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Stablecoin Growth Knocks Silvergate Exchange Network Volume Over $100B

All-time transaction volume on the Silvergate Exchange Network (SEN), a fiat pathway into bitcoin markets, has reached $100 billion.

Updated May 9, 2023, 3:12 a.m. Published Oct 6, 2020, 3:04 p.m.
Silvergate bank

All-time transaction volume on the Silvergate Exchange Network (SEN) has reached $100 billion, with SEN transactions correlated to bitcoin and stablecoin trading.

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The La Jolla, Calif.-based Silvergate Bank has seen a significant adoption of the payments platform, which is open 24/7 to offer fiat on-ramps for the crypto markets. For full-year 2019, the bank saw around $33 billion transacted on the network compared to $76 billion in the first nine months of this year, said Alan Lane, Silvergate’s CEO. (The bank did not track how much these volumes were affected by the average price of bitcoin each year.)

For the first and second quarters of 2020, Silvergate advertised that its activity on the SEN had outpaced the trading in the bitcoin markets. “A dollar going across the SEN was growing at an even faster rate than what we were seeing in terms of the transactions on the bitcoin blockchain,” Lane said.

In general the bank sees more SEN transactions when there is bitcoin volatility, but SEN transactions have increased while volatility has been down because of increased SEN adoption.

DeFi boost

Silvergate has also seen a correlation between SEN transactions and decentralized finance (DeFi) adoption as it’s the transactional bank for all of the U.S. regulated stablecoins such as USDC and PAX, Lane added.

The SEN has allowed Silvergate to be one of the few American banks to offer its customers a transaction API. Like whitelisted investors on Ethereum, customers who want to transact on the SEN have to be members of the network, allowing Silvergate to do due diligence screenings like know-your-customer (KYC) checks before offering an API that would automate transactions.

Read more: CoinDesk Research - Silvergate Bank: How Deep Is Its Moat?

“They’re coding our APIs right into their technology stack,” Lane said. “It is secure and 24/7 and you don’t need human intervention when they have coded in the API.”

After wrapping the pilot of SEN Leverage, a bitcoin-backed lending product, Silvergate will become the only bank to offer a lending API.

“We aren’t doing the loan from start to finish on the API,” Lane said. “But once we’ve approved you, you’re on the SEN and you want to borrow, you can do that on nights and weekends.”

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Pudgy Penguins: A New Blueprint for Tokenized Culture

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Pudgy Penguins is building a multi-vertical consumer IP platform — combining phygital products, games, NFTs and PENGU to monetize culture at scale.

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Pudgy Penguins is emerging as one of the strongest NFT-native brands of this cycle, shifting from speculative “digital luxury goods” into a multi-vertical consumer IP platform. Its strategy is to acquire users through mainstream channels first; toys, retail partnerships and viral media, then onboard them into Web3 through games, NFTs and the PENGU token.

The ecosystem now spans phygital products (> $13M retail sales and >1M units sold), games and experiences (Pudgy Party surpassed 500k downloads in two weeks), and a widely distributed token (airdropped to 6M+ wallets). While the market is currently pricing Pudgy at a premium relative to traditional IP peers, sustained success depends on execution across retail expansion, gaming adoption and deeper token utility.

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Standard Chartered says U.S. regional banks most at risk in $500 billion stablecoin shift

Stablecoin networks (Unsplash, modified by CoinDesk)

The delay of market structure legislation highlights a growing threat to domestic lenders as digital dollars begin to cannibalize traditional bank deposits.

What to know:

  • Standard Chartered warned that U.S. regional banks are the most exposed to stablecoin disruption due to their heavy reliance on net interest margin (NIM) for revenue.
  • The bank projected that one-third of the growing stablecoin market will be sourced from developed market bank deposits, totaling an estimated $500 billion outflow by 2028.
  • A legislative standoff over whether stablecoin providers can pay interest is stalling market structure legislation, though Standard Chartered still expects a March passage.