Netherlands

Dutch University set to recover more than twice the paid BTC ransom in 2019

The university reluctantly paid €200,000 in Bitcoin in December 2019 to avoid losing critical research data and resources.

Netherland-based Maastricht University (UM) is set to recover nearly €500,000 ($512,150) worth of Bitcoin (BTC) after the police authorities managed to solve the infamous ransomware attack in December 2019.

In 2019, a ransomware hack targeted the said university and froze all its research data, emails and library resources. The hackers demanded €200,000 in BTC and the university, fearing losing critical research data, decided to pay the said amount .

The Dutch Public Prosecution Service (DDPS) managed to track down one of the crypto wallets associated with the hack in 2020 to Ukraine and froze funds in the account valued at only €40,000 at the time. In the next two years, the DPPS managed to secure the contents of the account including nearly one-fifth of the stolen BTC.

The value of the part ransom recovered by the authorities has reached €500,000, more than double the amount university paid two and a half years ago, thanks to the price surge of the top cryptocurrency during the bull run in 2021.

Related: Chainalysis launches reporting service for businesses targeted in crypto-related cyberattacks

The university in its official statement said that even though the monetary value of the recovered ransom is higher, it cannot undo the damages done by hackers. The university in an official blog post said:

“The Netherlands Public Prosecution Service was able to seize cryptocurrencies worth approximately €500,000, which may be made available to UM. This is still less than the damages incurred by the university, but it is a nice sum to be used to support students in need.”

The seized funds are currently with the DPPS and a legal proceeding has been initiated to transfer the funds to the university. The executive board of the university has decided to utilize the recovered funds to help students in financial need.

The seizure of crypto funds by authorities highlights the importance of th decentralized and transparent public ledger system used by BTC and crypto in general. While critics often portray crypto as an opaque and anonymous system preferred by criminals, research data indicate that less than 1% of current crypto in circulation is associated with illicit activities.

Even stolen and ransom crypto funds are often tracked down and recovered. For example, the United States authorities managed to recover $2.3 million in crypto from the Colonial Pipeline ransom.

New spot Bitcoin ETF launches at Euronext Amsterdam Exchange

The Jacobi Bitcoin ETF will start trading on the Euronext Amsterdam Exchange under the ticker BCOIN in July.

Major Dutch stock exchange Euronext Amsterdam, a part of the pan-European marketplace Euronext, is debuting its first Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund (ETF).

Jacobi Asset Management, a London-based digital asset management platform, is preparing to launch its Jacobi Bitcoin ETF on Euronext Amsterdam next month, the firm announced on Thursday. The spot Bitcoin ETF will start trading on the Euronext Amsterdam Exchange under the ticker BCOIN.

The Jacobi Bitcoin ETF is positioned as the first spot Bitcoin ETF launched in Europe, Jacobi founder and CEO Jamie Khurshid told Cointelegraph.

“Our product is the first spot or physical-backed Bitcoin fund, and the fund is not allowed to lend, stake or leverage any of the assets it owns. For the first time in Europe, investors buying an exchange-traded Bitcoin product will own the units that own the Bitcoin,” Khurshid said. “There are other exchange-traded products in Europe but no other spot BTC ETF,” he added.

A spokesperson for Euronext confirmed that BCOIN will be the first spot Bitcoin ETF ever listed on Euronext. “This will be the first Bitcoin ETF on Euronext, or the first fund directly investing in Bitcoin. All other currently existing products on our segment are exchange-traded notes, or legally structured as debt instruments,” he said in a statement. While the ETF will arrive in July, Euronext did not provide a specific date for the launch.

As previously reported, Jacobi received approval from the Guernsey Financial Services Commission to launch the Bitcoin ETF in October 2021.

Custodial services for the Jacobi Bitcoin ETF will be provided by Fidelity’s crypto arm Fidelity Digital Assets while Flow Traders and DRW would serve as market makers to facilitate trading. Institutional and professional investors in Europe will be able to have access to the ETF for a 1.5% annual management fee, the announcement notes.

A former investment banker at Goldman Sachs, Khurshid believes that the new Bitcoin ETF launch will help bring more stability to the crypto market amid a massive sell-off. He said:

“We believe this will now remove the barrier to entry for those investment firms that have mandates to invest in regulated products only and will therefore increase adoption of digital assets bringing more stability and less influence from the whales, which is nothing short of a necessity for the crypto industry.”

Jacobi’s Bitcoin ETF launch in the Netherlands is a significant milestone in the global spot crypto ETF market as Amsterdam is associated with Europe’s top sharing trading venue, reportedly outstripping London in 2021.

As previously reported, Canada was one of the first countries in the world to debut a spot Bitcoin ETF with the launch of the Purpose Bitcoin ETF in February 2021. Australia debuted its first crypto ETFs in mid-May 2022.

Related: Why the world needs a spot Bitcoin ETF in the US: 21Shares CEO explains

While the global adoption of spot crypto ETFs has been growing in recent years, the United States is yet to approve a physical-backed Bitcoin ETF. On June 29, crypto investment giant Grayscale launched a legal challenge against the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission after being denied its application to convert its Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into a spot-based Bitcoin ETF.