#1021
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Ie they should only be able to make money on a trade. If the exchange wants to use the capital for leverage purposes, the customer needs to say OK and get benefit from the risk taking behaviour. Crypto, stable coins, etc… different story. That’s buyer beware territory. But brokerages, acting as custodian for their customer much of the time, need to be regulated more appropriately. Either way, a healthy reminder - if you don’t have they keys it’s not your coin. |
#1022
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Good luck with that ever happening. The modern economy's long past that sort of requirement.
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#1023
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It’s how an equity brokerage works, no?
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#1024
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I'm pretty sure the capital requirement is down in the single-digit % of customer funds.
More details here: (good luck figuring out what it really says) https://www.sec.gov/about/offices/oi.../key_rules.pdf Also, for banks I believe the figure is 4%. |
#1025
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The capital requirement for a brokerage is distinct from a bank, and is intended to provide stability with regard to liquidity for all participants. The shares themselves (effectively the customer deposit) must always be held by the brokerage, whereas a bank simply holds a tiny fraction of deposits. In Australia it wouldn’t even matter if the broker collapsed, shareholders have direct ownership over their shares. And in America, even if the brokerage was illiquid rule 15c3-3 states they must hold the equities the customer owns… so while the customer might not be able to transact (I am not intending to underplay how suboptimal not being able to trade in such a situation would be) their shares have not evaporated. Last edited by jimoots; 12-18-2022 at 05:07 AM. |
#1026
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I stand corrected.
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#1027
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Jimmy & Louis
https://www.bankregdata.com//allHMmet.asp?met=ONE If you scroll down, you can see the largest banks are at a 12-14% Tier capital versus Risk Weighted Assets. If a bank was anywhere near 4%, it would be out of business. As for BD, the reg capital seems lighter, but the asset base is lighter and for the most part the client funds should be segregated. There are still places for a BD to use leverage, and any client with a margin account and margin balances is a case in point. Reg T define the amount of leverage a BD can extend to clients. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The issue for Crypto is the whole concept of Exchanges, Banks and Brokers is all muddled. First of all, an exchange is never lending money to clients, or investing client funds. An exchange is merely a venue for transaction. An exchange makes money by charging companies a one-time listing fee, annual fees for listing, providing data on trades, and potentially other services. But an exchange is by and large, a non-risk, service for fee entity. Banks and BD you have a rougher idea on. |
#1028
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There are some seriously smart mother****ers on this site. |
#1029
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"The judge also took up a request by Mr. Bankman-Fried’s lawyers to keep secret the names of two people who, along with the FTX founder’s parents, had agreed to sign bonds to help assure his appearance in court.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/03/t...ot-guilty.html |
#1030
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Apparently, Bankman-Fried’s parents have received threats to their safety |
#1031
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#1032
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Really. Whomever these fantasy bail bondspeople are, somebody can actually say that. I call putting money or assets on the line pretty damn substantive. Cant get much more substantive than that. Unless it was in bitcoin. "Apparently, Bankman-Fried’s parents have received threats to their safety" Remember that close associate of Maddoff's that got off and is living free? I could have sworn she'd get nailed by a car bomb. Lucky her. Sonja Kohn.
__________________
It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#1033
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She was pretty much the classic mark for Madoff- an Orthodox Jewish Woman in Business. Madoff had a knack for manipulating people's affinity bias. Even though the case brought against her was dismissed by court, the cases brought by the Trustee (Picard) and investors versus the fund/companies were not. Everyone sued everyone. Eventually the company and fund she was involved settled for 585mm. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonja_Kohn https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thema_International_Fund Madoff was very good at paying high fees to feeder funds for his fraud. He wiped out a lot of people in these. She was just one and not even the biggest. I think the people posting collateral for SBF's bond can remain anonymous. They are anonymous to the public, but not to Johnny 3. Johnny 3 is going to sue everyone who ever sat in a room with SBF. In That's how this works. Last edited by verticaldoug; 01-03-2023 at 11:53 PM. |
#1034
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Here's the next set of crypto which is going to leave a blackhole.
Gemini’s Winklevoss Slams DCG’s Silbert Over Frozen Crypto (2) 2023-01-02 16:47:00.411 GMT By Olga Kharif (Bloomberg) -- The fallout from the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire just got messier, with digital- asset entrepreneur Cameron Winklevoss accusing fellow businessman Barry Silbert of “bad faith stall tactics” and the intermingling of funds within his conglomerate that Winklevoss says have left $900 million in customer assets needlessly in limbo since FTX’s meltdown. Gemini Trust Co., founded by Winklevoss and his twin brother, paused redemptions on a lending product called Earn, which offered investors the potential to generate as much as 8% in interest on their digital coins. It did so by lending them out to Genesis Global Capital, one of the companies owned by Silbert’s Digital Currency Group. The Earn halt came in November after Genesis suspended both redemptions and new loan originations at its lending unit because of its exposure to FTX. Genesis has told clients that it could take “weeks” to find a path forward, and that bankruptcy may be one possibility. Winklevoss, facing pressure of his own from angry customers locked out of their Gemini accounts and a lawsuit alleging fraud, in an open letter Monday said he had provided Silbert with multiple proposals to resolve the issue, including as recently as Dec. 25. He told Silbert “this mess is entirely of your own making,” citing some $1.675 billion owed to Genesis by DCG, which it used for other business purposes within Silbert’s conglomerate. “This is money that Genesis owes to Earn users and other creditors.” Read more:Gemini, Winklevoss Twins Sued for Fraud Over Earn Accounts “It’s not lost on us that you’ve been working desperately to try and firewall DCG from the problems that you created at Genesis,” Winklevoss wrote. “You should dispense with this fiction because we all know what you know — that DCG and Genesis are beyond commingled.” Read more: Genesis Balance Sheet Reveals Web of Loans Across Silbert Empire Silbert in a tweeted response refuted several accusations in Wilkevoss’s letter, saying “DCG did not borrow $1.675 billion from Genesis” and “never missed an interest payment to Genesis and is current on all loans outstanding,” without providing more detail. Silbert also claimed DCG delivered a proposal for resolving the dispute to Genesis and Winklevoss’s advisers on Dec. 29, but had received no reply. Barry Silbert @BarrySilbert |
#1035
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__________________
It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
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