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    Most Surprising Crypto Statistics of 2021

    1. Bitcoin Surpassed $1 Trillion in Market Value for the First Time
    In February, bitcoin attained a new milestone after reaching a market capitalization of $1 trillion. The price of Bitcoin was trading slightly above $53500. This was the first time a cryptocurrency was reaching a market cap of above $1 trillion. However, bitcoin is currently trading at $47 170, with a market cap of $892 billion. Ethereum is the second-largest crypto and can achieve the same feat if, at least, it doubles its price.2. The Value of Global Cryptocurrency Markets Increased by Almost 3000% Between 2020 to 2021
    The total cryptocurrency market increased from $100 billion in early 2020 to $3 trillion in 2021. This represents a 3000% growth. However, the market value has dropped to $2.22 trillion. Future growth will be influenced by the growth of big cryptos, especially bitcoin and ethereum. Valuates Reports estimates that the global cryptocurrency market size will grow at a CAGR of 12.8% from 2021 to hit $4.94 billion by 2030.3. Shiba Grew 26 Million Percent Within One Year
    According to crypto-academy.org, Shiba was trading at $0.0000000003 in the third quarter of 2020. The price proliferated in 2021, reaching an all-time high of $0.00008 in October, a growth of over 26 million percent in slightly 13 months. This is the biggest cryptocurrency growth in 2021. To put it into perspective, an investment of $10 yielded $266 million. In 2021, the price increased from $0.00000001 in January to $0.00003 at the end of the year, representing over 330 000% in one year.4. There Are 34000 Bitcoin ATMs
    Bitcoin remains the biggest cryptocurrency, commanding almost half of the cryptocurrency market. Growth and increasing adoption have necessitated the improvement of the bitcoin supporting infrastructure. The number of bitcoins increased to 34000 from 14 000 at the beginning of the year. Most of these machines is in the US, with slightly over 30000. Canada comes second with about 2200 Bitcoin ATMs. El Salvador, which made Bitcoin a legal tender in September, takes third place with 200 Bitcoin ATMs. The working of Bitcoin is quite different from conventional ATMs. It allows people to exchange bitcoin for fiat currency and also sell fiat currency for bitcoin.5. There Are More Than 300 Million Cryptocurrency Users Worldwide
    In 2020, the number of identity verified users crossed the 100 million mark. Binance reports the number grew to 300 million as of 2021, representing about 3.8% of the global population. This number is 5.8% of the population aged between 15 and 65 years and is poised to rise as crypto adoption grows.6. The Value of Global Cryptocurrency Theft in 2020 Was $513 Million
    In 2020, crypto theft from scams almost reached the all-time figure recorded during the 2017 bull run. $7.7 million was stolen in crypto scams globally, an 80% increase from 2020. According to Chainalysis, Rug Pull accounts for the bulk of the crypto theft at $2.8 billion. This represents 28% of the total crypto from 1% recorded in 2020. Rug pulls is where developers abandon a project and vanish into thin air with investors’ funds.7. India Has the Most Crypto Owners at 100 Million
    India tops the countries with the highest number of crypto users. According to Triple-A, India tops with 100,740,320 crypto users, followed by the USA at 27,491,810. Russia and Nigeria follow at 17 million and 13 million respectively. 12.73% of the Ukrainian population own crypto – the highest percentage in the world.8. There Were More Than One Million Ethereum Transactions Every Day in 2021
    Ethereum processes more than 1 million transactions daily. According to data from Y Charts, Ethereum processed between 1.057 million and 1.717 million daily transactions. This is more than six times the bitcoin transactions that averaged 250 000 in June.9. There Are More Than 16000 Cryptocurrency
    Developers are creating new cryptocurrencies every day. According to Coin Market Cap data, there are over 16000 cryptocurrencies listed across 451 crypto exchanges. 10. 18,000 Businesses Are Already Accepting Cryptocurrency Payments
    Did you know you can pay for goods and services using bitcoin? You probably do. What you might not be aware of is that 18000 businesses spread across the world accept bitcoin payments. Deloitte reports that 2300 US businesses were accepting bitcoin payments by late 2020, excluding bitcoin ATMs. Big companies that accept crypto payments include AT&T, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Overstock (NASDAQ:OSTK), Twitch, Pizzahut, and NewEgg. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Mastercard (NYSE:MA), Visa (NYSE:V), and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) are also planning to join the group.11. The US Control a 35.4% Hash Rate
    The US IS THE TOP DESTINATION for bitcoin miners. It now controls 35% of the bitcoin hash rate as per Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance. Hash rate refers to the computing power of miners. The US edged China after the Chinese government banned crypto mining. At its peak, China controlled 67% of the hash rate in September 2020.12. The Top 10 Cryptocurrencies Make Up 88% Of the Total Market Value
    Cryptocurrencies have varying market prices and capitalization. Bitcoin, which enjoys a first-mover advantage, was, at some point, more valuable than all other cryptocurrencies combined. However, it is losing market share to ethereum and other altcoins. The top ten cryptos have significantly taken up the dwindling market share of Bitcoin. The low-ranked cryptos have diminutive value, especially due to low demand and popularity. The surprising fact is that Bitcoin, ethereum, Binance coin, and other cryptos that rank top ten control about 88% of the total crypto market value.13. Merchants Who Accept Crypto Payments Enjoyed an Average Return on Investment of 327%
    One of the areas that cryptos are revolutionizing is online payments. People who hold cryptos find it convenient and cheap to pay using digital currencies. Businesses that accept cryptos, therefore, attract cryptocurrency users. This explains the whopping 327% ROI by merchants who accept cryptos. On the flipside
    The Crypto market has not been all rosy. While the statistics paint a tantalizing growth story, Some cryptos are experiencing a bear run. For instance, Bitcoin has dipped from a high of 65000 and is now trading at 47000. Shiba Inu has shed more than 70%.Why You Should Care
    According to these statistics, the crypto market has grown on all fronts and is set for further expansion. However, you should prudently choose which digital assets to invest in to rake profits. Otherwise, you risk suffering from losses if you invest in plummeting digital currency.Conclusion
    2021 has been the year when the crypto market exploded and hence the surprising statistics. We expect more growth in the crypto market in 2022 and perhaps more surprising statistics and fun facts. EMAIL NEWSLETTERJoin to get the flipside of cryptoUpgrade your inbox and get our DailyCoin editors’ picks 1x a week delivered straight to your inbox.[contact-form-7]
    You can always unsubscribe with just 1 click.Continue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Is there an end in sight to supply chain disruption?

    Bob Biesterfeld knows the depths of the global supply chain crisis first hand — he has hauliers still unloading Halloween costumes from containers at the Los Angeles and Long Beach port complex. For the boss of CH Robinson, North America’s largest freight broker, the delayed shipments of vampire, ghost and witch outfits provides the perfect illustration of the turmoil in ocean shipping for the past 18 months. About 90 per cent of world trade moves by sea, and these logistical woes have tormented businesses across the globe from Argentine winemakers to Sri Lankan clothing producers.Record vessel delays have clogged ports and crammed warehouses, adding to the supply ruptures caused by the semiconductor crunch and petrochemical shortages. Smaller companies have had to fight tooth and nail to secure space on container ships to keep production and sales moving while facing cash flow pressure as they soak up rocketing freight rates — up seven times on average pre-pandemic levels — and mounting stockpiles. Consumers have experienced it via empty shelves, limited product availability and rising prices.

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    Jens Bjorn Andersen, chief executive of DSV, one of the world’s largest logistics groups currently squeezed between frustrated shipping lines and angry customers, describes the situation as “the worst I’ve seen” after more than three decades in the industry.The shipping bottlenecks have exposed one of the most serious threats to the global economy as it emerges from the pandemic: whether the worldwide traffic jam remains gridlocked or begins to flow again in 2022. If the bottlenecks persist, freight costs will remain high, space for cargo on ships will be limited and retailers and manufacturers will have to endure chronic delays. That could in turn fuel inflation, prompt supply chain upheavals and accelerate consolidation of shipping networks, fundamentally changing world trade.During the pandemic, container shipping had to juggle a tremendous surge in consumer demand for goods with the reality of having slashed capacity during the initial lockdowns in the first half of 2020. As a result a highly synchronised system was spun out of rhythm. Containers stacked up at the terminal in the Port of Long Beach in California © Jeff Gritchen/MediaNews Group via Getty Images“We used to work on an eight-lane highway,” says Randy Chen, vice-chair at Wan Hai Lines, a Taiwanese shipping company, of global logistics operations, “[then] we shrank the highway by half. The shipping industry was the first to get it back to eight lanes.” But, adds Chen, it has been more difficult for ports, warehouses and trucking — all hit by Covid-related labour shortages — to do the same. Terminal closures last year at two of the world’s five busiest container ports — Shenzhen and Ningbo-Zhoushan in China — after small Covid outbreaks, as well as the freak blockage of the Suez Canal by a mammoth 400-metre-long ship, added to delays. “Every time we have a Covid-related incident, it’s like a car accident that stops all eight lanes,” adds Chen.Now, the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant has the shipping industry on edge, waiting for the next hitch that could derail operations. In Europe, pre-Christmas lockdowns in some countries and added restrictions in others knocked confidence. Most eyes are on what China — home to seven of the top 10 container ports in the world including the busiest, Shanghai — does next. Beijing, which operates a national zero-Covid policy, put Xi’an, a central city of 13m, into lockdown in December; Hong Kong has temporarily banned passenger flights from eight countries, including the US; and the city of Ningbo was partially shutdown last week in response to fresh coronavirus cases.The prospect of a rerun of 2021’s supply chain problems fills companies with dread. “Our warehouse is full but there are always one or two parts missing,” says Johanna Urkauf, managing director of KTM Bike Industries, an Austrian bicycle manufacturer. Erik Yim, managing director of China Merchants Port Holdings, a state-backed group, says “the only way” to restore order to the supply chain is to have closer alignment between governments on coronavirus measures through an internationally recognised protocol designed to protect key transport workers. That, he adds, must be combined with keeping vital infrastructure such as ports open and early warnings of hold-ups.Simon Heaney, analyst at Drewry, a maritime consultancy, is pessimistic that we will see a dramatic change this year. “We expected to have more improvement in supply chains becoming unblocked by this stage. In fact, things have worsened,” he says. “We have more feedback telling us how deep a crisis inland logistics [trucking and ports] is facing.”China, the world’s largest exporting nation, maintains a zero-Covid policy © Tao Ming/Xinhua via APAll eyes on ChinaA key factor in whether ocean liners can restore a reliable infrastructure for global trade in 2022 will be the strength of consumer goods demand — if it remains strong it will be difficult to clear backlogs. About 60 per cent of spending by a US consumer typically goes to goods and the rest to services, but that has risen to 65 per cent, according to Bernstein. As a result, US imports were up almost 20 per cent in September and October 2021 over the same months in 2019.Demand for container shipping tends to rise in the weeks before Chinese new year — in early February in 2022 — when factories close temporarily and exports ebb. It is the time we might see some improvement, says John Pearson, chief executive of DHL Express.But shipping executives say the lunar new year will probably be followed by a restocking of depleted inventories — hovering at historic lows in the US — that could run into the peak summer season for container shipping to deliver Black Friday and Christmas 2022 goods. Ron Widdows, a former shipping executive and head of FlexiVan, which rents out one of North America’s largest fleets of chassis — steel frames that are attached to lorry cabs and carry containers — says that a sustained drop in cargo flows would help to restore productivity, get rid of empty containers and deal with the backlogs. But he thinks it is unlikely to happen quickly.

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    Instead he expects further bumpiness in getting products to market from a possible halt to some Chinese manufacturing during February’s winter Olympics in Beijing to strict coronavirus quarantine rules for seafarers. “It’s as much about volatility as it is the absolute volume,” he says. Not all of the shipping lines’ customers are convinced of a sustained demand boom. Some have been stung paying about $15,000 to move a 40-foot container from China to the US west coast, 10 times more than pre-pandemic. Transport costs are set to keep rising this year as the higher spot market rates get locked into annual freight contracts, which are currently under negotiation. Other customers say fear-mongering over potential shipping chaos this year looks more like a bargaining strategy by the carriers.The return of tourism, hospitality and other services plus rising consumer bills and higher-interest rates could all soften demand for goods, says James Hookham, chief executive of the Global Shippers Forum, a trade group representing importers and exporters.“I’m not buying the hype that says we will endure this for most of 2022,” says Hookham, who believes shipping congestion could ease within weeks once consumers begin feeling the pinch. “There’s no inevitably about the continuing high levels of demand for container shipping.”

    Terminal closures last year at Shenzhen port in China added to delivery delays © Martin Pollard/Reuters

    Unlocking the US The transportation problems are global, hitting businesses and consumers from São Paulo to Tokyo. But some executives and analysts believe one bottleneck, above all the others, may hold the key to ending the disruption: the neighbouring ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the US gateway for Asian imports. Outdated infrastructure and the inability to operate 24 hours, seven days a week like Asian counterparts have contributed to severe congestion.The size of the queue of vessels lined up outside the terminals has become a barometer of worldwide supply chain convulsions. While that queue has lengthened out many miles to sea because of new rules, the effective number of container ships waiting — above 100 last Thursday — is at a record high. LA/Long Beach accounted for roughly 22 per cent of shipping capacity waiting to berth globally last Tuesday, according to Kuehne + Nagel, a Swiss logistics group.“If we solve North America, then there would be enough capacity for the rest of the system,” Alan Murphy, an analyst at consultancy Sea-Intelligence, told a meeting of shipping experts in December.However, easing congestion in the US appears far from simple. Joerg Wolle, Kuehne + Nagel chair, says that inefficiency at the ports and the truck driver shortage — neither of which have short-term fixes — mean the system has been unable to cope with the demand surge.Wolle hopes for some slackening of labour tightness with the gradual return of workers but believes it will take time: “we will be lucky and happy if we see a real relief [in the system] by autumn.” Equipment is a further restraint. The US has 4 per cent fewer chassis in circulation than in 2018, according to consultancy ACT Research, yet demand has increased. CH Robinson’s Biesterfeld says that makers of the steel frames and trailers would be unable to pump out enough to make a difference before the second half of 2022.Casting a further shadow over a return to normality are negotiations with the workers at LA/Long Beach whose contracts expire in July. The previous 2015 pact was only reached after intervention by the Obama administration following nine months of talks, as well as industrial action that left dozens of ships backing up outside the port. Peter Sand, chief analyst at Oslo-based shipping data provider Xeneta, says that talks with the dockworkers, which typically centre on pay and automation, will almost certainly result in “unavoidable disruption in some form”.Los Angeles and Long Beach ports accounted for roughly 22 per cent of shipping capacity waiting to berth globally last Tuesday © Tim Rue/Bloomberg‘It will never normalise’ In the decade prior to coronavirus, shipping cargo in containers was so cheap that the industry, plagued by excess capacity, struggled to make a profit. Some carriers went bust and the world’s top shipping lines formed three alliances, sharing space on voyages. Now, the world’s leading nine carriers control 83 per cent of tonnage.This consolidation plus the dearth of investment in new ships before the pandemic and tightening emission regulations has led many commentators to conclude that higher rates will persist.And the expectation that the world will have to learn to live with lofty freight rates has bled into discussion of the link between shipping costs and inflation. Industry executives say the costs, even multiplied by 10, are still a tiny fraction of the price a consumer pays for a product. But a UN report in November predicted a 1.5 per cent increase in global inflation due to shipping — and even more for lower value items such as furniture and high-tech goods containing thousands of components that criss-cross the oceans.

    There may be further problems in getting products to market from a possible halt to some Chinese manufacturing during the winter Olympics in February © Thomas Peter/Reuters

    The shipping crisis has also sparked questions about the evolving shape of the infrastructure that underpins international commerce and economic prosperity.Scott Price, president of UPS International, sees one consequence of the past 18 months as a “migration to new supply chain models” with companies moving production of complex goods closer to consumers — to combat higher transport costs and the end of cheap Chinese labour.

    Those predictions come as shipping lines deploy more vessels to lucrative lanes. Tonnage dedicated to routes between North America and Asia grew 30 per cent between January and December 2021, according to data from consultancy Alphaliner. While much of that extra capacity ended up waiting offshore rather than cruising, capacity serving Africa or journeys between Asian nations dropped 3.3 per cent and almost 10 per cent, respectively, over the same period. Shipping companies also significantly slashed the number of port calls in their networks in the second half of 2021. Stops at the five biggest Asian and northern European ports on weekly loops have plummeted by a quarter since 2016, a phenomenon that has only accelerated in the pandemic according to Alphaliner. Lars Mikael Jensen, head of global ocean network at Maersk, says that the shift to a “more hub-and-spoke” model — which the Danish shipping group is in the process of adopting — will help restore reliability.“Instead of calling at every port directly, we put [the cargo] on to feeders at a connection point,” he says. “That will make the network less dependent on individual delays at ports . . . this is something we’re looking to do more of.”This next phase in industry consolidation worries transport economist Antonella Teodoro of consultancy MDS Transmodal. Her analysis shows a 12 per cent drop since the start of 2019 in the number of countries that African nations are directly connected with, which makes trade more expensive. “Less direct connectivity for small economies should keep some regulators awake at night,” says Teodoro. “This is not about us not having Christmas goods in time but a worsening [economic situation] for countries left behind by globalisation.” Sean van Dort, logistics chair of the trade body Joint Apparel Association Forum Sri Lanka, echoes those concerns. Fewer vessels have been making direct calls to the country’s commercial centre Colombo to drop off the fabrics, yarns and accessories from East Asia needed by garment suppliers to manufacture for multinational brands. “Many small and medium-sized companies have had to close or temporarily shut down as they don’t have the financial power to air freight goods,” he says. Shipping lines are “a moth to the flame and go where the higher freight rates are”.For cargo owners on the sharp end of the disruption, the shipping industry warns of a lengthy wait for better news.“I don’t think it will ever normalise,” says DSV’s Andersen who believes the past two years has led to fundamental change in the logistics industry. “If ‘normalise’ means going back to the situation we saw prior to Covid, to be honest I don’t think we’ll ever get back [to that].” More

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    Price analysis 1/7: BTC, ETH, BNB, SOL, ADA, XRP, LUNA, DOT, AVAX, DOGE

    Adding to the negative sentiment was the shutdown of the world’s second-biggest Bitcoin mining hub in Kazakhstan, where the internet has been shut down following massive protests by citizens. This caused a dip of about 13.4% in the Bitcoin network’s overall hash rate from 205,000 petahash per second (PH/s) to 177,330 PH/s.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    UK lawmakers form crypto advocacy group for parliament: Report

    According to a Friday report from the Financial Times, members of parliament, as well as members of the House of Lords in the United Kingdom, launched the Crypto and Digital Assets Group to ensure rules for the crypto industry in the U.K. “support innovation” as of last week. The cross-party group aims to protect investors from financial crimes, including token scams or offerings from regulated companies. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    ECB executive warns green energy push will drive inflation higher

    Policies to tackle climate change are likely to keep energy prices higher for longer and may force the European Central Bank to withdraw its stimulus more quickly than planned, one of its senior executives has warned.Isabel Schnabel, the ECB executive responsible for market operations, said the planned transition away from fossil fuels to a greener low-carbon economy “poses measurable upside risks to our baseline projection of inflation over the medium term”.After the economy rebounded from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, a sharp surge in energy prices drove inflation to 5 per cent in December, a record high for the eurozone. But the ECB has forecast energy prices will fade and has committed to maintain its ultra-loose monetary policy for at least another year.However, the inflationary impact of the green energy transition could force the central bank to reconsider this position, Schnabel said, speaking via video link to the annual meeting of the American Finance Association on Saturday. “There are instances in which central banks will need to break with the prevailing consensus that monetary policy should look through rising energy prices so as to secure price stability over the medium term,” Schnabel said.

    Energy prices in the 19 countries that share the euro rose 26 per cent in December from a year earlier, close to a record high set the previous month. Natural gas prices hit record highs in the region last year, driving wholesale electricity prices to €196 per megawatt hour in November — nearly quadruple average pre-pandemic levels — the ECB executive said.“While in the past energy prices often fell as quickly as they rose, the need to step up the fight against climate change may imply that fossil fuel prices will now not only have to stay elevated, but even have to keep rising if we are to meet the goals of the Paris climate agreement,” Schnabel said.The German economics professor, who joined the ECB board two years ago, has emerged as the most vocal critic among its top executives of its vast bond-buying programme, which has acquired a €4.7tn portfolio of assets since it started seven years ago.The ECB last month responded to concern about rapidly rising prices by announcing a “step-by-step” reduction in its asset purchases from €90bn a month last year to €20bn a month by October. But other central banks — including the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England — are tightening policy more quickly and critics say the ECB should do the same.Schnabel outlined “two scenarios where monetary policy would need to change course”. One is if persistently elevated energy prices caused consumers to expect continued high levels of inflation and created a 1970s style wage-price spiral. But she said “so far” wages and union demands “remain comparatively moderate”.The second scenario is if policies to tackle climate change, such as a carbon tax and measures to compensate poorer households for higher energy costs, turn out to increase inflationary pressures — as recent studies suggest is already happening — she said.Philip Lane, the ECB’s chief executive, seems to disagree. He told Irish broadcaster RTE on Friday that while rising energy prices were “a major concern”, there was “less upside this year” and he was confident “supply will shift, pressures should ease in the aggregate this year”. Like most central banks, the ECB has been surprised by the persistence of upward pressure on prices. Last month it sharply raised its eurozone inflation forecast for this year to 3.2 per, while predicting it would drop back below its 2 per cent target next year.But Schnabel said this assumption was “derived from futures curves” showing that energy prices would not contribute to overall inflation in the next two years, adding that “these estimates could be conservative”. If oil prices stayed at November 2021 levels, she said it would be enough for the ECB to hit its inflation target in 2024.

    Video: Cars, companies, countries: the race to go electric More

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    ECB may need to act if energy price rises more persistent: Schnabel

    Inflation hit a record high 5% last months, more than twice the ECB’s 2% target but the bank has not tightened policy so far, arguing that price growth will abate on its own as transitory one-off factors are the main reasons for high inflation.”The green transition poses upside risks to medium-term inflation,” Schnabel said in a speech. “Rising energy prices may require a departure from a ‘looking through’ policy.” Schnabel said there were two scenarios in which the ECB would have to change policy.The first one is if high energy prices feed through to other sectors of the economy and alter price setting behaviour. “So far, however, there are no signs of broader second-round effects,” Schnabel argued. “Wage growth and demands by unions remain comparatively moderate.”The second scenario would be if the path of energy prices, heavily impacted by carbon taxes and the green transition, threatens to push headline inflation above target.Supply and demand imbalances may remain protracted amid the transition and carbon prices are likely to rise further, meaning that the contribution of energy and electricity prices to consumer price inflation could be above its historical norm in the medium term, Schnabel added.Schnabel added that a carbon tax is unlikely to be a negative for economic growth and studies suggest that it could even have a modest positive impact. More