Amid a bearish crypto market, Miami and its mayor Francis Suarez are seemingly losing their enthusiasm for cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology, according to some industry observers.
Suarez has long been praised by the sector’s representatives for his plans to transform the city into a leading crypto hub.
The mayor continues to collect his salary in Bitcoin (BTC) despite last year’s market crash and the extended bear market.
In July 2022, he even declared that crypto’s growing popularity presented a major opportunity for his city, as it could make it possible for Miami to “beat the Silicon Valley” as it is “leaning into innovation”.
This said, as the city is readying to host another edition of Bitcoin 2023, an annual event which calls itself the “largest Bitcoin conference” with more than 15,000 attendees and more than 2,000 companies scheduled to attend the show between May 18 and 20, Miami’s crypto landscape is much different from what it was during last year’s show, The Wall Street Journal reported.
“A year ago, when the annual Bitcoin conference opened in Miami, the city was arguably the country’s biggest booster of digital currencies.
MiamiCoin traded on a global crypto exchange.
The Miami Heat basketball team played at FTX Arena, and cryptocurrency exchange Blockchain.com was preparing to move its headquarters to a splashy office in the city’s Wynwood neighborhood,” according to the daily.
A year later, none of the above is true anymore, reflecting how turbulent 2022 was for crypto, but also for Miami.
Following FTX’s collapse, the city’s NBA team is now playing its postseason home games at Kaseya Center, and the exchange which accommodated MiamiCoin stopped trading the crypto after its value lost more than 99%
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