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Major coins remainedbuoyant on Monday eveningas the global cryptocurrency market cap rose 0.5% to $989.5 billion at 7:48 p.m. EST. Price Performance Of Major Coins Coin 24-hour 7-day Price Bitcoin BTC/USD 1.5% 22.8% $21,153.06 Ethereum ETH/USD 1.3% 18.5% $1,570.81 Dogecoin DOGE/USD -2.65% 9.1% $0.08 Top 24-Hour Gainers (Data via CoinMarketCap) Cryptocurrency 24-Hour % Change (+/-) Price Loopring (LRC) +5.1% $0.30 Quant (QNT) +5.5% $138.73 Frax Share (FXS) +6.9% ??$8.93

See Also: Best Ways To Earn Free Cryptocurrency

Why It Matters: Bitcoin and Ethereum werehigher on Monday as the New-Year rally remained intact. However, the momentum was muted in other risk assets like stocks as investors look ahead to corporate earnings season.

There's certainly an increasing sense of optimism about 2023 as we make our way through the opening month of the year. The economic data has been kind, to say the least, which is not something we were afforded for the vast majority of the year just gone, said Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst at OANDA.

A boost in risk appetite has triggered a surge in bitcoin which spent the final weeks of last year languishing between $16,000 and $17,000. It is up more than 25% since the turn of the year, breaking back above $20,000 this morning in the process, said the analyst in a note seen by Benzinga.

Erlam said it wasnt clear outright if it is a sign of bottoming out or a brief rebound but there are clearly still some very bullish traders out there.

Michal van de Poppe said that Bitcoin is trying to break resistance and might seek a sweep of the $21,600 level. He said eyes will be on the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against six other currencies, in the coming days. At the time of writing, the dollar index was at 102.30.

#Bitcoin trying to break resistance, might actually seek for a sweep of $21.6K.

Eyes still on $DXY coming days. Michal van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL) January 16, 2023

Glassnode said that Bitcoin has seen greater volumes of Profits realized on-chain than losses for the first time since June.

For the first time since June, #Bitcoin has seen a greater volume of Profits realized on-chain than losses.

During bear cycles, this tends to act as a psychological level where investors sell at, or near break-even, creating resistance.

Full Analysis: https://t.co/4PyCTobCUz pic.twitter.com/L0bBq2323f glassnode (@glassnode) January 16, 2023

Separately, the on-chain analysis firm said that a convincing break above 1.0 for Realized profit/loss ratio, or aSOPR metrics has historically [signaled] a cycle regime shift is underway.

A successful retest and bounce of aSOPR from 1.0 is often observed near cycle turning points, said Glassnode.

A convincing break above 1.0 for Realized P/L Ratio, or aSOPR has historically signalled a cycle regime shift is underway.

A successful retest and bounce of aSOPR from 1.0 is often observed near cycle turning points.

Full Analysis: https://t.co/4PyCTobCUz pic.twitter.com/asBbH7n7Tp glassnode (@glassnode) January 16, 2023

aSOPR or adjusted Output Profit Ratio is a metric that tracks the ratio of spent outputs in profit in a given timeframe.

Santiment said that cryptocurrency traders are behaving like they are seeing a top and are taking the opportunity to profit take while given the chance.

The market intelligence platform said that Bitcoin is seeing the highest profit-take ratio since Feb. 2021, while in the case of Ethereum, it has been the case since Oct. 2021.

Are #crypto markets seeing a top? Traders are behaving like they believe so, taking this opportunity to profit take while given the chance. #Bitcoin is seeing its highest profit tx ratio since Feb, 2021. For #Ethereum, it’s the highest since Oct, 2021. https://t.co/GFrtZtFIYP pic.twitter.com/yqDc2uDPuR Santiment (@santimentfeed) January 16, 2023

Read Next: Gaming Token Rallies 96% In A Week, Outperforming Bitcoin, Ethereum And Dogecoin Gains

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Counter-terror police investigating second Kneecap video

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Counter-terror police investigating second Kneecap video

Counter-terror police are “assessing” a second video of a Kneecap performance – after it allegedly saw the rap trio calling for the death of Conservative MPs.

The footage is believed to have been taken during one of the Northern Irish band’s concerts in November 2023.

One member of the group is alleged to have said: “The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP.”

On Wednesday the Metropolitan Police revealed its counter-terror unit was investigating another clip of a Kneecap performance over claims it showed one member shouting: “Up Hamas, up Hezbollah”.

That video was from a Kneecap gig at London’s Kentish Town Forum last November.

Hamas and Hezbollah are both proscribed as terrorist groups in the UK. Under Section 12 of the Terrorism Act 2000, it is an offence to express “an opinion or belief that is supportive of a proscribed organisation”.

Commenting on the second clip, a Met Police spokesman said on Sunday: “We were made aware of a video on April 22, believed to be from an event in November 2024, and it has been referred to the counter-terrorism internet referral unit for assessment and to determine whether any further police investigation may be required.

“We have also been made aware of another video believed to be from an event in November 2023.”

He added that the internet referral unit is “assessing” both clips to “determine whether further police investigation is required”.

In their statement in response to the previous Met investigation, Kneecap described it as a “coordinated smear campaign”.

They said they “use their shows to call out the British and Irish governments’ complicity in war crimes” and that their fans “see through the lies”.

Read more from Sky News
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Two British MPs have been murdered in the past 10 years – Labour’s Jo Cox in 2016 and Conservative Sir David Amess in 2021.

A UK government spokesman commented: “We unequivocally condemn threatening remarks made towards any individual.

“Political intimidation and abuse must have no place in our society. We recognise the chilling effect that harassment and intimidation of elected representatives can have on our democracy.

“All reports of intimidation, harassment and threats are taken extremely seriously. We work with the police and Parliament to do everything in our power to crack down on threats to elected officials.”

Sky News has contacted Kneecap’s management for further comment.

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The cost of innovation — Regulations are Web3’s greatest asset

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The cost of innovation — Regulations are Web3’s greatest asset

The cost of innovation — Regulations are Web3’s greatest asset

Opinion by: Hedi Navazan, chief compliance officer at 1inch

Web3 needs a clear regulatory system that addresses innovation bottlenecks and user safety in decentralized finance (DeFi). A one-size-fits-all approach cannot be achieved to regulate DeFi. The industry needs custom, risk-based approaches that balance innovation, security and compliance.

DeFi’s challenges and rules

A common critique is that regulatory scrutiny leads to the death of innovation, tracing this situation back to the Biden administration. In 2022, uncertainty for crypto businesses increased following lawsuits against Coinbase, Binance and OpenSea for alleged violations of securities laws.

Under the US administration, the Securities and Exchange Commission agreed to dismiss the lawsuit against Coinbase, as the agency reversed the crypto stance, hinting at a path toward regulation with clear boundaries.

Many would argue that the same risk is the same rule. Imposing traditional finance requirements on DeFi simply will not work from many aspects but the most technical challenges.

Openness, transparency, immutability, and automation are key parameters of DeFi. Without clear regulations, however, the prevalent issue of “Ponzi-like schemes” can divert focus from effective innovation use cases to conjuring a “deceptive perception” of blockchain technology. 

Guidance and clarity from regulatory bodies can reduce significant risks for retail users.

Policymakers should take time to understand DeFi’s architecture before introducing restrictive measures. DeFi needs risk-based regulatory models that understand its architecture and address illicit activity and consumer protection. 

Self-regulatory frameworks cultivate transparency and security in DeFi

The entire industry highly recommends implementing a self-regulatory framework that ensures continuous innovation while simultaneously ensuring consumer safety and financial transparency. 

Take the example of DeFi platforms that have taken a self-regulatory approach by implementing robust security measures, including transaction monitoring, wallet screening and implementing a blacklist mechanism that restricts a wallet of suspicion with illicit activity. 

Sound security measures would help DeFi projects monitor onchain activity and prevent system misuse. Self-regulation can help DeFi projects operate with greater legitimacy, yet it may not be the only solution.

Clear structure and governance are key

It’s no secret that institutional players are waiting for the regulatory green light. Adding to the list of regulatory frameworks, Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) sets stepping stones for future DeFi regulations that can lead to institutional adoption of DeFi. It provides businesses with regulatory clarity and a framework to operate.

Many crypto projects will struggle and die as a result of higher compliance costs associated with MiCA, which will enforce a more reliable ecosystem by requiring augmented transparency from issuers and quickly attract institutional capital for innovation. Clear regulations will lead to more investments in projects that support investor trust.

Anonymity in crypto is quickly disappearing. Blockchain analytics tools, regulators and companies can monitor suspicious activity while preserving user privacy to some extent. Future adaptations of MiCA regulations can enable compliance-focused DeFi solutions, such as compliant liquidity pools and blockchain-based identity verification.

Regulatory clarity can break barriers to DeFi integration

The banks’ iron gate has been another significant barrier. Compliance officers frequently witness banks erect walls to keep crypto out. Bank supervisors distance companies that are out of compliance, even if it’s indirect scrutiny or fines, slamming doors on crypto projects’ financial operations.

Clear regulations will address this issue and make compliance a facilitator, not a barrier, for DeFi and banking integration. In the future, traditional banks will integrate DeFi. Institutions will not replace banks but will merge DeFi’s efficiencies with TradFi’s structure.

Recent: Hester Peirce calls for SEC rulemaking to ‘bake in’ crypto regulation

The repeal of Staff Accounting Bulletin (SAB) 121 in January 2025 mitigated accounting burdens for banks to recognize crypto assets held for customers as both assets and liabilities on their balance sheets. The previous laws created hurdles of increased capital reserve requirements and other regulatory challenges.

SAB 122 aims to provide structured solutions from reactive compliance to proactive financial integration — a step toward creating DeFi and banking synergy. Crypto companies must still follow accounting principles and disclosure requirements to protect crypto assets.

Clear regulations can increase the frequency of banking use cases, such as custody, reserve backing, asset tokenization, stablecoin issuance and offering accounts to digital asset businesses.

Building bridges between regulators and innovators in DeFi

Experts pointing out concerns about DeFi’s over-regulation killing innovation can now address them using “regulatory sandboxes.” These dispense startups with a “secure zone” to test their products before committing to full-scale regulatory mandates. For example, startups in the United Kingdom under the Financial Conduct Authority are thriving using this “trial and error” method that has accelerated innovation.

These have enabled businesses to test innovation and business models in a real-world setting under regulator supervision. Sandboxes could be accessible to licensed entities, unregulated startups or companies outside the financial services sector.

Similarly, the European Union’s DLT Pilot Regime advances innovation and competition, encouraging market entry for startups by reducing upfront compliance costs through “gates” that align legal frameworks at each level while upgrading technological innovation.

Clear regulations can cultivate and support innovation through open dialogue between regulators and innovators.

Opinion by: Hedi Navazan, chief compliance officer at 1inch.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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