New HBO Documentary Hints at Identity of Bitcoin Inventor, Crypto Pulls Back Amid Elevated US Inflation Numbers

New HBO Documentary Suggests Peter Todd is Bitcoin’s Founder

An HBO documentary, “Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery,” released Tuesday hints that early Bitcoin developer Peter Todd is the cryptocurrency’s founder and man behind the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. In a clip late in the documentary, Todd denied he is the founder of Bitcoin and continued to deny it in a subsequent interview with Coindesk and other media outlets.

The film provided minimal concrete evidence that Todd created Bitcoin, but focused instead on his technical skills, his love of cryptography, and his relationship with Adam Back, the Blockstream CEO and investor of Hashcash. “Money Electric” director Cullen Hoback also pointed to a 2010 forum post from Satoshi Nakamoto in which Todd responded, arguing that Todd had forgotten to switch his accounts and his post was a continuation of Satoshi’s original post.

“This is going to be very funny when you put this into the documentary and a bunch of bitcoiners watch it,” Todd said in the documentary clip while standing alongside Back. “I suspect a lot of them will be very happy if you go this route because it’s yet another example of journalists really missing the point in a way that’s very funny.”

This is not the first time Hoback has made a documentary film about trying to uncover the identity of a secretive figure. For his 2021 HBO documentary “Q: Into the Storm,” Hoback spent three years attempting to find the creator of Qanon.

Crypto.com Sues SEC After Receiving Wells Notice

Crypto.com has officially sued the SEC after the company received a Wells notice from the regulatory agency, which typically precedes enforcement actions. The platform said the SEC’s continued regulatory enforcement against crypto companies forced them into taking legal action.

According to Crypto.com, the SEC is unjustly expanding its jurisdiction over digital assets by labeling most cryptocurrencies as securities. The lawsuit is part of a broader industry pushback against the SEC’s regulatory approach, which many crypto companies claim is outdated and unsuitable for digital assets.

The platform is far from the first to take such legal action; Coinbase and Consensys have also previously sued the SEC, similarly challenging the agency’s stance on categorizing cryptocurrencies as securities. The SEC has reiterated the need for crypto exchanges to register with the agency, while firms argue that current regulations are impractical for the digital asset sector.

After Positive Jobs Report, Bitcoin Stalls Out Amid Sticky Inflation Data

Bitcoin’s price reached roughly $64,000 on Monday following the release of strong US jobs data last week, with positive expectations for the US economy boosting investor sentiment. The rebound started after the Federal Reserve released its monthly jobs report on Friday, showing 254,000 jobs added in September, significantly surpassing the forecast of 150,000 from Dow Jones.

Memecoins additionally saw significant gains over the weekend as growing social sentiment and increased risk-taking among crypto traders fueled the rally. Conversations and posts regarding a potential “memecoin supercycle,” which suggests that meme tokens might drive the next crypto bull run, spread across social media platform X.

But the price of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies pulled back this week. On Thursday, the US Department of Labor announced that the Consumer Price Index, a key inflation measure, rose slightly more than expected in September, checking in at 2.4% year-over year. That was a 0.2% increase from the previous month and likely decreases the chance of another jumbo 50 basis-point rate cut at the next Federal Reserve meeting.

US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Report Nearly $19 Million in Net Outflows

On Tuesday, US spot bitcoin ETFs reported $18.66 million in net outflows, ending a brief two-day streak of positive inflows. Fidelity’s FBTC saw the largest outflows of the day, with $48.82 million exiting the fund. While Grayscale’s GBTC, the second-largest spot bitcoin ETF by net assets, also experienced outflows of $9.41 million.

Only BlackRock’s IBIT, the largest spot bitcoin ETF, registered inflows, with $39.57 million flowing in. The other nine bitcoin ETFs saw no movement in either direction. US spot ethereum ETFs saw $8.19 million in outflows after reporting no activity on Monday. Bitwise’s ETHW led the ether ETF took the lead with the outflows, with $4.54 million leaving the fund.

Overall, spot bitcoin ETFs have seen more positive performance since launch in comparison to their Ethereum counterparts thus far. Some industry commentators have chalked this up to the fact that bitcoin is seen by many as a more accessible entry point to the space, compared to the more tech-focused Ethereum network.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top