Hong Kong’s Treasury chief announced plans to extend existing tax breaks to cryptocurrency investments by year-end, aiming to attract more crypto-focused funds and family offices. The city also expects to approve additional crypto trading platform licenses in the coming months, building on its recent licensing framework launched in June. Financial Secretary Paul Chan noted that the Securities and Futures Commission is currently reviewing several applications, with stablecoin legislation also in the pipeline. Additionally, Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority plans to consult further on regulations for OTC crypto trading and custodial services in 2024.
U.S. authorities are conducting a criminal investigation into Tether to assess if third parties are using its stablecoin, USDT, for illegal activities such as terrorism financing, hacking, or sanctions violations, The Wall Street Journal reports. This probe, led by the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office, examines potential breaches of anti-money laundering regulations and sanctions laws. Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury Department is considering sanctions on Tether due to alleged use of the stablecoin by sanctioned individuals and groups, including Russian entities and terrorist organizations. Tether’s CEO and spokesperson denied the allegations, dismissing them as speculation, and reaffirmed the company’s cooperation with law enforcement against misuse.
Derivatives traders are positioning for a post-election rally in bitcoin, with Deribit CEO Luuk Strijers noting that call options outnumber puts 2-to-1 for the Nov. 8 options expiry, just after the U.S. presidential election. Open interest for these options exceeds $2 billion, with dominant strike prices at $70,000, $75,000, and $80,000, suggesting bullish sentiment and anticipation of volatility. Strijers noted that implied volatility is expected to peak briefly post-election, indicating market confidence in a swift resolution. Meanwhile, Standard Chartered's Geoff Kendrick projects bitcoin could approach its previous all-time high of $73,000 on election day, based on trading volume and options strike data.
On Friday evening, Bitcoin dipped to a low of $65,500 following a Wall Street Journal article suggesting the DOJ was investigating Tether for potential sanctions breaches and anti-money laundering infractions. Tether refuted these allegations, which helped stabilize Bitcoin's price. Over the weekend, Bitcoin recouped its losses, now trading at $69,000. The market saw significant purchasing of SOL during this period.
In ETF movements, Bitcoin saw substantial interest with a notable inflow of $402 million on Friday, predominantly led by Blackrock, amid a spike in trading volume reaching a ten-day peak of $2.9 billion. Conversely, Ethereum witnessed a decline, with Grayscale seeing outflows of $19.2 million and no new inflows from other managers.
The upcoming week is filled with key economic data: JOLTS job openings report on Tuesday, Bank of Japan's interest rate decision on Wednesday, followed by the core PCE price index on Thursday, and culminating with the crucial non-farm payroll figures on Friday.
This week also features earnings announcements from five of the 'Magnificent Seven' tech giants—Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and Apple—which are poised to influence market dynamics.
U.S. equity futures saw an uptick on Monday, fueled by anticipation of robust earnings from these technology behemoths, potentially driving indices to new records. Market sentiment was further bolstered by easing geopolitical tensions, as weekend airstrikes by Israel in Iran avoided hitting critical oil or nuclear sites, leading to a decrease in oil prices to around $67 per barrel.
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