Goldman ‘puts brakes on crypto trading desk’ (high impact)
The greatest shadow cast over the market this week was from the hulk of investment banking, Goldman Sachs, which had announced months ago that it would be opening a trading desk for Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) futures – even appointing a head trader – only to put it on the backburner, according to reports this Wednesday.
Since the crypto market entered a bear phase at the start of the year, crypto investors/traders have had an almost monomania with institutional investment in the space believing the prospect of it and an ETF will be an unequivocally positive development for prices. However, this will do nothing for the real world-utility that drives most assets.
However, on Thursday, at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference, Goldman chief financial officer Martin Chavez moved to quell the reports that the bank had given up on its crypto endeavors, calling it fake news and saying that the bank was still working on a non-deliverable forward derivative of BTC because “clients want it”.
Both Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) and Facebook shares have been on a parallel path over the past five days as they were affected by bad news and although the prices weren’t correlated they followed a similar trend in sell-offs which may signal a crossover of buyers/sellers in both markets.

Chart of BTC in blue and Facebook (FB) in red; both sold off this week in a similar fashion on bad news. 
Price action wasn’t the only parallel between BTC and FB, as word emerged on Thursday that Facebook’s blockchain team is advertising for new positions, one of which is for a head of business development with extensive experience in ‘dealmaking’. Facebook’s blockchain division is led by David Marcus who formerly sat on the board of Coinbase
It is unsurprising that Facebook has played the blockchain card this week when its business and ETHics model was scrutinised and vilified by media and Congress and it is likely an attempt to halt the slide of its shares which are down around 8 percent this week.
A very clever PR stunt to remind the public of its ‘efforts to decentralize’ its power or a hint that it’s interested in acquiring decentralized apps and companies?   
Buterin caveats “inevitable collapse” of ETH  (med impact)
Vitalik Buterin was forced to defend an assertion made in a TechCrunch article written by Jeremy Rubin, an advisor to Stellar, that the collapse of ETH as a currency is inevitable and its value would plummet to zero.
Rubin made the points that gas fees the only use case for the currency and at that gas fees don’t necessarily have to be paid in ETH itself, but can be done in any currency through ‘economic abstraction’ and that it is still possible for the network to succeed while the native currency implodes.
In a reddit thread Buterin agreed that with the network in its current state the value of ETH could possibly go to zero, but that’s assuming the network stays on PoW. He said the move to PoS and a proposal to burn ETH paid in gas fees would prevent this from happening.
Ethereum (available on Coinbase) has had a torrid time in recent months with its price hitting lows not seen since this time last year. Despite its promise, user growth of its thousand-plus Dapps has been very poor, aside for a tech-savvy niche audience, with no value-proposition for mainstream adoption apparent. Both the scaling issues and price action this week suggest that others are also losing faith and patience in the Ethereum (available on Coinbase) project.
Shapeshift exchange looks for KYC (low impact)
Libertarian exchange Shapeshift that was famed for its anonymous customer accounts also moved this week to implement KYC for its customers under duress to “de-risk”. It is a symbolic move for the exchange, founded by blockchain evangelist Eric Voorhees, against the core tenets it was established on.        

Ripple (available on Binance) used in payment corridor between Europe and India (low impact)

TransferGo, an international payment provider, has announced it will use Ripple (available on Binance)’s products for real-time remittances between Europe and India, which is a multi-billion dollar channel. Ripple (available on Binance) also announced a similar partnership with Brazilian currency exchange company, Beetech, to facilitate payments out of Brazil.
The usual weekly pronouncements from Ripple (available on Binance) executives about its partnerships also continued, as Ripple (available on Binance) co-founder and chairman Chris Larsen unveiled at a tech conference the names of the 100 banks that had signed up to participate with its products. From Ripple (available on Binance)’s perspective, this means more than just a partnership but that the companies have committed to integrating one or more of its products.
Separately, Platio a London-based “smart bank” platform built on the EOS blockchain announced it will use Ripple (available on Binance)’s xVia alongside Sepa and SWIFT for remittances, one of the few projects to use all three side-by-side.
People’s Bank of China opens digital currency research centre (low impact)
The Digital Currency Research Lab of the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) is expanding its research centres outside of Beijing to trial blockchain and crypto-like currencies in real world applications. 
According to local publication Securities Times the government will open a fintech center in Nanjing, the capital city of the eastern Jiangsu province. The Digital Currency Research Lab in Nanjing will be a collaboration between a Jiangsu bank and the University of Nanjing. The PBoC is working on a prototype digital currency while it has also been buying vast amounts of gold in recent years, boosting its reserves from 400 tonnes in 2000 to around 2000 tonnes today. 
Perhaps a Chinese digital RMB backed by gold will be a future reserve currency?     
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