplete picture and self-serving. It’s analogousto a horse and buggy manufacturer shouting about safety issues when the car first showed up. “Yeah…but you could drive it really fast and crash it into a tree and die!” Well sure.
The reality is there is lots of innovative work still to be done around creating a completely secure bitcoin experience, but that work is progressing quickly and the world will soon be better for it. When Bank of America dropped tens of thousands of credit cards in the mailboxes of Fresno, Calif., residents in the late 50s, losses were initially extraordinarily high and executives gasped. But commerce and life as we knew it was forever changed.
A couple of years back, Congress introduced legislation, branded as the Durbin Amendment, that was designed to cap the amount of interchange fees that a merchant could be charged by a bank to process debit card transactions. The “intent” was to take some of the excess riches the banks were getting from debit card transactions and return it to the wallets of merchants and hopefully even consumers (in the form of lower pricing).
In practice, what happened is Walmart (which led the Senate lobbying on behalf of the Durbin changes) got massive reduced savings, small businesses missed out, and banks just made up for the lost revenue in other areas like increased checking account and ATM fees. Consumers and families lost out. In the meantime, the remittance market has gone completely unchecked, and that’s been the case for years.
The World Bank estimates that over $450 billion in remittance payments into developing countries will occur in 2015, which is three times larger than the amount of total direct foreign aid that will be sent to those countries. Unfortunately, $36 billion of those payments will never reach the individual or families they were intended to help because of fees that are charged.
The beauty of the advent of bitcoin is there is no need to hope that a centralized government authority tries to “fix” the issue with a faux solution that just shifts dollars around among giant corporations. Bitcoin’s low-cost structure and potential integration capability with all mobile devices eliminates the costs required to support the 80-year-old messenger with a cute hat, and renders the $36 billion in fees totally unnecessary — $36 billion that will do really well in the world.
As this payment revolution becomes the standard and truly improves people’s lives by returning their money back to them, there will be a real test to see what entrenched players learn from their historical brethren about how not only to stay relevant but survive. History has shown that waiting to see what happens or playing defensively will not change the world.
FEATURED IMAGE: ZACH COPLEY/FLICKR UNDER A CC BY-SA 2.0 LICENSE

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