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ETFs Hit Record Inflows: Crypto Funds Soar
Plus Study Shows Bitcoin 51% Attack Unfeasible
The Breakdown First Five - Tuesday, February 20, 2024
Welcome back to The Breakdown First Five — the 5 most interesting and/or important stories in bitcoin, crypto, and markets to start your day.
5. Coinbase Ditches Bitcoin Payments
Coinbase Commerce caused quite a stir by ditching self-custodied Bitcoin as a payment option on their merchant platform. Bitcoin custodied with Coinbase can still be used and the explanation was that UTXO based coins are not compatible with their new EVM-based disintermediated system. Coinbase said only a tiny portion of customers even made use of the Bitcoin payment option. Many criticized Coinbase for not doubling down on lightning integration.
You can get upset at Coinbase for not supporting Bitcoin for payment processing or take the more productive approach and build great products that improve Bitcoin’s UX. If Coinbase is wrong it means there’s a business opportunity here!
— Alexander Leishman 🇺🇸 (@Leishman)
10:16 PM • Feb 18, 2024
4. Y Combinator: No Crypto, Thanks
Y Combinator have published their latest request for startups, making it clear that this year they are uninterested in crypto. NFTs and tokenized logistics are out, making way for AI iterations and healthtech. The sole crypto-related topic was stablecoin finance, both new issuers and new infrastructure for financial use cases. YC notes that the stablecoin wars are far from over, suggesting that only 7 million people have used payment stablecoins.
YC posted new request for startups list.
In Fintech, don't think most folks realize how big these 2 areas of opportunity are.
1. using LLMs to automate so much of the manual work flows in financial services
2. how important stablecoins are becoming as payment rails + stores… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
— Rex Salisbury (@rexsalisbury)
6:35 PM • Feb 15, 2024
3. Celsius Repayments
The Celsius bankruptcy saga is nearly complete as creditors receive their payments. $2B in crypto was distributed to 172,000 creditors, with around 75% of creditors collecting their distribution. Mashinsky is still facing prison time and the repayments can never undo the harm he caused, but at least this painful chapter in crypto history is almost over.
I lost 0.5btc in Celsius in 2022, biggest L of my life.
Had completely written it off, but just got back $7k from the bankruptcy distribution.
What floors should I sweep?
(Apart from McDonald’s)
— Degenvestor (@degenvestor69)
3:03 PM • Feb 15, 2024
2. 51% Impossible
A new paper from Coin Metrics has put some number around the idea that a 51% attack would be costly and impractical. The research found that a Bitcoin takeover would cost upwards of $20B and have no hope of paying itself, relegating the attack to only the most destructive state actors. Many nitpicked the analysis, suggesting their own pet Bitcoin attack would be more feasible, but the data and methodology to analyze this question is still groundbreaking.
previous 'cost to attack' analyses of bitcoin have been vague or theory driven. no longer. the CM team developed mine-match, which meant they were able to identify virtually every ASIC mining on bitcoin (based on karim helmy's research). this, combined with ASIC 2ndary… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
— nic 🌠 op_cat-er (@nic__carter)
9:12 PM • Feb 15, 2024
1. Record Week for ETFs
According to Coin Shares data, last week was the largest ever week for crypto fund inflows. $2.45B was added to global crypto funds, almost all of it piled on top of the new US-based Bitcoin ETFs. Blackrock’s Bitcoin ETF has now gathered over $5B, more than the rest of their ETFs combined so far this year. Grayscale shed $623M in outflows, accelerating slightly but nowhere near the earlier pace.
There are > 330 ETF issuers…
iShares Bitcoin ETF *alone* has brought in more $$$ this yr than all but 4 of these issuers (including iShares itself).
In other words, IBIT has taken in more $$$ than nearly every issuers’ *entire* ETF lineup.
— Nate Geraci (@NateGeraci)
1:39 AM • Feb 19, 2024