Crypto
Creditors of fraudulent cryptocurrency platform QuadrigaCX can get 13% of their money back | CBC News
The law firm representing creditors of defunct cryptocurrency company QuadrigaCX says each creditor with a proven claim will get back 13 per cent of what they invested.
QuadrigaCX was one of Canada’s biggest cryptocurrency exchanges before it collapsed in early 2019, following the death of its founder, Gerald Cotten. He died while on his honeymoon in India in December 2018.
The company turned out to be a Ponzi scheme.
In a notice posted late last week, law firm Miller Thomson said as of this month, there are $305.66 million in total claims against QuadrigaCX.
Elvis Cavalic of Calgary lost around $15,000 from QuadrigaCX. He was surprised to learn from CBC News that some of the creditors would be eligible to get back some of their lost money.
“My interpretation was that the money was gone,” he said. “It’s been years and they’ve blown through it in legal fees and perhaps some of the holders with larger volumes, you know, [I thought] they were prioritized.”
Cavalic said the last update he received from Miller Thomson was in November 2020.
He said he’s going to file a claim to hopefully recoup some of his money.
Cavalic said his experience soured him on cryptocurrency.
“I just don’t trust any of the exchanges,” he said. “Ever since Quadriga, you’ve seen this happen again and again in various countries, including Canada.”
Cotten, who lived in Nova Scotia, was the only person who had the codes needed to access where the company kept much of its customers’ money.
Investigators uncovered that Cotten had been moving money from the exchange into his personal accounts and engaging in other suspicious behaviour.
Cotten lived a life of luxury that included exotic vacations, luxury vehicles, a yacht and a Cessna aircraft.
His widow, Jennifer Robertson, said she did not know about her husband’s fraudulent activities.
After Cotten’s death, she agreed to forfeit $12 million in assets that included vehicles and real estate. She was allowed to keep $90,000 in cash, $20,000 in retirement savings, a 2015 Jeep Cherokee, $15,000 in furniture and some jewelry, including her wedding band.
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Crypto
Bitcoin enthusiasm rides high as Trump prepares to take presidential office
Bitcoin adjacent stocks got a substantial lift after the cryptocurrency’s price jumped over $104,000 on Friday.
Bitcoin mining behemoth, Mara Holdings (NASDAQ: MARA) was the biggest and most vocal, climbing by 13 per cent. It was followed closely by Riot Platforms (NASDAQ: RIOT), MicroStrategy Inc (NASDAQ: MSTR) at 7 per cent and Coinbase Global Inc (NASDAQ: COIN) at 5 per cent.
The original cryptocurrency’s good fortunes have been at the behest of Donald Trump’s election victory, based on the optimistic take that the incoming administration will take a more favourable approach to crypto, and Bitcoin in particular.
In December, Trump appointed Paul Atkins to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission. Atkins, who previously served as an SEC commissioner under President George W. Bush, has recently focused on digital assets. He is set to replace Gary Gensler, widely regarded as a crypto critic. Trump will also likely replace several SEC commissioners whose terms are set to expire during his administration.
Furthermore, crypto advocates and holders will soon shape U.S. policy on the emerging technology, following a series of nominations and advisory appointments by President-elect Donald Trump, who takes office on Monday.
The crypto industry, after years of battling lawsuits and enforcement actions by the U.S. government, hopes the Trump administration will signal a policy shift. Officials will vet political appointees for potential conflicts, and some appointees have pledged to sell their interests.
The industry will host a sold-out black-tie ball in Washington on Friday, with ticket prices ranging from USD$2,500 to USD$10,000. David Sacks, serving as Trump’s artificial intelligence and crypto czar, plans to attend.
Read more: BlackRock launches Bitcoin ETF in Canada
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Trump’s tenure will be cryptocurrency friendly
The reasons for the optimism surrounding the cryptocurrency’s future don’t necessarily begin and end with Trump either.
The president-elect has filled his inner-circle with a number of different cryptocurrency friendly personalities, most of whom are well-known and well-respected in the space.
Scott Bessent, a billionare hedge fund manager, is Trump’s pick for Treasury Secretary. He has expressed favourable views on cryptocurrency. According to a financial disclosure filed last month, Bessent holds shares in a BlackRock bitcoin exchange-traded fund valued between $250,001 and $500,000.
“Crypto is about freedom and the crypto economy is here to stay,” he said in July. “I think everything is on the table with bitcoin.” ‘
In a letter to the U.S. Treasury last week, Bessent stated he would divest his interests in the fund and other investments within 90 days of his confirmation.
Further, Trump selected Tesla’s chief and the world’s richest man to lead a government cost-cutting initiative called the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Elon Musk, a longtime advocate for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and dogecoin, has significantly influenced their prices through his public comments and the actions of his companies. The acronym for Musk’s cost-cutting agency, DOGE, references dogecoin, now the seventh-largest cryptocurrency with a circulation value of $4.5 billion, according to CoinGecko.
In 2021, Tesla purchased $1.5 billion in bitcoin, making it one of the largest companies to invest in cryptocurrency before selling most of its holdings. By September 2024, Tesla reported holding $184 million in unspecified digital assets, according to a financial statement. Musk did not respond to a request for comment via Tesla regarding his personal cryptocurrency holdings.
Read more: Tether Limited sets up first brick and mortar office in El Salvador
Read more: Cryptocurrency fugitive Do Kwon extradited to US
Trump to encourage leadership in crypto
Vice President-elect J.D. Vance held between USD$250,001 and USD$500,000 in bitcoin as of August 2024, according to a financial disclosure.
Vance co-founded the venture capital firm Narya, which has invested in Strive, Ramaswamy’s asset management company, and the video platform Rumble, as indicated on its website. In November, Rumble announced plans to allocate its excess cash reserves to bitcoin. The company also received a USD$775 million investment from stablecoin firm Tether last year.
When asked for comment on the crypto stances of Vance and Trump’s sons, Trump-Vance transition spokesperson Brian Hughes stated—without providing evidence—that bureaucrats in Washington had attempted to stifle innovation with increased regulation and higher taxes.
“President Trump will deliver on his promise to encourage American leadership in crypto and other emerging technologies,” he said in a statement.
Finally, set to collaborate with Musk at DOGE, former presidential candidate and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy is the founder of Strive Asset Management.
Strive reported managing over USD$1 billion in assets as of September, and filed last month to launch an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that invests in corporate bonds for bitcoin investments.
In November, the company launched a wealth management arm aimed at integrating bitcoin into Americans’ investment portfolios, according to a press release from Ramaswamy.
In June 2023, Ramaswamy disclosed holding between $100,001 and $250,000 in bitcoin and between $15,001 and $50,000 in ether, a smaller cryptocurrency.
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Crypto
'Wild west of finance': Why are there cryptocurrency ATMs?
The Canberra region has about 39 cryptocurrency ATMS, but for locals who haven’t engaged with digital currency before their presence can be confusing.
Cryptocurrencies, or cryptos, are digital tokens that allow people to make payments directly to each other through an online system.
The ATMS were created as an alternative payment method to remove the middleman of banks through a de-centralised system.
When transferring crypto, thousands of computers worldwide verify the transfer, instead of one bank.
Bought and sold on digital marketplaces called exchanges, cryptocurrencies don’t have any intrinsic monetary value — they are worth whatever people are willing to pay for them at the market on a given day.
Currently, Bitcoin is both the most popular crypto and the crypto with the highest monetary value, at about $150,000 per coin.
So if the main purpose of crypto is to be digital, why do crypto ATMs exist, and are they useful?
How do they work?
There is no tangible data on how many Australians are accessing the ATMs, however as of last July, according to YouGov, about 1.3 million NSW residents, 801,000 Victorians, 850,000 Queenslanders, 294,000 South Australians, and 462,000 WA residents said they currently owned crypto.
Award-wining technology journalist and founder of technology publication Pickr, Leigh Stark, told ABC Radio Canberra the primary function of a crypto ATM is to turn real money into digital money, or vice versa.
In order to use a crypto ATM a person must already have a crypto wallet that can generate a QR code.
At a crypto ATM the digital currency can be bought, sold, or both, but Mr Stark said most only offer access to between five and 10 of the major cryptocurrencies — almost always including Bitcoin.
Selling cryptocurrency through a crypto ATM means swapping it for its current market value in cash or with a debit card.
You can also buy cryptocurrency with cash or a debit card at a crypto ATM.
Mr Stark said he didn’t know “if there’s necessarily a need” for cryptocurrency ATMs.
“I can understand why some people might want to take some of their money out of it, so effectively turning a digital coin that only exists on the internet into hard money, that kind of makes some sense to me,” he said.
“But buying crypto through it, I’m not entirely sure I understand that — largely because of the amount of exchanges that exist online.
“I feel like they would be a better approach for actually buying crypto, not even just because of the money transfer, but also because there are a lot more options for what you invest in on an online exchange.”
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Mr Stark warned taking money out from some crypto ATMs was taxable, and it was up to a user to remember and file.
“So the ATMs, effectively, they still have to abide by Australian government regulation regarding how they work,” he said
“But the whole thing about crypto and managing to take your money out of it, it qualifies as part of the capital gains tax.
“Not all crypto ATMs work that way, but if you take your money out, you have to remember what you did as a form of event, and file that information later on.”
Are Canberrans using Bitcoin ATMs?
Mr Stark said because a Bitcoin ATM usually only offered access to a selection of major cryptocurrencies, their usefulness depends on what exchanges a person invests in.
And they don’t all support selling, which is how a person can get money from them.
“Not every Bitcoin ATM works as a form of exchange, that’s for selling currency and they don’t all do that.
“In fact, far fewer support selling than they do buying.”
Mr Stark said crypto ATMs in the Canberra region typically accepted a maximum of $25,000 in cash, but he suspected the majority of users wouldn’t be carrying that much cash with them.
But he said much smaller amounts were not uncommon.
“I mean the reality is, if you put in 20 bucks, that’s 0.000013 of a single Bitcoin,” he said.
“[But] you absolutely could buy that small amount of crypto, and that’s quite normal.”
Mr Stark said often people begin buying crypto in these very small amounts and then decide whether to buy more depending on whether its value increases.
“Crypto is kind of the wild wild west of finance, depending on what type of coin you get, whether it’s one of the big ones like Bitcoin or one of the small ones like Shiba Inu or Ethereum, or anything like that, you might end up with a small amount that spirals into a big one,” he said.
“You might be one of those success stories, it seems highly unlikely, but you could be just waiting for it to get higher and higher.”
Are they used for scams or crime?
In order to use the financial proceeds of crime, or ‘dirty money’, it first needs to be laundered to hide its illegal origins.
Cryptocurrency offers a sophisticated way to do this by turning it into digital currency.
However, every crypto transaction is recorded on a blockchain — essentially a publicly available, online ledger — so to make the dirty money truly clean, the crypto is then put through a mixer service.
These services mix cryptocurrency together from a number of different users, which obscures the transaction trails and makes it very difficult to trace the original source.
Mr Stark said it wouldn’t shock him if Bitcoin ATMs were being used for criminal enterprises like money laundering or money mule activities.
“I’ve not seen it, but likewise, I’ve also never seen anyone actively use a Bitcoin ATM before,” he said.
“I’ve never had a reason to, and that’s kind of the point.
“But maybe I’m coming at the wrong times, maybe there are people coming through with $25,000 at 1am and I just have no idea.”
As for using them in scams, Mr Stark said that was less about the ATMs and more about cryptocurrency as a whole.
He said if someone is asking you to get Bitcoin for them “it’s probably a scam”.
“There are a lot of different scams out there, and Australians lose billions every year, but yes, if somebody has asked you to buy them crypto or said that you need to give them crypto in order to get something in return, it’s very likely a scam,” Mr Stark said.
“Some of the Bitcoin ATMs have been used for things like that, and so now the Australian government is effectively trying to track and work out how those actually work in relation.”
Crypto
Trump to designate cryptocurrency as a national priority
As President-elect Donald Trump begins a second term on Monday, he plans to issue an executive order making cryptocurrency a national priority, Bloomberg reports.
The order is meant to guide government agencies to work with the industry and possibly pause crypto-related litigation, according to Bloomberg, which cited unnamed people familiar with the matter. Trump also plans to create a crypto advisory council to advocate for the industry’s policies, per Bloomberg, and has suggested creating a national bitcoin stockpile.
This would mark a new era for crypto, an industry that collapsed two years ago after prices crashed. The period was marked by the fall of FTX, a leading exchange that went bankrupt that year. Its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, was convicted of defrauding customers and sentenced to 25 years in prison.
The industry resurged in 2024, boosted by Trump, a former skeptic who pledged to turn the U.S. into the crypto capital of the world. Eager for a clear governing framework and a friendlier watchdog, donors poured tens of millions of dollars into pro-crypto candidates’ campaigns.
Dogecoin, a cryptocurrency with a dog mascot and billionaire Elon Musk as a fan, surged in value after Trump won and announced a non-governmental cost-cutting group nicknamed DOGE.
Trump then nominated crypto ally Paul Atkins to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission, the federal agency that led a crackdown under the Biden administration. Bitcoin surged to $100,000 for the first time following the announcement. “CONGRATULATIONS BITCOINERS!!! $100,000!!!” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “YOU’RE WELCOME!!!”
Crypto companies and investing platforms like Coinbase, Robinhood, Kraken and Ondo Finance Inc. have made $1 million donations to his inauguration. Ripple plans to donate $5 million in the form of its own digital token, and the industry is holding an “Inaugural Crypto Ball” to support Trump, Bloomberg reports.
Trump’s business interests include World Liberty Financial, a crypto platform he and his sons launched last year with Steve Witkoff, a friend and inaugural committee co-chair who has been named special Middle East envoy. The Trumps are not employees of the business but promote it, and an entity affiliated with Trump, DT Marks DEFI LLC, is entitled to receive 75% of the revenues.
In mid-November, the Financial Times reported that Trump Media — the parent company of Trump’s social media platform, Truth Social — was in talks to buy Bakkt, a crypto trading firm previously led by Kelly Loeffler, another co-chair of his inaugural committee.
Trump’s 2024 financial disclosures show he owned as much as $5 million worth of the crypto token ethereum, a crypto token that has surged in value since the election, according to The New York Times.
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