Crypto crowd dominate Davos main street despite price crash
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[May 23, 2022] By
Jessica DiNapoli
DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - A free
bitcoin pizza stall and a "Liquidity Lounge" were among the treats on
offer for attendees at this year's 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 $800 billion 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 U.S. 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 told Reuters.
But recent losses have not dented the crypto 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 and
network" and show how it can bridge new technologies and traditional
finance, said CEO Dan Doney.
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.
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Representations of virtual cryptocurrencies are placed on U.S.
Dollar banknotes in this illustration taken November 28, 2021.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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 at the time.
Bitcoin, which was worth $30,332 on Monday, fell to its lowest levels since
December 2020 earlier in May. The world's largest cryptocurrency had hit a
record high of $69,000 in November.
"We're used to this, and as the market gets bigger, the peaks and valleys will
be smoother," said Cliff Sarkin, chief operating officer of CasperLabs, a
provider of blockchain technology to businesses, which is hosting speakers and
events.
The token tied to Casper's technology has also taken a hit, Sarkin told Reuters.
The WEF, which typically caters to the financial elite including major banks
such as Citigroup to Credit Suisse, is holding panels on cyrptocurrencies'
carbon footprint and future and one on decentralized finance.
"It's been rising outside and inside the gates," said Stan Stalnacker, chief
strategy officer at social network Hub Culture, which also operates a digital
currency, referring to crypto's presence in the conference and on its sidelines.
Stalnacker estimated that about 50% of the town's storefronts have been occupied
by blockchain or cryptocurrency firms for the duration of the event.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in Davos; Additional reporting by Divya Chowdhury
in Davos; Editing by Alexander Smith)
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