Bitcoin
Bitcoin Billionaire Michael Saylor, Company Settles DC Tax Fraud Lawsuit
Billionaire Bitcoin Investor Michael Saylor and the Software Company He Founded have agreed to pay $40 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the D.C. attorney general alleging he defrauded the city of millions in taxes by falsely claiming to live in Virginia or Florida, D.C. officials said.
Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb said the resolution marked the largest income tax recovery in the city’s history and should serve as a message to district residents trying to dodge tax bills by pretending to live elsewhere.
“No one in the District of Columbia, no matter how rich or powerful, is above the law,” Schwalb said in a statement.
Under the agreement, Saylor and MicroStrategy, an enterprise software company he founded in 1989, deny violating district law and have not admitted any wrongdoing.
In a statement released Monday, Saylor said he moved to Florida in 2012 and has made Miami Beach his home. “I continue to dispute the claim that I was ever a resident of the District of Columbia. I agreed to resolve this matter to avoid the continued burden of litigation on friends, family and myself,” Saylor said.
In court filings, lawyers from the attorney general’s office argued that Saylor lived in a 7,000-square-foot penthouse on the Georgetown waterfront or on yachts docked in the Potomac River. But they said that from 2005 to 2021 he paid no income taxes to the city.
According to Forbes, Saylor has a net worth of $4.6 billion, driven by large investments in bitcoin.
Saylor first misrepresented himself as a resident of Virginia, where taxes are lower, and then Florida, where there is no personal income tax, the District alleged in court filings. DC said MicroStrategy knowingly submitted false records as part of the effort. In all, Saylor avoided paying more than $25 million in district taxes, the city argued.
“Saylor openly boasted about his tax evasion scheme, encouraging his friends to follow his example and arguing that anyone who paid taxes to the District was stupid,” Schwalb said in Monday’s statement.
The city’s lawsuit included a 2012 Facebook post by Saylor evoking another billionaire inventor — albeit a fictional inventor from the “Iron Man” films. Saylor’s post came with a photo of his Georgetown apartment building, where he combined three penthouse apartments into one. It said he was “looking wistfully at my future home” as he waited for his architect to “crack the whip at the contractors and herd the cats. I wonder if Tony Stark would be so patient…”
The district said Excel records of Saylor’s location maintained by his company showed he met the threshold for needing to pay income taxes to the city. For example, he was present for 313 days in 2015, they said. The limit is 183 days.
Saylor’s lawyers, led by Eugene Scalia — Secretary of Labor in the Trump administration and son of former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia — argued in court filings last year that the city’s case was a “speculative story of collusion” riddled with flaws. fatal legalities.
In a 2023 filing in D.C. Superior Court, Saylor’s lawyers argued that he “suffered reputational harm” due to fraud allegations brought by the attorney general’s office. They said the allegations were “considered with remarkable indifference given their seriousness” and Saylor’s prominent role at MicroStrategy, a public company based in the Tysons area of Fairfax County, Virginia.
His attorneys argued that the district’s claims against Saylor should have been dismissed for procedural and legal reasons. “The District’s tax claims are subject to rejection because there has been no tax assessment, which is a necessary prerequisite,” they wrote in a filing.
The district joined the case after whistleblowers sued Saylor under the city’s False Claims Act. This law allows people to sue in cases of alleged tax fraud – and then receive a large payout from whatever the city eventually collects.
Saylor’s lawyers said this pointed to another legal problem in the city’s approach. The change in the law that allows “vindictive” private individuals to “prosecute tax-related actions… has fundamentally changed district government” and, therefore, violates the Home Rule Act that governs their affairs, they argued in court filings.
But rather than fight over the adequacy of the provisions of the False Claims Act, the sides reached a settlement.
How much money What whistleblowers will receive is subject to negotiation with the city hall. If they can’t reach an agreement, a judge will decide. The money will come out of the $40 million total Saylor agreed to pay over 14 days. He also agreed to comply with the district’s tax laws.
The agreement prohibits any future action against Saylor or MicroStrategy On this matter.
The agreement said Saylor, executive chairman of MicroStrategy, would file a return and pay income taxes in the city “in any current or future tax year” where he owned or rented a residence and was physically present in the city for at least 183 days.
Bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC), Stocks Bleed as China’s Surprise Rate Cut Signals Panic, Treasury Yield Curve Steepens
Risk assets fell on Thursday as China’s second rate cut in a week raised concerns of instability in the world’s second-largest economy.
Bitcoin (BTC)the leading cryptocurrency by market cap, is down nearly 2% since midnight UTC to around $64,000 and ether (ETH) fell more than 5%, dragging the broader altcoin market lower. The CoinDesk 20 Index (CD20), a measure of the broader cryptocurrency market, lost 4.6% in 24 hours.
In equity markets, Germany’s DAX, France’s CAC and the euro zone’s Euro Stoxx 50 all fell more than 1.5%, and futures linked to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 were down slightly after the index’s 3% drop on Wednesday, according to the data source. Investing.com.
On Thursday morning, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced a surprise, cut outside the schedule in its one-year medium-term lending rate to 2.3% from 2.5%, injecting 200 billion yuan ($27.5 billion) of liquidity into the market. That is the biggest reduction since 2020.
The movement, together with similar reductions in other lending rates earlier this week shows the urgency among policymakers to sustain growth after their recent third plenary offered little hope of a boost. Data released earlier this month showed China’s economy expanded 4.7% in the second quarter at an annualized pace, much weaker than the 5.1% estimated and slower than the 5.3% in the first quarter.
“Equity futures are flat after yesterday’s bloody session that shook sentiment across asset classes,” Ilan Solot, senior global strategist at Marex Solutions, said in a note shared with CoinDesk. “The PBoC’s decision to cut rates in a surprise move has only added to the sense of panic.” Marex Solutions, a division of global financial platform Marex, specializes in creating and distributing custom derivatives products and issuing structured products tied to cryptocurrencies.
Solot noted the continued “steepening of the US Treasury yield curve” as a threat to risk assets including cryptocurrencies, echoing CoinDesk Reports since the beginning of this month.
The yield curve steepens when the difference between longer-duration and shorter-duration bond yields widens. This month, the spread between 10-year and two-year Treasury yields widened by 20 basis points to -0.12 basis points (bps), mainly due to stickier 10-year yields.
“For me, the biggest concern is the shape of the US yield curve, which continues to steepen. The 2- and 10-year curve is not only -12 bps inverted, compared to -50 bps last month. The recent moves have been led by the rise in back-end [10y] yields and lower-than-expected decline in yields,” Solot said.
That’s a sign that markets expect the Fed to cut rates but see tighter inflation and expansionary fiscal policy as growing risks, Solot said.
Bitcoin
How systematic approaches reduce investor risk
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
Low liquidity, regulatory uncertainty and speculative behavior contribute to inefficiency in crypto markets. But systematic approaches, including momentum indices, can reduce risks for investors, says Gregory Mall, head of investment solutions at AMINA Bank.
July 24, 2024, 5:30 p.m.
Updated July 24, 2024, 5:35 p.m.
(Benjamin Cheng/Unsplash)
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Bitcoin
India to Release Crypto Policy Position by September After Consultations with Stakeholders: Report
“The policy position is how one consults with relevant stakeholders, so it’s to go out in public and say here’s a discussion paper, these are the issues and then stakeholders will give their views,” said Seth, who is the Secretary for Economic Affairs. “A cross-ministerial group is currently looking at a broader policy on cryptocurrencies. We hope to release the discussion paper before September.”
Bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) slide as risk aversion spreads to crypto markets
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Ether fell about 6%, the most in three weeks, and was trading at $3,188 as of 6:45 a.m. Thursday in London. Market leader Bitcoin fell about 3% to $64,260.
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