JPMorgan Managing Director Christine Moy’s departure from the investment bank is the latest sign that Wall Street firms will face headwinds retaining top talent from jumping for opportunities in the crypto and Web3 space.
Moy, who announced her resignation from JPMorgan on Tuesday on her LinkedIn page, led JPMorgan Chase’s digital asset and blockchain business, Onyx by J.P.Morgan. Onyx recently opened a virtual branch in the Decentraland metaverse. Moy had worked at JPMorgan for over 18 years, her LinkedIn page noted.
“After almost two decades, I am leaving JPM to pursue a new opportunity. As for my next world-building adventure, please stay tuned.” Moy wrote. “I am super excited to share with you what is next!”
While Moy did not disclose her next employer, she included the #wgmi hashtag at the end of her farewell post, a Web3-centric anagram meaning “We’re Going to Make it,” indicating membership in an eponymous non-fungible token (NFT) collectors club on the Solana blockchain.
Web3 the next hot career?
“On the back of America’s ‘Great Resignation’ a wave of talents are leaving tech giants and traditional finance to join projects in the wider Web3 hemisphere,” noted 21Shares Research Lead Eli Ndinga in a recent note.
“The big story of this decade is that Web 3 will be the largest beneficiary of The Great Resignation!”
Ndinga writes about the current relative values between the rapidly growing digital space, versus the much more mature banking and tech industries.
“The total value of tech stocks is $9.5 trillion as of writing, as opposed to crypto market’s $1.6 trillion,” Ndinga wrote in a recent report on the subject.
“Remember those numbers because at 21Shares, we believe that in the future the Great Resignation will reflect in the valuation of many crypto projects disrupting industries, such as financial services, eCommerce, media, and art.”
Ndinga, who is keeping a running tab of sorts tracking movement from traditional banking into decentralised finance, cites the relatively low crypto market valuation compared to more mature sectors, offering growth opportunities.
One asset manager is hiring
Digital asset manager Grayscale Investment, currently looking to double its current workforce to over 100, hires from a variety of backgrounds, including from traditional finance.
“Grayscale team members tend to have an entrepreneurial spirit; many do not have expertise in crypto, but are deeply curious and are genuinely excited about shaping the digital economy,” said a Grayscale spokeswoman. “We want to be intentional about redefining what it means to be an asset manager.”
Other recent departures matriculating from traditional finance to DiFi include Gordon Liao, who recently left his position as an economist in the Federal Reserve to lead the research effort at Uniswap Labs.
“Coming from a background in TradFi and CeFi, I’m most excited about the innovations that hold the potential for building a better, safer, more accessible financial system,” Liao said in a farewell Twitter thread.
Other recent moves, Ndinga pointed out include Justin Slaughter, who left the US Securities & Exchange Commission to join Paradigm lobbying regulators and policymakers and Kevin Beardsley, who recently joined XDFI Wallet from Kraken.
Read more
Rate this article
The difference between trading assets and CFDs
The main difference between CFD trading and trading assets, such as commodities and stocks, is that you don’t own the underlying asset when you trade on a CFD.
You can still benefit if the market moves in your favour, or make a loss if it moves against you. However, with traditional trading you enter a contract to exchange the legal ownership of the individual shares or the commodities for money, and you own this until you sell it again.
CFDs are leveraged products, which means that you only need to deposit a percentage of the full value of the CFD trade in order to open a position. But with traditional trading, you buy the assets for the full amount. In the UK, there is no stamp duty on CFD trading, but there is when you buy stocks, for example.
CFDs attract overnight costs to hold the trades (unless you use 1-1 leverage), which makes them more suited to short-term trading opportunities. Stocks and commodities are more normally bought and held for longer. You might also pay a broker commission or fees when buying and selling assets direct and you’d need somewhere to store them safely.
Capital Com is an execution-only service provider. The material provided on this website is for information purposes only and should not be understood as an investment advice. Any opinion that may be provided on this page does not constitute a recommendation by Capital Com or its agents. We do not make any representations or warranty on the accuracy or completeness of the information that is provided on this page. If you rely on the information on this page then you do so entirely on your own risk.