Miami Tech Week took place last week in the South Florida city as part of April’s Tech Month programming, which also included NFT Miami and the Bitcoin 2022 conference earlier in the month. Tech Week kicked off with the eMerge Americas conference and the myriad of panel discussions scheduled throughout the city that followed.
Cointelegraph gathered some key insights from thought leaders who participated, and the two main themes are Miami as a hot spot for crypto folks, and crypto as a disruptor of the investment landscape.
eMerge Americas is a venture-backed organization with a mission to position Miami as the tech hub of North and South America. Its signature event since 2014 has been the annual tech conference, which features a startup pitch competition. After a two-year hiatus, it returned to the Miami Beach Convention Center on April 18-19 with web3, crypto and NFT content. The crypto trading platform Blockchain.com was the 2022 title sponsor.
Related: Crypto startup Blockchain.com planning 2022 IPO
Peter Smith, Blockchain.com’s chief executive officer and co-founder, sat on an eMerge panel to discuss the state of the crypto market. Afterwards he expanded on his bullish outlook when he told CNBC that he expects “crypto assets to rebound much faster than tech stocks and growth stocks” amid a current downtown in the market.
Blockchain.com claims that it is the first crypto company to move its headquarters to Miami. Smith even tweeted out some reasons for that move on Thursday. His main motive was a “vibe” of genuine love of crypto from Miami’s residents.
Reason 1: #Miami loves #Crypto. Not just Mayor @FrancisSuarez and local leadership, but actual people in Miami. Walking around the city, you find more people than anywhere else who are genuinely into building the next financial system, vs the last one (NYC)
— Peter Smith (@OneMorePeter) April 21, 2022
Another eMerge speaker was Melinda Delis, Director of Business Development at Gemini. During her panel about “Business Applications for Emerging Technologies” like NFTs, she revealed her clients’ main concerns when it comes to the Metaverse: “Custody. For these businesses to meet the standards of their internal risk and compliance teams, they need to check what is the security of the custodian, what are the controls around it, and how is it regulated.”
Related: Crypto seen as the ‘future of money’ in inflation-mired countries
Regulation is a topic that Ripple’s chief executive officer, Brad Garlinghouse, had strong opinions on. During a panel programming at the Faena Forum Miami Beach on Friday, Garlinghouse mentioned on stage that Ripple (XRP) is currently in a lawsuit with Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, which alleges that Ripple conducted an illegal securities offering through sales of XRP. Ripple argues XRP should be treated as a virtual currency rather than as a stock.
Garlinghouse advised audience members to “not incorporate a company in the U.S.” because the country “has been and continues to fall behind in terms of regulatory clarity. And investors don’t want to put money into uncertainty.” He even tweeted about his experience later that day.
The SEC seems perfectly content to let the US fall further behind – all in the name of protecting their own jurisdiction at the expense of US citizens. Politics over policy is good for no one. We need a clear regulatory framework now.
— Brad Garlinghouse (@bgarlinghouse) April 22, 2022
Sitting next to Garlinghouse was Ivan Soto-Wright, co-founder and chief executive officer of MoonPay, the Miami-based crypto payment platform. When the moderator, Coinbase’s head of business operations and strategy Marc Bhargava, asked about the future of NFTs, Soto-Wright stated that “NFTs have now overtaken crypto.”
He pointed to companies like Yuga Labs and CryptoPunks that have been able to monetize their brand value by “turning its intellectual property into a number on the income statement.” The next big wave of…
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