The Herald (South Africa)

Crypto crowd dominates Davos’s main street

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A free bitcoin pizza stall and a “Liquidity Lounge” were among the treats on offer for attendees at the 2022 meeting in Davos, where blockchain and cryptocurr­ency firms have taken over its main street, despite a recent crash in digital coin values.

Executives from the crypto sector have descended on the annual gathering of business leaders and politician­s in the Swiss Alpine resort, seeking to encourage faster adoption of their technology, which is largely unregulate­d.

The crypto crowd’s prominence at Davos, while largely on the sidelines of the main event, comes as cryptocurr­encies shed $800bn (R12.6-trillion) in market value earlier this month.

Small traders have flocked to crypto in the hope of quick returns, despite warnings from regulators that the emerging assets can be high risk.

Luna, until recently the eighth-biggest digital coin and backed by institutio­nal crypto investors, has shed nearly all of its value.

“What surprised me was just how fast it completely imploded into nothing,” Jeremy Allaire, CEO and cofounder of Circle Internet Financial, whose USDC stablecoin is pegged to the US dollar, said of Luna’s collapse.

“To see something that seemed like an apparent, high growth competitiv­e thing just completely implode to zero in 72 hours, I’ve have never seen anything like that,” he said.

Recent losses have not dented the companies’ plans to show off their products and services. Securrency Inc, a digital market infrastruc­ture backed by Abu Dhabi, came to Davos for the first time this year to build relationsh­ips, network and show how it could bridge new technologi­es and traditiona­l finance, CEO Dan Doney said.

The company has set up its own agenda of panels on digital currency, in the style of the World Economic Forum’s, just outside the security cordon for the main conference centre.

Tether, one of the world’s largest stablecoin­s, offered passers-by free slices to celebrate Bitcoin Pizza Day on May 22, when in 2010 Lazlo Hanyecz paid for two pizzas with 10,000 bitcoin, worth about $41 (R647) at the time.

Bitcoin, worth $30,332 (R479,000) yesterday, fell to its lowest levels since December 2020 earlier this month.

The world’s largest cryptocurr­ency had hit a record high of $69,000 (about R1m) in November last year.

“We’re used to this, and as the market gets bigger, the peaks and valleys will be smoother,” Cliff Sarkin, COO of CasperLabs, a provider of blockchain technology to businesses said.

The WEF, which typically caters to the financial elite, is holding panels on cryptocurr­encies’ carbon footprint and future, and one on decentrali­sed finance.

“It’s been rising outside and inside the gates,” Stan Stalnacker, chief strategy officer at social network Hub Culture, which also operates a digital currency, said, referring to crypto’s presence at the conference.

Stalnacker estimated about 50% of the town’s storefront­s have been occupied by blockchain or cryptocurr­ency firms for the duration of the event.

 ?? Picture: ARND WIEGMANN/REUTERS ?? SERIOUS BUSINESS: Swiss President Ignazio Cassis addresses delegates during the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos
Picture: ARND WIEGMANN/REUTERS SERIOUS BUSINESS: Swiss President Ignazio Cassis addresses delegates during the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos

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