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First Mover Asia: Crypto Is Flat Before Fed Chair Speech; Japan's SBI Building a Metamask Competitor for Yen-Denominated NFT Trading

source-logo  coindesk.com 07 February 2023 02:24, UTC

Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:

Prices: What's next for crypto prices? Traders are waiting for a speech by Fed chair Jay Powell before they make their next moves. In Japan, one digital assets company wants to build the market for NFT trading in Yen.

Insights: Digital asset financial services firm SBI is building a Metamask competitor for yen-denominated NFT trading. Could the initiative aid Japan's Web 3 efforts?

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Prices

CoinDesk Market Index (CMI)
1,076
−12.9 1.2%
Bitcoin (BTC)
$22,807
−251.1 1.1%
Ethereum (ETH)
$1,620
−19.3 1.2%
S&P 500
4,111.08
−25.4 0.6%
Gold
$1,883
+20.1 1.1%
Nikkei 225
27,693.65
+184.2 0.7%
BTC/ETH prices per CoinDesk Indices, as of 7 a.m. ET (11 a.m. UTC)

Crypto Traders are Waiting on a Signal from the Fed

Major digital assets are trading flat as the Asia business day begins, with bitcoin down 1% on-day to $22,829 and ether also off 1% to $1,622.

Singapore-based crypto trading fund QCP Capital said in a recent note that the performance of equities today and U.S. central bank Chair Jerome Powell’s speech will be its guide to the next leg in crypto.

“Without a recession and >4% unemployment this year, it is extremely unlikely the Fed will cut rates, which means our view that the market’s pricing of cuts this year is too dovish still holds,” the fund wrote.

QCP said its is looking to see Powell's comments on whether he thinks the current market rally has “gotten out of hand.”

Despite talk of a recession, and frequent headlines mentioning layoffs, the last two job markets reports show that the U.S. labor market is still hot. December’s numbers show the U.S. added 223,000 jobs to payrolls, pushing the unemployment rate down to 3.5%, while recently released numbers from January show 517,000 jobs being added. Both numbers defied expectations.

“I think it's still going to be very hard to get to 2%,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst with OANDA, recently said on CoinDesk TV. “The Fed acknowledged, for the first time in this cycle, they said that the disinflation process has begun.”

Moya highlighted the strong labor market in the U.S., and worldwide, as an obstacle to driving down inflation with increased wages supported by a fundamentally strong market.

“If we see further signs that some inflation abroad is becoming stickier than we thought, then there’s a risk of a decent sell-off across Wall Street that could drag down bitcoin,” he said.

Moya says he’s looking at Treasury Yields. There’s still a correlation between that and the price of bitcoin that remains intact – for now.

Biggest Gainers

There are no gainers in CoinDesk 20 today.

Biggest Losers

Asset Ticker Returns DACS Sector
Cardano ADA −4.3% Smart Contract Platform
Gala GALA −4.2% Entertainment
Solana SOL −4.0% Smart Contract Platform

Insights

SBI's Metamask Competitor for Yen-Denominated NFT Trading

Japan’s SBI, a digital assets financial services firm, recently announced it's launching a MetaMask-like wallet platform for non fungible tokens (NFTs) that’s only using the Japanese yen for trades on the SBINFT Market, CoinDesk Japan reports.

(Japan’s SBI)

Japan, with its world-renowned IP, and universally recognized styles of art, is an emerging hub for NFTs. But the majority of transactions are done in USD, not yen, which is something that SBI is looking to change.

In international trade dominated by fiat, the U.S. dollar, the world’s most liquid currency and the measure for most commodities’ pricing , ranks as the highest traded global currency with nearly 88% of global trade denominated in Greenbacks. This is predictable as the U.S. is the world’s largest economy and most of the globe’s trade has some sort of nexus to the country.

Crypto, however, is tied to no nation. There’s no centralized economy behind it. Yet at the same time, the majority of the world’s digital asset transactions are denominated in USD.

“Despite the shrinking US portion of the world’s GDP, the dollar increasingly dominates, notably in the digital ecosystem,” Bloomberg analyst Mike McGlone wrote in an April 2021 note. “There appears to be little to stop the most consistent trends in crypto assets: rising trading volume and the proliferation of stablecoins tracking the dollar.”

Case and point: data from CoinGecko shows that there’s only around $87 million in 24 hour volume for yen-denominated bitcoin trading pairs, and roughly $21.5 million for ether trading in yen. There have been a few attempts at developing a yen stablecoin, but they don’t seem to have gotten much traction.

But this comes as Japan fully embraces Web 3. As CoinDesk’s Emily Parker reported during a recent trip to the country, crypto there seems to exist in a near parallel universe. Post Mt. Gox rules have meant that FTX Japan assets are held in third-party custody; Lawmakers are working to propose a framework for DAOs and NFTs to the nation’s legislature, called the Diet.

The next step of this embrace will be more crypto trading in yen. SBI’s Web 3 wallet might be what instigates things.

coindesk.com