Blockchain
Ankr adds Eth2 futures (fETH) to its staking system

Ankr, a web3 infrastructure platform supporting more than 40 blockchain protocols for staking or developing purposes, today announced in addition to their aETH token, it has now added a second synthetic liquid Eth2 asset to Ankr Staking (fETH (Eth2 futures).
ETH stakers in Ankr Staking can now choose between the aETH and fETH liquid assets to redeem. In the end, both assets represent staked ETH + rewards, but in a slightly different way.
fETH
Where aETH represents the user’s staked ETH plus future rewards, so as time passes, 1 aETH becomes increasingly more valuable versus 1 ETH, fETH remains pegged at a 1:1 ratio with ETH.
Instead of the rewards being added to the token value, holders of fETH have their total fETH increase on a daily basis, once they hold their own fETH tokens in their own wallet.
Summary
- aETH is the reward bearing bond asset for liquid Eth2 staking
- fETH is the futures asset for liquid Eth2 staking
How It Works
When a user receives their fETH, they are allocated a percentage of the total supply according to how much they staked. It is important to understand that it’s expressed as a percentage rather than a fixed amount.
Every day, Ankr Staking receives ETH rewards into the fETH Eth2 staking pool and this is used to increase the total supply of fETH by the amount received.
By increasing the total supply, all fETH holders then have their total token allocation increased automatically because they hold a percentage (and because the total went up, so does the amount they hold).
For Example:
- The total pool size is 9,900 ETH which means the total supply of fETH is also 9,900.
- Joe stakes 100 ETH (pushing the total supply of fETH to 10,000) and receives a 1% allocation, which gives him an initial balance of 100 fETH.
- Rebase runs and 100 ETH rewards are added to the pool which pushes the total supply of fETH to 10,100.
- Because Joe holds a 1% allocation, the amount of fETH in his wallet will increase to 101 fETH automatically.
(Note these numbers are just to illustrate the mechanics and aren’t realistic amounts).
How to get fETH?
Users can stake their ETH as normal and then once it has been sent to the contract, users can choose whether to redeem aETH or fETH. Users can then claim whichever one they choose.
When connected to Ankr Staking, users can see their fETH balance alongside their other balances now:
Source: https://www.cryptoninjas.net/2021/02/22/ankr-adds-eth2-futures-feth-to-its-staking-system/
Blockchain
Déjà vu: Ethereum’s First Month of CME Futures Overwhelmingly Bearish


Futures contracts allow institutional investors to hedge against future price movements of an asset with the possibility of shorting them. Just like with Bitcoin, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange launched its products when Ethereum was trading on its way to an all-time high.
It is unsurprising then that the first month of trading futures has been bearish as the asset’s price has retraced heavily and those shorting it on CME would have been correct to do so.
First month of CME trading for $eth ethereum pic.twitter.com/7xPO0Z4588
— frxresearch (@frxresearch) February 28, 2021
Déjà vu For Crypto Futures
CME launched its Ether futures on Feb. 8, and at the time the asset was trading at around $1,600. As reported by CryptoPotato at the time, a bearish reaction was expected.
Ethereum prices hit an all-time high of $2,050 on Feb. 21, but have corrected by 30% since then to today’s prices of around $1,450 – 10% lower than when the futures were launched.
ETH has underperformed BTC since the CME futures launch but a similar situation occurred with BTC, which underperformed ETH after its CME futures launch.
For #CME notes:
8 hours before CME’s first ETH 26 February 2021 expiration at 1600 UTC,
– Exchanges’ Feb futures expired at 0800 UTC
– Notable options expiry
– CME front month hit a -10% price limit, price reversed instantly and dumped at CME expiry
CME Feb closed -14.23%
— NeoButane (@NeoButane) February 26, 2021
When Bitcoin futures were first launched in December 2017, the asset hit an all-time high a week or so later then pulled back heavily resulting in a similar effect on futures markets. Exactly the same has happened with Ethereum a little over three years later.
Of course, BTC has recovered and entered a new bull market and the same will happen with Ethereum regardless of how deep this correction goes.
In terms of volumes, the CME is reporting its highest ever day as Feb. 23 with 2,092 contracts traded. That volume has slumped to around 749 contracts on Feb. 26.
Longer-term contracts are likely to be bullish as the rollout of ETH 2.0 and the growth of staking opportunities is likely to push ETH prices to new highs whilst alleviating those epic transaction cost issues.
Ethereum Price Outlook
Currently, Ethereum has gained 4% on the day but has declined almost 30% since its peak last weekend. The asset fell to a monthly low of $1,300 on Feb. 28 but has since recovered a little to trade back over $1,400 again at the time of press.
There is strong support at current levels so ETH needs to remain above it to maintain the current momentum. A fall below could see ETH settle at just over $1,200 but a sustained move higher would need to see resistance at $1,600 broken again.
PrimeXBT Special Offer: Use this link to register & enter CRYPTOPOTATO35 code to get 35% free bonus on any deposit up to 1 BTC.
Blockchain
Kraken Daily Market Report for February 28 2021

Overview
- Total spot trading volume at $1.82 billion, down from the 30-day average of $2.06 billion.
- Total futures notional at $594.6 million.
- The top five traded coins were, respectively, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Cardano, Tether, and Polkadot.
- Most coins had losses, but Storj ended +1.9% over USD.
February 28, 2021 $1.82B traded across all markets today Crypto, EUR, USD, JPY, CAD, GBP, CHF, AUD |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
XBT $44187. ↓4.0% $675.3M |
ETH $1337.0 ↓8.0% $357.2M |
ADA $1.2216 ↓7.1% $266.9M |
USDT $1.0003 ↓0.06% $159.7M |
DOT $30.816 ↓7.7% $76.2M |
USDC $1.0000 ↑0.0% $26.0M |
LTC $158.32 ↓7.7% $24.1M |
XRP $0.4102 ↓5.8% $20.9M |
LINK $23.667 ↓9.6% $19.5M |
KSM $197.06 ↓14% $12.2M |
XLM $0.3923 ↓10% $11.9M |
XDG $0.0467 ↓6.5% $11.1M |
BCH $445.77 ↓7.7% $9.05M |
FLOW $20.565 ↓0.04% $8.9M |
ALGO $0.9922 ↓9.4% $8.41M |
GRT $1.4982 ↓11% $6.79M |
UNI $21.239 ↓9.5% $6.4M |
XMR $209.91 ↑0.2% $6.22M |
XTZ $3.2894 ↓9.4% $5.84M |
DAI $1.0014 ↓0.0% $5.46M |
ATOM $17.059 ↓10% $5.25M |
AAVE $309.75 ↓6.8% $5.13M |
DASH $190.75 ↓9.4% $3.95M |
FIL $35.897 ↓5.2% $3.37M |
YFI $28850. ↓8.1% $3.26M |
EOS $3.3847 ↓7.7% $2.85M |
TRX $0.0438 ↓5.6% $2.79M |
ZEC $112.46 ↓6.1% $2.5M |
SNX $16.848 ↓10% $2.34M |
QTUM $4.7348 ↓10% $2.19M |
ICX $1.3552 ↓11% $1.9M |
BAT $0.4747 ↓7.6% $1.87M |
SC $0.0090 ↓9.8% $1.74M |
NANO $4.8697 ↓5.1% $1.6M |
COMP $365.42 ↓8.5% $1.42M |
CRV $1.6987 ↓13% $1.4M |
WAVES $8.6036 ↓10% $1.37M |
STORJ $0.6465 ↑1.9% $1.34M |
OMG $4.0980 ↓8.4% $1.16M |
OXT $0.4319 ↓7.4% $1.0M |
ETC $10.078 ↓9.0% $866K |
MANA $0.2276 ↓9.7% $845K |
KAVA $3.1622 ↓14% $787K |
LSK $2.6988 ↓12% $765K |
KNC $1.5027 ↓11% $602K |
ANT $3.6684 ↓13% $590K |
GNO $117.07 ↓8.3% $533K |
PAXG $1741.7 ↓0.3% $498K |
KEEP $0.2902 ↓7.5% $457K |
REP $29.205 ↓7.2% $413K |
BAL $32.795 ↓11% $281K |
MLN $35.873 ↓1.3% $217K |
REPV2 $24.055 ↓11% $115K |
TBTC $47281. ↓1.8% $51.9K |
#####################. Trading Volume by Asset. ##########################################
Trading Volume by Asset
The figures below break down the trading volume of the largest, mid-size, and smallest assets. Cryptos are in purple, fiats are in blue. For each asset, the chart contains the daily trading volume in USD, and the percentage of the total trading volume. The percentages for fiats and cryptos are treated separately, so that they both add up to 100%.
Figure 1: Largest trading assets: trading volume (measured in USD) and its percentage of the total trading volume (February 28 2021)
Figure 2: Mid-size trading assets: (measured in USD) (February 28 2021)
Figure 3: Smallest trading assets: (measured in USD) (February 28 2021)
#####################. Spread %. ##########################################
Spread %
Spread percentage is the width of the bid/ask spread divided by the bid/ask midpoint. The values are generated by taking the median spread percentage over each minute, then the average of the medians over the day.
Figure 4: Average spread % by pair (February 28 2021)
.
#########. Returns and Volume ############################################
Returns and Volume
Figure 5: Returns of the four highest volume pairs (February 28 2021)
Figure 6: Volume of the major currencies and an average line that fits the data to a sinusoidal curve to show the daily volume highs and lows (February 28 2021)
###########. Daily Returns. #################################################
Daily Returns %
Figure 7: Returns over USD and XBT. Relative volume and return size is indicated by the size of the font. (February 28 2021)
###########. Disclaimer #################################################
The values generated in this report are from public market data distributed from Kraken WebSockets api. The total volumes and returns are calculated over the reporting day using UTC time.
Source: https://blog.kraken.com/post/8078/kraken-daily-market-report-for-february-28-2021/
Blockchain
Crypto Exchange Mistakenly Sold Bitcoin for $6,000: Now Requests Users To Return It


What started out as a normal trading day for some PDAX customers led to a favorable turn of fortune, or so it seemed. Their euphoria may have been short-lived by a harsh reality check as the Philippine-based exchange prepares to take legal actions.
Philippine Digital Asset Exchange (PDAX) suffered a flaw that led to bitcoin trading 88% below its actual price. The exchange reported that a surge in trading activity was the cause. At the time, bitcoin was trading north of $50k, but traders were able to scoop some for $6k.
Although PDAX halted operations to fix the glitch, it was a bit too late by then. Some users capitalized on the loophole and withdrew bitcoins out of the exchange.
To avert the massive loss, PDAX has asked traders to return its bitcoin or risk facing legal proceedings. Many users claim to have received messages to this effect.
It remains unclear how the legal proceedings will play for PDAX, with users rightly pointing out that traders’ actions are within the agreed terms and conditions.
A #Cryptocurrency exchange glitch at PDAX in Southeast Asia allowed crypto traders to buy Bitcoin for $6,100 & were able to withdraw the discounted BTC. They may face legal action unless they return it. But PDAX’s terms and conditions say orders are “final and irreversible.”
— Luke D. (@lukedalu) February 25, 2021
Bitcoin Whale Responsible For Glitch?
Large volume transactions have become the order of the day as bitcoin whales step up activity. Their mass transactions often indicate strong bullish signals unless they get hooked while at it.
Reports surfacing on social media led to strong suggestions that the entire fiasco occurred due to an error by a bitcoin whale. who allegedly sold 316,000 BTC for PHP 300k (about $6100) instead of the actual price of PHP 2.3 million ($47,000). This prompted PDAX to cease trading activity and temporarily shut out users.
Users Outraged By Inability To Access Accounts
PDAX’s attempt to control the situation turned out to be counterproductive as it sparked outrage from many users on social media. The downtime, which lasted for 36 hours, left customers furious as they could not access their accounts.
They expressed frustration due to missed trading opportunities and accrued losses from not being able to close positions.
Dear Pdax, until now accounts cannot be accessed. Multiple promised broken. Aside from the bitcoin issue, our money is trapped in your platform. @ANCALERTS @pdaxph @BangkoSentral https://t.co/b5aJemxDIS
— Caldero y Realonda vda de Dolomite (@mikel_pangan) February 22, 2021
PDAX Clears The Air
PDAX eventually released a comprehensive report addressing the issue. It claimed that an “isolated unfunded order” infiltrated its system and affected the account of its users. It explained further that it had tracked and rectified the glitch and was in the process of fully restoring users’ accounts.
Speaking in a press conference, PDAX CEO Nichel Gaba said:
“It’s very understandable that a lot of users will feel upset they were able to buy what they thought an order was there for Bitcoin at very low prices. But unfortunately, the underlying Bitcoins were never in the possession of the exchange, so there’s never really anything there to be bought or sold, unfortunately.”
The BSP-licensed exchanged assured users that it will continue addressing their concerns and rendering support where necessary.
PrimeXBT Special Offer: Use this link to register & enter CRYPTOPOTATO35 code to get 35% free bonus on any deposit up to 1 BTC.
-
Blockchain3 days ago
Gemini collaborates with The Giving Block and others, adds donations option
-
Blockchain1 week ago
Ripple now registered as a Wyoming business
-
Blockchain6 days ago
Peter Schiff Now Discusses Bitcoin More Often Than His Beloved Gold
-
Blockchain1 week ago
Former BoE, BoC Governor Mark Carney joins Stripe board of directors
-
Blockchain1 week ago
Are Bitcoin’s long-term hodlers entering the seller’s market?
-
Blockchain1 week ago
Elon Musk Explains to Peter Schiff What Money Is
-
Blockchain1 week ago
Litecoin, Cosmos, Tezos Price Analysis: 21 February
-
Blockchain1 week ago
A Review of BTCGOSU — Reviewer of Crypto Casinos