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First Mover Asia: Bitcoin Opens the Week Above $30K Amid Rising Investor Optimism

source-logo  coindesk.com 26 June 2023 03:50, UTC

Good morning. Here’s what’s happening:Prices: If bitcoin manages to stay past $30K, we might get another leg up, says one analyst.Insights: Japan's recent amendment to exclude unrealized gains of self-issued cryptocurrency from taxation promotes a healthy environment for crypto startups. This continued trend of regulatory adaptability has earned praise from stakeholders.PricesETF Optimism is Powering Bitcoin's Continued Rally

Bitcoin and ether are both off to a strong start as the week begins in Asia. The world’s largest digital asset is still above the $30K mark, while ether is up 1.3% to $1,901.

Analysts say that this mini-bull market, which has followed multiple applications for spot bitcoin ETFs, is pushing BTC and ETH to some of its strongest weekly gains since March. CoinDesk Indices’ Bitcoin Trend Indicator (BTI) shows the asset is in a “significant uptrend” with its price gaining 15.6% during the last week and 17% over the last 14 days.

“Last week, we noted how the market looked strong for mid to long-term opportunities, and Bitcoin was likely to be in the spotlight,” BitBull Capital’s Joe DiPasquale said in a note to CoinDesk. “This week we saw Bitcoin breaking through the $30K resistance and managing to stay above it despite volatility.”

DiPasquale sees continued growth across the market in the coming weeks, but also volatility.

“On the flip side, alts are now also starting to rally. But the market is likely to remain volatile in the coming weeks,” he said. “If Bitcoin manages to stay above $30K for long, we may see another leg up. On the downside, $27K now remains strong support.”

Data from CoinGlass shows that over the weekend, traders with short positions had a slight edge. In the past 24 hours, there were $9.5 million in liquidated long positions and $7.10 in liquidated short positions. Open interest is up to $14.6 billion from $11.7 billion at the start of last week.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) hasn’t indicated when it intends to announce a decision on the bitcoin ETFs from BlackRock, Invesco and WisdomTree.

Many are optimistic that the inclusion of a surveillance-sharing agreement would be enough to make the SEC comfortable enough to approve it, much like how the Ontario Securities Commission wanted a mature crypto custodian sector before it approved the first bitcoin ETFs to be listed in Toronto in 2021.

Until then, the question is: how high will bitcoin go?

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InsightsCrypto-Friendly Japan Recent Tax Moves Keep It at the Forefront of Regulatory Policy

Over the weekend CoinDesk Japan reported that the National Tax Agency of Japan has amended the nation’s tax law to exclude unrealized gains of self-issued cryptocurrency from taxation.

This is a huge relief for crypto startups that issue their own tokens.

Before the change, the Japanese tax law required corporations to pay taxes on unrealized gains from their cryptocurrency holdings at the end of each fiscal year, irrespective of whether those gains had been realized or not.

In short, if a company was holding a token and its value increased within the fiscal year, the company had to pay taxes on the increased value (the unrealized gain), even if it hadn't sold the cryptocurrency (i.e., hadn't "realized" the gain). This law applied to all types of cryptocurrencies, whether self-issued by the company or not.

Taxing unrealized gains isn’t a policy that’s conducive to building a dynamic, successful environment for entrepreneurship. Norway tried it, and it led to an exodus. But having taxes on the unrealized gains of a token is particularly detrimental to the crypto industry as developers and other team members are often heavily compensated in these tokens to compensatefor the inherent risk of the industry – with its tremendous ups and downs.

For Japan, this is another smart public policy move that has identified a problem and built a specific, crypto-native solution.

“What we see in Japan is a very clear taxonomy for digital assets,” Rahul Advani, Ripple’s policy lead for Asia, said in a recent interview withCoinDesk. "Regulators are now looking beyond just money laundering and terrorist financing. They're looking at capital, they're looking at bank exposures, and a very important part of that is market integrity but also consumer protection."

Japan has been an early adopter of cryptocurrency rules and established regulations and standards for crypto exchanges, Advani explained, praisingthe nation’s laws regarding the segregation of customer funds on exchanges.

For example, despite the global bankruptcy of FTX, its Japanese subsidiary, FTX Japan, appears poised to pay its customers in full, largely due to Japan's careful regulation of crypto exchanges. It was the safest place to be a customer of Sam Bankman-Fried’s.

“Japan has in its bankruptcy laws, [a priority for] exchange customers above other creditors,” he said. “So that's one reason why exchange customers were able to be made whole before other creditors."

Now, in contrast, none of this is happening in the U.S.

Sure, given existing rules about capital gains in the U.S. it's unlikely that tokens issued by crypto companies would be taxed. But there’s no specific rules to say that this won’t happen. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission won’t even give guidance on how it determines if something – like the issued tokens at the center of this – is or isn’t a security.

If the SEC won’t even advise voluntarily, good luck getting any other sort of policy development in the U.S.

coindesk.com