Get your daily, bite-sized digest of cryptoasset and blockchain-related news – investigating the stories flying under the radar of today’s crypto news.
Investing news
- The American asset management giant BlackRock is looking to expand its crypto team, and has posted a vacancy for the new role of vice president and blockchain lead on its website in a bid to to drive up the demand for its crypto products. The successful candidate will need to be based in New York, where they will take charge of evaluating tokens. The firm said that it wants to hire an applicant with experience in blockchain technology and cryptography. BlackRock wrote that it hopes to hire a candidate who can “devise and articulate” new “valuation methodologies for cryptoassets.”
Blockchain news
- Japan’s Mizuho Financial Group, one of the largest financial institutions in the world, is set to team up with Hitachi on a blockchain-powered logistics platform. Per Nikkei, Hitachi (a conglomerate with tech, construction, logistics, and metals subsidiaries) is set to work with Mizuho on a solution that will allow parties to finance loans making use of cargo that is in transport, rather than having to wait until deliveries are completed before they seek capital from lenders. The platform will provide banks and other parties with transparent data on the status of forthcoming deliveries.
Tax news
- Israel’s Tax Authority is the latest to target crypto holders, with news outlet Globes writing that crypto wallet holders “have been sent letters requesting they report all assets and income, although many have no other assets aside from their digital wallets.” And the tax body appears to be aware that many Israelis make use of overseas exchanges in their dealings. The same media outlet claimed that “inquiries have been submitted to cryptocurrency exchanges in Israel and around the world” in a bid to “obtain information about Israelis trading” in cryptoassets.
CBDCs news
- Russia’s Central Bank is taking aim at the global payments network SWIFT. RT’s English service reported that the First Deputy Governor of the bank, Olga Skorobogatova, told reporters that she expected central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) to launch in earnest in the next “five to seven years.” She added that central banks could seek to collaborate directly, doing away with the need for SWIFT, which could become obsolete once the world’s biggest economies launched their CBDCs.
- The Governor of Turkey’s Central Bank (CBRT) said the nation will pilot a digital version of its currency, the lira, in 2021. Per Teknorex, Governor Naci Ağbal told MPs in parliament last week that Ankara was working on an “R&D project” making use of “digital money.” Ağbal was quoted as stating, “The conceptual stage of this project is complete. We are aiming to begin pilot testing in the second half of next year.” (
Source: Cryptonews