Golden ChipMunk
Well-Known Member
The European Union’s Travel Rule, blocking an XRP deposit
https://www.cryptopolitan.com/crypto-com-refuses-xrp-eu-new-rule/
https://www.cryptopolitan.com/crypto-com-refuses-xrp-eu-new-rule/
The European Union’s Travel Rule, blocking an XRP deposit
https://www.cryptopolitan.com/crypto-com-refuses-xrp-eu-new-rule/
If it closes at this price or above $2.75 today, it will be the highest daily close everXRP hit USD $3 today. Up 233% from my first post.
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If it closes at this price or above $2.75 today, it will be the highest daily close ever
If it closes at this price or above $2.75 today, it will be the highest daily close ever
While many in the cryptocurrency community have been cheering on the pro-crypto executive orders Trump is expected to issue, one idea is causing more controversy: the idea of an America-first strategic reserve that would prioritize digital coins founded in the US, like Solana, USD Coin and Ripple.
In recent weeks, Trump has met with the founders of these coins and, sources said, is receptive to the idea.
Insiders, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, shared concerns that it could delegitimize efforts to promote Bitcoin, which is the asset they want to prioritize.
But sources also told The Post that those fissures take a back seat to what they believe will become a crypto golden age.
Chaparro, for one, thinks Trump has already set a new tone for the industry: “It’s a radical shift — America is so back in business for crypto founders.”
Speculation that Ripple might be part of an 'America-first' strategic cryptocurrency reserve.
Not sure that will gain traction as it's too centralised, unless the government would be happy putting reserves within the control of a private company. And yes the Founders will claim it's not centralised but they tend to talk shite.
The "too centralised" argument isn't really a dealbreaker for governments, banks, or financial institutions. It's probably the opposite.
Major cryptos are now becoming more centralized as big players accumulate, and mining is now out of reach for the small player.
Reserve assets have to be under the control of governments otherwise they will be inviting counterparty risk.
The problem with XRP is that the preferred validator nodes are selected by Ripple Labs and the XRP Foundation.
You could also argue that foreign currency reserves have a much bigger counterparty risk. You could also argue Gold stored offshore has a bigger counterparty risk. Many nations (including Australia) store their gold with the Bank of England.
But most FX reserves are currencies from nations with long standing and reliable rules of law and economic and financial institutions, and likewise with the BoE.
It would come down to how the Treasuries and Central Banks of the various nations assess any need for including a crypto asset in their reserves should they see a need and whether that need should include a privately issued, pre-mined crypto-currency where 20% of the total allocation is held by the developers.![]()
FX can easily be seized based upon sanctions. Look at Russia.
The BoE has refused to return gold on numerous occasions. See: Venezuela, Argentina, Iran.
I'm not sure the US gov would hold crypto reserves with the treasury or central bank. The articles I've seen are calling it a 'stockpile', much the same as oil, coal, or other commodities. Maybe that's a way Trump can fast-track it or avoid legal requirements?
Either way, it looks like the US will hold crypto under Trump's term, perhaps even Ripple and other US based cryptos, which Trump seems to be favoring.
@willrocks, just as an aside, would you consider it appropriate for the Australian government to actively buy and sell (or hoard) shares in publicly listed companies like Amazon or ANZ for instance? Or buy corporate bonds?![]()
If you're trying to equate XRP with shares in publicly listed companies.
I am actually, simply because XRP was pre-mined and the devs retain a significant proportion of the tokens.![]()
Interestingly Gensler always maintained that XRP was a security, that issue is still before the courts. But I don't want to dive down that rabbit hole.![]()