Bitcoin Daily: SEC Freezes Crypto Firm’s Assets, Alleging It Stole $12M From Investors; Hong Kong: 39 Pct Of New FinTechs There Are Blockchain Firms; Coinbase Eyes Selling Blockchain Analytics To IRS, DEA

The Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) has moved to freeze the assets of a $12 million cryptocurrency mining and multi-level marketing (MLM) scheme, Coindesk reports.

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    The defendant in the case is Utah resident Daniel F. Putnam, whose businesses — MMT Distributions and R&D Global — and associates — Angel A. Rodriguez of Utah and Jean Paul Ramirez Rico of Colombia — are alleged to have lied to investors and misappropriated funds.

    The scheme by the “Modern Money Team,” as Putnam referred to the entire operation, was reportedly to offer investors “cryptocurrency trading packages” they had purchased, which could have ostensibly been used for “arbitrage” opportunities at Bitfinex.

    The group managed to get $12 million from 2,000 investors, Coindesk reports.

    But the defendants allegedly ceased paying out investors in November 2019 while still raising funds well into 2020. Putnam reportedly used some the money for a condominium and a spa, according to the complaint.

    In Hong Kong, 39 percent of new FinTech firms launched in the last year are now operating via blockchain, Cointelgraph reported.

    The firms are operating using distributed ledger technology (DLT), which has been growing — in 2018, the number of firms using it sat at only 27 percent by comparison.

    Enterprise DLT solutions are the largest chunk of the total with 45 percent utilizing blockchain, while trading platforms make up 27 percent, and digital asset custodians comprise 14 percent of the total. Trade finance settlement makes up 9 percent.

    Coinbase is looking to sell Coinbase Analytics, its blockchain analytics software, to the U.S. government, The Block reported.

    Though no sale has been made as of Sunday (June 7), there are some firms beginning to show interest, with both the U.S. Drug Enforcement Association (DEA) and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) looking to buy the license, according to documents seen by The Block. The purchase, according to the IRS document, would be useful to help keep ahead of crimes related to cryptocurrency and digital banking.

    The news comes a year after Coinbase’s purchase of blockchain intelligence platform Neutrino, which engineering director Varun Srinivasan said would be an aid in preventing fraud and identifying bad actors.

    The purchase gained some controversy due to Neutrino’s founder’s involvement in Hacking Team, the Italian spyware firm. Coinbase said it would part ways with the team members involved with that firm.


    EazyPay Deploys Mastercard Receivables Manager for B2B Transactions in Bahrain

    Mastercard

    Eazy Financial Services, which does business as EazyPay, has become the first acquirer in Bahrain to adopt Mastercard Receivables Manager.

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      The company will use this solution to help merchants in Bahrain automate their B2B virtual card receivables, according to a Tuesday (July 29) press release.

      “EazyPay supports businesses with digital payment solutions designed to simplify operations and elevate the customer experience,” Nayef Tawfeeq Al Alawi, founder, managing director and CEO at EazyPay, said in the release. “As virtual cards gain traction for supplier payments, Mastercard Receivables Manager empowers us to strengthen the B2B payments ecosystem across key industries and large market segments.”

      Mastercard Receivables Manager eliminates manual processes by streamlining the capture of virtual card payments, processing them straight through and delivering remittance data directly to merchants’ accounting systems, according to the release.

      For merchants, this adds up to better efficiency, working capital and cash flow, per the release.

      “At Mastercard, we are committed to delivering value-added services that help acquirers and their merchants operate more efficiently,” Saud Swar, country manager, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan and other Levant at Mastercard, said in the release. “Receivables Manager addresses a critical challenge for suppliers managing high volumes of virtual card payments by automating processing, reducing time and boosting efficiency.”

      Mastercard announced Tuesday that it launchedwidescale global availability” of Mastercard Receivables Manager, two years after the introduction of the automated solution for virtual cards.

      Since the product’s debut in July 2023, Mastercard Receivables Manager has been enhanced with new capabilities such as multi-language and secure card-on-file to support digital commerce around the world.

      The PYMNTS Intelligence reportVirtual Mobility: How Mobile Virtual Cards Elevate B2B Paymentsfound that virtual cards can deliver security, efficiency and return on investment to B2B payments.

      In an earlier collaboration between Mastercard and EazyPay, the companies teamed up in January 2023 to enhance EazyPay’s eCommerce offerings with Mastercard Payment Gateway Services (MPGS), which is now known as Mastercard Gateway.

      Before that, in June 2021, the two companies worked together to equip smallto medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and micromerchants with online payment technologies and access to financial services.

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