Comment history

banker says...

Hypothetical/rhetorical question: "If a person is arrested for fraud in a capacity of employment, and someone else pays restitution so that he avoids jail, how does one pass the requirements of AML/KYC and fiduciary requirements and responsibilities?". Just asking.

banker says...

It's quite easy to hack an ICO done by novices. Most ICO hacks come from hacking the ICO website. Here is the way most of them have happened.

Lets suppose that you say that your ICO will happen on February 1, at 9 AM. You announce this on your website. Your ICO website doesn't handle any of the money. It is just a notice board. So folks go cheap on this. The way that you participate in an ICO is that they give you their wallet address, you use that in your wallet to send them Bitcoin or Ether and a smart contract puts their crypto-currency into your wallet.

But the wallet information/address is on a cheap website. A wallet address looks something like this: 2NfcaSREac5XrYQLkNQtBa8WBpemYpqEiwUFTR7

It is just a jumble of numbers and letters. So what these hackers do, is that they have plenty of time to hack into the website. Most website administrators still had default user names and passwords as admin, admin or root, password. They hack into the website and change the wallet address to one of their own. Nobody notices until they realise that there this no money coming into their website, and people who send money aren't getting their coins. It is ingenious, simple and clever. An ICO lost $7 million dollars in the first 10 minutes of their ICO.

I think though, that BISX wants to be a secondary market. After you buy your crypto-currency and you want to cash out, you put it for sale on BISX and someone will buy it. BISX doesn't actually hold the crypto. They just connect buyers and seller.

Here is the deal. Most cryptos from ICOs rise in price after the ICO. They don't go down until the company misses its first milestone. So the early bird gets the worm. I have made money on crypto that I bought soon after the ICO, and as soon as I hit my numbers -- a 10% increase in my investment, I sell it. Sure it may have gone up more and I left money on the table, but some of them have gone up by more and a couple of weeks later they are worthless.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 24 January 2018, 5:41 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

NOTE: I have been messaged through the Tribune from more than a handful of people, asking me for help in how to make money from crypto-currency. They have given me phone numbers, email addresses etc.

Unfortunately, I cannot respond or help, due to my identity management. My firm manages other peoples money, and those high net worth individuals may have political, religious, societal beliefs that are quite different to mine, and if by chance they associate my postings with the firm that I work for, it could damage the firm and my job. Hence I cannot help you. I post on this site through a foreign proxy, even when I was in Nassau, so that I could not be possibly identified by IP address.

What I would suggest, is that I know that there are people using crypto in Nassau. I would suggest a public meet-up of interested people. It could be an informal thing like on the patio at Starbucks or something. Investing in crypto is not a zero sum game, where for every winner there is a loser, so there is no harm in helping others to make money at this game. It requires a keen business mind to read whitepapers of various crypto offerings and make business decisions as to whether they are a viable business or not. Google is your friend, and you should join crypto forums where savvy folk discuss crypto investing.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 24 January 2018, 8:55 a.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

I think that you were right as of yesterday, but as of today, my Bloomberg terminal says that they softened their stance if people followed the new rules (be a national and AML/KYC) tied to a bank account.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 5:31 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

The Canadians just issued a new travel advisory to the Bahamas yesterday -- the usual story -- crime.

We can't wait for a deus ex machina to save us.

We have to climb out of the hole that we are in.

The first way is to rehabilitate the name Bahamas. Not everyone thinks that we are a sh*thole country, to quote Trump. If one can make money legitimately in crypto, it doesn't matter whether it is the Bahamas or Haiti. If there is money to be made legally, they will find us.

You never know what the thin edge of the wedge is to salvation. It een Jeezus beatin' an' bible thumpin'. Quite frankly there are very few other choices. (And I made a hell of a pile of money on crypto currency myself, so if I can do it, anybody with a computer can.)

So, bottom line we gatta try this. If we become a crypto center, hallelujah -- we can all buy an ark and save ourselves when the climate-change floods come -- except for the PLP. They deserve to be swallowed up by the ocean and their drowned, rotting carcasses consumed and turned into crab crap -- which is ironic and fitting.

As for trying to tax it, they don't understand it. Just say blockchain and watch their eyes glaze over. Keith has to sneak this one in before someone in the government sees a potential tax grab. I like how Minnis lets his ministers go (not like Crisco Butt who let his minister rob the country blind), but how to create instead of destroy. Sometimes I think that the lights een on inside when Minnis talks, but generally this could work out. It is the first tangible thing that I see that could save us.

There is a huge international Crypto conference coming up at Baha Mar very soon. Don't have the dates. A biggie. Big names. Techies in Crypto. All the Biggies. Much about Crypto. If nobody gets killed or robbed, or notices the cheap, shoddy Chinese construction in the hotel rooms, once again we could be on a renaissance.

It is something completely different like this that can save us. We can't save ourselves with the tings dat we gat.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 5:26 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

Actually, let me correct you. South Korea has banned anonymous crypto-trading because of AML/KYC concerns. They also banned foreigners from trading on their domestic exchanges -- for fear that North Korea is getting money and evading sanctions. To trade crypto in South Korea, you have to be a South Korean national and you have to tie your crypto wallet to a bank account so they know who you are.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 3:56 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

crypto-tokens is what they are called by insiders.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 1:01 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

Exactly. And to your point, Senator Kwasi Thompson wants to make Grand Bahama Tech Hub with blockchain startups. Crypto is just getting started, and if that happens, there is hope again -- until the sea swallows up the Bahamas when they rise due to global warming.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 12:59 p.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

Two things:

First an explainer. They will not be denominated local shares in Crypto-currency. They will be listing the actual coins -- crypto-currency -- domestic and international. These coins will be backed by tokenized businesses, services, quanta, utility or other value.They will not be exchanging crypto-currency for actual money. They will be listing crypto for buyers and sellers, just like a stock market, except in crypto. They just facilitate the transaction.

1) Being registered with the Securities and exchange commission and having Bahamas in the name, gives it a leg up over some anonymous exchange in Singapore that may or may not be legit. Here you have a physical address where you can go for redress. This will be huge for trust issues. And to be successful, they will have to be choosy as to who they list, which I am sure they have considered, due to possible reputational damage. They could capture a significant share of utility crypto from the American marketplace which is not allowed to deal in equity crypto.

2) It empowers the hell out of Bahamians economically. It frees them from relying solely on the banks for American dollars. And having cryptocurrency with strongAML/ KYC (these are called whitelisted cryptos), there won't be the reputational damage that the web shops are doing.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 10:36 a.m. Suggest removal

banker says...

You know what ?? I am in -- not for me, but for my family. Here is the deal. They already said that there would be a government sanctioned crypto currency called Conch Coin. So my family in the Bahamas (I am already earning a hard currency), uses Bahamian dollars to buy some of this coin. All you need is a computer. They will give you instructions on how to set up a wallet. It is easy. I already have a few wallets for different types of crypto currency. I wouldn't be surprised if Conch Coin didn't give you a wallet as a browser extension. So you pay for your Conch Coin at the bank or at an office, or by mail, or by credit card locally online. You get your Conch Coin in your wallet on the computer.

The interesting thing about crypto-currencies is that they go up in price if they are well run. I would expect ConchCoin to work well, because it is probably the first crypto-currency that is non-fiat(Barbados has a digital dollar already) in the Caribbean Basin. So you have a bunch of Conch Coin in your wallet. What you can do, is immediately put your Conch Coin for sale on any one of the 180+ international crypto exchanges and get American Dollars back and no Central Bank fees. Of course you will have to go through the AML/KYC procedure like sending a scan of your passport etc, and you will need a paypal account, but it is a wonderful way for Bahamians to participate in the global economy.

This will be fabulous for my family who don't have to buy American dollars and paying the Central Bank load.

The other exciting part for me, is that even if I invest in Bahamian dollars, if Conch Coin is successful, I could make 10% in a couple of months in Bahamian dollars just because of the rise in value of Conch Coin. Try making that sort of money with the banks.

This may be a way for BISX to be saved. As for platform concerns expressed above, there are 3rd party custodians. They could list the crypto like a stock and have the custodian handle the back end.

Keith has been trying to make BISX into something. He has tried almost everything. He has failed at everything. BISX is a joke. The Securities and Exchange Commission is a bigger joke. However if Keith manages to internationalise BISX with Crypto and it has the name of Bahamas behind it, by gawd he just might do it.

BISX or not, crypto is the way to go and I am all in.

On BISX to 'jump in' oncryptocurrency IPOs

Posted 23 January 2018, 9:44 a.m. Suggest removal