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Home Blog Page 19

Judge Certifies Class Action Securities Lawsuit Againt NVIDIA On Alleged Concealed Revenue from GPU Sales

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A U.S. federal judge in California certified a class-action securities lawsuit against NVIDIA and its CEO Jensen Huang. The suit alleges that the company concealed more than $1 billion in revenue from GPU sales to cryptocurrency miners during the 2017–2018 crypto boom, improperly booking it as standard gaming demand.

The class period covers investors who purchased NVIDIA stock between August 10, 2017, and November 15, 2018. Plaintiffs claim NVIDIA downplayed the role of crypto miners—who were snapping up GeForce gaming GPUs in massive quantities—while publicly attributing surging revenue to consumer gaming.

When mining demand collapsed in late 2018, NVIDIA issued weak guidance, and the stock dropped sharply. Key claims include: Internal documents, former employee testimony, and independent analyses suggest NVIDIA earned roughly $1.1–1.35 billion, some estimates up to $1.7 billion total crypto-related more from miners than it disclosed.

Much of this came from miners purchasing consumer-grade GeForce cards often through resellers or indirect channels rather than dedicated mining hardware at the time. NVIDIA allegedly minimized crypto exposure in earnings calls and filings, creating a misleading picture of sustainable gaming growth.

This isn’t entirely new. The original complaint dates back to 2018, and the case has been winding through the courts. The recent development is class certification, allowing affected shareholders to sue collectively. A case management conference is set for April 21, 2026.

NVIDIA has faced scrutiny over crypto disclosures before. In 2022, the SEC fined the company $5.5 million for failing to adequately disclose the impact of cryptocurrency mining on its business in earlier periods.

During the 2017–2018 boom, GPU shortages were widespread, with miners competing against gamers. NVIDIA later introduced dedicated Crypto Mining Processors (CMPs) in 2021 to separate the markets, but the lawsuit focuses on the earlier period. NVIDIA has not yet issued a detailed public rebuttal to the latest certification but the company has historically argued that it disclosed material information and that crypto demand was part of broader market trends.

Companies in volatile sectors like semiconductors often face such suits when revenue shifts with external cycles. NVIDIA shares (NVDA) fell around 7% on the news of the certification, reflecting investor sensitivity to any reminder of past crypto volatility—especially as the company is now heavily tied to AI data center demand.

This is a long-running disclosure dispute from the last major crypto bull run, not a new operational scandal. It highlights how intertwined NVIDIA’s GPU business once was with cryptocurrency mining before AI became the dominant growth driver. The case will likely drag on, with potential for settlement or further appeals.

For current NVIDIA investors, the bigger near-term drivers remain AI chip demand, competition, and export restrictions rather than this 8-year-old episode. If you’re holding NVDA or following the stock, this adds some headline risk but doesn’t appear to change the fundamental AI trajectory.

Plaintiffs seek recovery tied to the stock price drop after NVIDIA’s November 2018 revenue warning; when the company finally flagged a sharp falloff in crypto demand. The stock fell ~28.5% over two trading days at that time. Damages in securities class actions are often calculated using out-of-pocket models based on inflated share prices during the class period.

While exact figures aren’t public yet, the scale could reach hundreds of millions to over a billion in a worst-case judgment or settlement, especially with a large certified class. NVIDIA already paid a modest $5.5 million SEC fine in 2022 for inadequate crypto mining disclosures in fiscal 2018 quarters.

This private lawsuit is separate and more significant because it involves investor damages rather than just regulatory penalties. Most securities class actions settle before trial to avoid uncertainty and legal costs. NVIDIA has signaled confidence in its disclosures; noting that long-term shareholders did incredibly well despite the 2018 dip.

A settlement could still cost tens to hundreds of millions, covered partly by insurance, but it would represent a non-operating hit. Shares showed mixed or mildly negative reactions around the March 25–26, 2026 certification news (reports of ~3–7% dips in some sessions, though offset by broader market moves and upcoming GTC conference optimism).

The reaction was muted overall, reflecting that this is an old issue from nearly a decade ago. It serves as a reminder of NVIDIA’s past cyclical volatility tied to crypto. However, today’s business is overwhelmingly driven by AI/data center demand which accounted for the vast majority of recent record revenue, e.g., $62B+ in a recent quarter.

The 2017–2018 gaming and crypto overlap feels distant to current holders focused on Blackwell, CUDA ecosystem dominance, and hyperscaler spending.

 

 

Implications of David Sack Steping Down As Whitehouse AI and Crypto Czar 

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David Sacks has stepped down from his role as the White House’s AI and Crypto Czar formally Special Advisor for AI and Crypto after serving roughly 130 days.

He announced this in a Bloomberg Television interview on March 26, 2026, citing the expiration of his term as a special government employee (SGE). Federal rules limit SGEs to 130 days of work in a 12-month period. His tenure ran from the start of the Trump administration in January 2025 until late March 2026.

Transition to a New Advisory Role

Sacks is transitioning as co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). This is a federal advisory committee of industry and academic experts that provides policy recommendations to the White House on a broad range of science and technology issues.

White House officials and Sacks have described this as an expansion of his influence rather than a demotion. He will continue advising on AI and crypto matters while weighing in on wider tech policy. One senior adviser noted that Sacks will “always be his crypto and AI czar” in spirit, but the new role lets him address a broader portfolio without the SGE time constraints.

President Trump named Sacks; a venture capitalist, former PayPal executive, and PayPal Mafia member as AI & Crypto Czar in December 2024. The role focused on building a legal/regulatory framework for crypto, promoting U.S. leadership in AI and digital assets, and related policy efforts like market structure legislation like aspects of the CLARITY Act or GENIUS Act.

Sacks helped advance pro-crypto and pro-AI initiatives, including divestment of over $200 million in related holdings for ethics compliance. However, some key legislation remains unresolved in Congress as he departs the formal czar post. Crypto markets showed some dips amid uncertainty about ongoing policy momentum though Sacks’ continued advisory involvement has tempered concerns for many observers.

This move aligns with how some high-profile private-sector appointees rotate into less time-constrained advisory bodies while staying involved. Sacks retains significant influence through PCAST and his ongoing ties to the administration’s tech agenda. No successor for the specific Czar title has been prominently named; the formal special advisor role appears to have ended with his departure.

Sacks played a central role in the passage and implementation of the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act in July 2025. This landmark bill created a federal regulatory framework for USD-pegged stablecoins under Federal Reserve oversight. It aimed to bolster U.S. dollar dominance globally, enable yield-bearing stablecoins, and integrate them into traditional finance.

Sacks and the administration touted it as a foundational step toward making the U.S. the crypto capital of the world. He advanced efforts on broader market structure bills often referenced as the CLARITY Act or similar proposals, coordinating a bicameral congressional working group with leaders from Senate Banking, House Financial Services, and Agriculture Committees.

By early 2026, a Senate panel had advanced key measures, with Sacks declaring the U.S. one step closer to comprehensive clarity. While full enactment was still pending at his departure, his work laid groundwork for resolving long-standing regulatory uncertainty. As chair of the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets, Sacks oversaw a comprehensive 166-page report.

It outlined a new pro-crypto approach, including modernizing anti-money laundering rules, prioritizing rulemaking over enforcement, and rejecting a central bank digital currency (CBDC). This marked a clear break from prior administration policies. Sacks supported and helped implement the March 2025 executive order establishing a U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a broader Digital Asset Stockpile for other seized cryptocurrencies. This positioned crypto as a national strategic asset and signaled government adoption.

Sacks consistently framed his work around ending the war on crypto, fostering innovation onshore, and integrating crypto with traditional banking into a unified digital assets industry. He participated in high-profile events like the Crypto Ball and Capitol Hill press conferences alongside congressional leaders to build bipartisan momentum.

Industry observers described these as monumental wins and remarkable progress in a compressed timeframe, with Sacks credited for quickly identifying and addressing regulatory bottlenecks. Sacks’ role was advisory and focused on coordination rather than unilateral authority; many initiatives required congressional action.

Key market structure legislation remained unresolved upon his exit, leading some to note unfinished business amid industry divisions. However, his tenure accelerated a pro-crypto policy shift that boosted market sentiment and set the stage for ongoing efforts. In his Bloomberg interview announcing the transition to co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST).

Sacks’ achievements centered on delivering early regulatory clarity, stablecoin legislation, and symbolic national reserves—foundational steps toward Trump’s vision of U.S. crypto dominance—while navigating ethical constraints and short-term limits. These moves were widely seen as a net positive for the industry, even as longer-term legislation continues to evolve.

Current Global Oil Market Performances Exposed Vulnerabilities in Energy Security Guarantees

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The surge in oil prices to around $96 and beyond, with spikes to $100–$120+ for Brent amid the US-Iran conflict has triggered one of the most significant disruptions to global energy markets in recent history.

The core driver is the effective closure or severe restriction of the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries about 20% of global seaborne oil and a similar share of LNG exports from the Persian Gulf. The IEA has described this as the largest oil supply disruption on record. Gulf producers (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait) have curtailed output by 6–10+ million barrels per day due to attacks on infrastructure, storage constraints, and halted tanker traffic.

Overall global supply has faced shortfalls estimated at 8 million bpd or more in peak disruption periods. Brent crude has swung wildly—briefly nearing $120/bbl, trading above $110, then easing toward $96–$107 depending on headlines about diplomacy, potential naval escorts, or de-escalation signals.

WTI (US benchmark) has followed, often in the $90–$100 range, up roughly 40% from pre-conflict levels around $67–$70. Asia which receives ~84% of Hormuz oil has faced sharper effective price pressures. The US is less directly dependent on Hormuz imports but still sees global price transmission.

Releases from strategic petroleum reserves including IEA-coordinated actions and some rerouting via Saudi Red Sea pipelines have provided partial offsets, but not enough to fully stabilize flows. The gas market has been hit harder proportionally than oil in some regions due to fewer rerouting options and lower storage buffers.

Qatar, world’s top LNG exporter, ~20% of global supply declared force majeure after strikes on Ras Laffan facilities. Iran’s South Pars field shared with Qatar was also targeted. European and Asian LNG benchmarks have surged far more sharply—European gas up ~85–100%+, Asian LNG up over 140% in some periods since late February.

This has prompted fuel switching: Asia (Japan, South Korea, China, India, Bangladesh) is ramping up coal use, with coal prices rising ~14%. Some countries are boosting nuclear or delaying decarbonization targets. Oil-linked LNG pricing in parts of Asia adds further upward pressure. Gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel prices have climbed globally. US average gas prices have risen notably toward $3.60–$3.88/gallon nationally, higher in California, feeding into transportation and logistics costs.

Alternative Fuels: Coal and, to a lesser extent, renewables and nuclear gain relative attractiveness in power generation where gas sets marginal prices. However, prolonged high oil can indirectly support other commodities. Higher energy costs act like a tax, adding to global inflation; IMF estimates suggest every 10% oil rise can add ~0.4% to inflation and subtract ~0.15% from GDP growth.

This complicates central bank policy—delaying rate cuts—and hits energy-intensive industries, airlines, and consumers. Energy producers and related stocks have outperformed, while transport, consumer discretionary, and high-valuation sectors suffer. Markets remain highly sensitive to any resolution in Hormuz access, ceasefire progress, or further infrastructure damage.

Volatility is extreme—prices can swing 5–14% in a day on news. Analysts have revised 2026 forecasts upward, but pre-conflict expectations were for softer prices due to potential surpluses. A quick resolution could see rapid easing back toward $70s; prolonged disruption risks sustained higher prices and demand destruction.

Offsets include: US shale flexibility, OPEC+ responses though limited, strategic releases, and eventual demand slowdown from higher costs. This event has exposed vulnerabilities in global energy chokepoints and accelerated discussions on diversification, resilience, and energy security. Oil-importing regions especially Asia face the brunt, while producers elsewhere see revenue gains amid the chaos. Markets can shift fast with new developments.

Coinbase and Better Home to Launch Token-Backed Conforming Mortgages Pledged with Bitcoin or USDC

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Coinbase and Better Home & Finance (Better Mortgage) announced a partnership, to launch the first token-backed conforming mortgages in the U.S. This allows qualified borrowers to pledge Bitcoin (BTC) or USDC as collateral for their down payment without selling the crypto.

Borrowers get two linked loans from Better: A standard conforming mortgage for the home purchase; originated and serviced by Better, backed by Fannie Mae with the same underwriting standards, protections, and eligibility as traditional mortgages. A separate down payment loan collateralized by the pledged crypto.

Eligible Coinbase users transfer BTC or USDC into a custodial account on Coinbase Prime; Better maintains custody during the loan term. The crypto is held as collateral but not sold, helping avoid immediate capital gains taxes though tax implications depend on individual circumstances and should be reviewed with a professional. Retain ownership and potential upside of your crypto holdings.

No margin calls mentioned in the announcements. Crypto is returned once the down payment loan is repaid typically aligned with the mortgage payoff. Borrowers must qualify for a mortgage with Better. Only BTC and USDC are supported initially. The product is expected to roll out in the next few months.

Coinbase One members may receive lender credits from Better covering up to 1% of the loan amount, capped at $10,000 toward closing costs. This marks a notable step in bridging crypto and traditional finance:It’s the first time Fannie Mae accepts crypto-backed mortgages in this conforming structure.

It targets the millions of Americans holding digital assets who may lack liquid cash for a down payment. Better; an AI-native mortgage lender handles origination and servicing; Coinbase powers the crypto custody and pledges. Coinbase is not involved in mortgage underwriting or advice. The program aims to expand homeownership access while keeping crypto positions intact.

Details like exact rates, LTV ratios for the crypto collateral, or full risk disclosures will come with the rollout—interested parties should check Better’s site or consult professionals for personalized advice. This fits broader trends of institutional integration of crypto into everyday finance, especially with growing mainstream acceptance.

Pledging crypto (BTC or USDC) as collateral for a down payment loan in the Coinbase + Better Mortgage program generally does not trigger any immediate U.S. federal income tax event. This is the core tax advantage highlighted in the March 26, 2026 announcement: you avoid selling your crypto, so you sidestep realizing capital gains (or losses) at the time of the pledge.

Why Pledging Is Not Taxable

Under IRS rules, digital assets like Bitcoin and USDC are treated as property. Taxable events occur only on a sale or exchange (disposition) where you transfer ownership in a way that realizes gain or loss.

Pledging the crypto: You transfer it to a Coinbase Prime custodial account as collateral, but you retain beneficial ownership. It’s analogous to using stocks or real estate as collateral for a loan—no disposition occurs, so no capital gains tax.

Receiving the loan proceeds: This is borrowed money (a liability), not taxable income. You’re not cashing out. Repaying the down payment loan ? When you pay it off (principal + interest), your crypto is returned to you. Still no taxable event. Your original cost basis and holding period carry over unchanged.

This structure lets you keep your crypto position intact including any future upside while using it to qualify for the Fannie Mae–backed conforming mortgage.

The only way the crypto is at risk is a 60-day payment delinquency on the down payment loan; market volatility alone never triggers liquidation, unlike typical crypto margin loans. If liquidated to cover the debt, the IRS treats this as a sale at the fair market value on the date of liquidation. You would then owe capital gains tax (short-term or long-term, depending on your holding period) on the difference between that value and your original cost basis.

Interest paid on the down payment loan. This is a separate personal loan (not part of the primary mortgage). Interest is generally not deductible for federal tax purposes because it doesn’t qualify as qualified residence interest under mortgage rules. Future sale of the returned crypto. When you eventually sell (after getting it back), you calculate gain/loss using your original cost basis and holding period.

The pledge period doesn’t reset anything. Other rare scenarios If you receive any staking rewards or income while the crypto is pledged (not applicable here, as it’s in custody and not being staked). State or local taxes, foreign tax rules, or alternative minimum tax could apply differently.

Any forgiveness of the loan highly unlikely could create cancellation-of-debt income. The official announcements explicitly state: “Tax treatment of crypto pledges can vary. Users are responsible for their own tax reporting and should consult independent tax advisors.” This is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules are based on current IRS principles for property and can evolve.

Your personal situation matters. The product is brand new, so specific IRS guidance tailored to it doesn’t exist yet—treatment follows general crypto-as-property rules. If you’re considering this mortgage, review the full loan documents from Better and talk to a qualified tax professional or CPA familiar with digital assets before proceeding.

Jerome Powell Notes that Federal Reserve Has No Plans for a Central Bank Digital Currency

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The Federal Reserve has explicitly stated it has no plans to issue or develop a central bank digital currency (CBDC), often referred to as a digital dollar. This position aligns with longstanding caution from the Fed, reinforced in 2025–2026 under Chair Jerome Powell.

The Fed’s 2022 discussion paper Money and Payments explored potential benefits and risks of a U.S. CBDC but took no position on whether to pursue one. It emphasized that any issuance would require clear support from the executive branch and Congress ideally via specific authorizing legislation. No such authorization has been granted.

In February 2025, Powell directly affirmed during congressional testimony that the Fed would not develop a CBDC while he leads the institution. He has repeatedly described the idea as unnecessary given the existing efficient U.S. payments system.

Recent reaffirmations from Fed officials, including references to statements by Randall Guynn, confirm there are currently no plans to create or issue one. This sets the U.S. apart from many other jurisdictions actively researching or piloting CBDCs.

An January 2025 executive order prohibited federal agencies from undertaking actions to establish, issue, or promote a CBDC and directed termination of related initiatives. Multiple bills aim to restrict or ban Fed issuance of a retail CBDC, with provisions incorporated into defense and other legislation. These reflect concerns over privacy, surveillance risks, financial stability, and disintermediation of banks.

The Fed has conducted technical research and pilots for learning purposes, but these do not indicate active development toward deployment. Projects like FedNow are instant payment services, not CBDCs. In short, while the Fed continues to monitor digital innovation and payments evolution including private stablecoins, which saw regulatory progress via the 2025 GENIUS Act, a government-issued retail CBDC is not on the agenda.

Any future shift would face significant legal, political, and practical hurdles requiring explicit congressional approval. This stance prioritizes the strengths of the current dollar system—cash, bank deposits, and private-sector innovations—over introducing a new central-bank liability with potential downsides for privacy and banking stability.

Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs)—digital versions of fiat money issued directly by a central bank—raise significant privacy concerns because they shift from cash-like anonymity or intermediated bank records to systems where transaction data could be centralized, traceable, and potentially accessible to governments.

While privacy risks depend heavily on design, critics argue that even “privacy-protected” CBDCs fall short of cash and could enable unprecedented financial surveillance. A retail CBDC could create a direct government ledger of every transaction, eliminating the “air gap” provided by private banks or cash.

Unlike physical cash, where no one tracks who spends a $100 bill, a CBDC might require the central bank to maintain records for anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism (CFT) compliance. This enables real-time visibility into individuals’ spending, savings, and behavior. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell noted in 2019 that a transparent CBDC could conceivably require the Federal Reserve to keep a running record of all payment data… a stark difference from cash and raises issues related to data privacy.

ECB President Christine Lagarde has similarly acknowledged that a digital euro would not offer “complete anonymity as there is with cash. In contrast to today’s bank deposits; protected somewhat by the third-party doctrine and requiring warrants or subpoenas for broad access, a CBDC stores data directly with the government by default, bypassing intermediaries and enabling keystroke surveillance.

Data Collection, Storage, and Misuse

CBDCs generate vast amounts of personally identifiable information (PII) and transaction data. Risks include: Data leaks or breaches: Centralized repositories become prime targets for cyberattacks, phishing, or malware. Governments or insiders could misuse data for profiling, discrimination, or non-financial purposes.

Cross-border flows: Varying privacy laws could expose data internationally. IMF analysis highlights that poor design leads to users losing control over who accesses their data and how it is used, potentially undermining trust in central bank money. CBDCs are often designed as programmable money—tokens that can expire, carry spending restrictions, or be monitored for compliance.

This goes beyond privacy to enable targeted restrictions, amplifying surveillance concerns. Critics warn this could evolve into de facto social or political controls. A single point of failure heightens risks of hacks that expose all users’ data at once, unlike fragmented private systems. Even anonymized designs may allow re-identification through data aggregation.

These risks are not hypothetical: surveys consistently rank privacy as a top public concern, with many viewing CBDCs as a step toward a surveillance state. Analyses of global trials show no CBDC matches cash-level privacy. Many require digital ID linkage, biometric ties, or full traceability, with data shared for welfare, tax, or AML purposes.

Privacy is not inevitable doom—design choices matter. Proponents including some central banks and recent research advocate: Privacy-by-Design and Privacy-Enhancing Technologies (PETs): Zero-knowledge proofs (ZKPs) allow verification (e.g., “this transaction is valid and the user has funds”) without revealing identities or details. Other tools include homomorphic encryption, differential privacy, and pseudonymity.

Private banks or fintechs handle customer identities and wallets; the central bank sees only aggregated or pseudonymous data. Tiered anonymity is common. Strict access rules, data minimization, user consent, audits, and separation of regulatory vs. operational functions within central banks.

A March 2026 study by UK researchers proposes a public blockchain-based retail CBDC using ZKPs and intermediaries to minimize central bank access to PII, arguing risks are real but solvable with governance. IMF and World Economic Forum perspectives note that well-designed CBDCs could even improve privacy over some private digital payments if PETs and laws are robust.

CBDC privacy risks are substantial and multifaceted, primarily stemming from centralization, traceability, and programmability—features that distinguish them from cash or even current digital banking. While cryptographic and legal mitigations exist and are actively researched, many experts and lawmakers view the potential for surveillance as outweighing benefits in privacy-sensitive jurisdictions like the US.

Any future CBDC would require extraordinary safeguards to avoid becoming a disaster for privacy, as some analyses have warned. Ongoing global pilots and 2026 research continue to test these trade-offs, but the debate underscores why caution prevails in many places.