What Does Fasig-Tipton’s Entry Into Cryptocurrency Mean For Buyers And Sellers?

The bloodstock market can be stubborn in its resistance to deviations from the way of doing business that's worked for decades, and even centuries. This is, after all, the same industry that only just widely accepted online bidding at auctions last year because of the pandemic.

Rooted with that knowledge, Fasig-Tipton's announcement on Monday that it would accept payment in cryptocurrency for its upcoming Saratoga Select Yearling Sale was a quantum leap in forward thinking.

For buyers, the new payment method allows for a different way to purchase horses that could potentially expand the buying bench into a bold, tech-savvy pool of new bidders. For sellers, the cryptocurrency option means only as much as they want it to mean.

The short explanation is that sale proceeds will be paid out to the seller by Fasig-Tipton in U.S. dollars, regardless of the currency used by the buyer, unless the seller specifically asks for payment in the company's chosen cryptocurrency class, Stablecoins. All sales will still be recorded in U.S. dollars from the auctioneer's stand and in the official results.

A seller won't be left with a wallet full of Stablecoins if they don't want it, the same way a seller wouldn't be stuck with proceeds in Euros if a horse were purchased by an international buyer. The proper currency conversions are handled as the funds pass through Fasig-Tipton's hands from buyer to seller, as two separate transactions.

Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning said the cryptocurrency market has ascended rapidly over the past decade, but its establishment as a legitimate part of the global economy was what made it the right time to establish the new payment option.

Browning hoped the new option, and the incentives tied to it, would perhaps attract a new segment of buyers who might find the high-risk, high-reward investments of the Thoroughbred industry appealing in the same way that they do for cryptocurrencies.

“We hope it's a two-way street,” he said. “We hope some of the folks in the crypto world say, 'This is pretty cool. It's like the Thoroughbred industry is reaching out to us.' I think there's a lot of similar personalities and a lot of similar traits among the people that would be participating in the crypto environment that would find a lot of aspects of Thoroughbred racing interesting and attractive. We would hope to be able to attract, if not new players, then new eyeballs to the racing industry, and hopefully that would convert into participants in the long-term in the auction process.”

Fasig-Tipton will offer 1 million SWAPP tokens to the buyer of the most expensive horse paid for in cryptocurrency at the Saratoga sale. SWAPP tokens can be exchanged for fiat currencies (traditional “paper money”) or other cryptocurrencies.

From Fasig-Tipton's press release announcing the new payment option, Swapp Protocol is a blockchain-based DeFi platform leading a movement to democratize the $1.2 trillion/year data industry by enabling consumers to start getting paid for their online data.

The process for a buyer intending to use cryptocurrency will be similar to one using any other currency. Credit must first be established with Fasig-Tipton, and since the bidding takes place in U.S. dollars, the number on that line would also be in U.S. dollars.

If Fasig-Tipton gets a credit application from a buyer it does not recognize, Browning said the company can verify their crypto assets, the same way it would verify another buyer's U.S. dollar assets or investment funds.

If a buyer wants to pay in cryptocurrency, they then notify the sales office of their intention to do so within the range of their credit window. The buyer will then convert their cryptocurrency of choice into Stablecoins, a class of asset-backed cryptocurrency based on real-world fiat currencies and commodities such as precious metals.

The “Stable” part of the name comes from its relative stability from price fluctuations, unlike other, more volatile cryptocurrencies, and Fasig-Tipton's equine background is just a well-placed coincidence.

“They just have to notify us,” Browning said. “Credit's extended for 15 days for qualified buyers, and we really don't care if they pay in U.S. dollars or cryptocurrency, as long as they pay on a timely basis. Just like somebody would call and say, 'Hey, I need your wire instructions to wire U.S. dollars,' they just have to say, “I need your cryptocurrency account information to initiate the transfer from our crypto account to your account.”

In its early stages, Browning anticipated most of the cryptocurrency activity would come from the buying side, should there be any at all in its initial offering in Saratoga Springs, but he was excited about the prospect of where the concept could go in the near and distant futures.

“We certainly didn't enter the space thinking it's going to be one-off,” he said. “I'm not saying we're forever committed, but we anticipate activity is likely to increase in the crypto world in the next generation, in the next decade. The marketplace didn't exist 10 years ago, and it's become a prominent financial marketplace in 2021, and I think based on what we see and read in the trends in popularity, it's likely to grow in popularity, instead of diminish.”

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O’Brien-Trained Mother Earth Very Game In Prix Rothschild

The Prix Rothschild, a Group 1 race restricted to fillies and mares, and run over one mile on the straight course at La Touques racecourse, kick-started the 2021 Deauville Barrière Meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 3rd. After a superb battle, it was the Irish filly Mother Earth who carried the day at the main expense of the French pair, Sagamiyra and Speak of the Devil. The first four home finished within half a length of each other.

Mother Earth (Zoffany) didn't have the clearest of runs but the 3-year-old filly showed great courage to fend off all comers. Carrying the label of the Coolmore, the international powerhouse, Mother Earth already won the 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket in May, a classic race which seeks to determine the best future breeding prospects. She followed this up with three excellent performances, having finished second in the Emirates Poule d'Essai des Pouliches, and third in both the Coronation Stakes and Falmouth Stakes – three very prestigious Group 1 events.

“She's very tough and very consistent,” trainer Aidan O'Brien said of Mother Earth. “Ryan [Moore] gave her a lovely ride and she is very  professional. We are very lucky in France this year, Ioritz [Mendizabal] gave our horses some great rides as did Ryan today and we are very lucky to have some very well bred horses. Mother Earth has a great mind. She travels very well, she settles very well and she quickens very well. She is a very good filly. We think the mile is really her trip as she travels really well. Sometimes, when she goes to the front, she waits a little bit but the mile is her perfect trip, we think, at the moment.

“I don't think she needs a break: she is very professional and she takes her races very well and loves racing. Her races are spaced out nice that far and she has come from her races very well. The Matron or the Moulin could be options, she is on all those races. We will see how she comes from this one before picking the next one. She is very versatile regarding the ground so America could be an option and she was second there last year.”

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Undefeated 3-Year-Old Life Is Good, Now In Pletcher’s Barn, Expected To Return In Jerkens

Undefeated sophomore colt Life Is Good, formerly in the barn of embattled trainer Bob Baffert but now conditioned by Todd Pletcher, is expected to make his return to the races in the Grade 1 Allen Jerkens Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 28, reports the Daily Racing Form.

The son of Into Mischief has not raced since March due to injury, when he was sent to his co-owner WinStar Farm to recover. WinStar trainer Destin Heath had the colt in training at Keeneland until mid-July, when he was shipped up to Pletcher' barn in New York. Life Is Good has now breezed twice at Saratoga since his arrival. WinStar's Elliott Walden indicated that the Jerkens will be used a step toward a return to two-turn races later in the year.

Also pointed to the Jerkens are Jackie's Warrior, last weekend's runaway winner of the G2 Amsterdam for trainer Steve Asmussen, as well as Pletcher trainee Following Sea, elevated to second last out in the G1 Haskell.

“That's our current target,” Pletcher told DRF of Life is Good and the Jerkens. “See how the horse continues to train, but you're not going to find any easy spots to come back in, I wouldn't think.”

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Baffert-Trained Illumination Headed To Saratoga For Test

Trainer Bob Baffert plans to send maiden winner Illumination to Saratoga for this Saturday's Grade 1 Test Stakes, reports the Daily Racing Form. It will be his first starter in New York since a judge overturned the New York Racing Association's ban of Bob Baffert on July 14.

NYRA notified Baffert ahead of the Belmont Stakes that it was suspending his ability to enter horses in races or have stall space at its racetracks due to his recent history of medication violations (five over a one-year period), the conflicting statements he provided to media around the Medina Spirit scandal, and Churchill Downs' suspension of the trainer.

Judge Carol Bagley Amon of the Eastern District of New York determined that NYRA's suspension of Baffert should not have taken place without some sort of hearing allowing him to address the organization's accusations against him. Although NYRA was asserting its private property rights in the case, Amon said the organization is closely entwined enough with the state that its suspension of Baffert constituted a state action, thereby requiring due process.

The Test Stakes will be held over the main track at seven furlongs and restricted to sophomore fillies. Baffert won the Test last year with Gamine, who is expected to ship to Saratoga for the G1 Ballerina on Aug. 28. The trainer is not expected to be in attendance for this Saturday's race at Saratoga.

Illumination, a daughter of Medaglia d'Oro, broke her maiden on June 4 at Santa Anita by eight lengths, but has not raced since. That was her fifth career start, but first in over seven months, during which time co-owner George Bolton told DRF the filly was turned out and given time to grow up.

The $900,000 yearling purchase from the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select sale earned a Grade 1 placing as a 2-year-old in the Del Mar Debutante, finishing third. She is out of the stakes-winning, multiple graded stakes-placed Street Sense mare Light the City, from the family of Mastery, Two Step Salsa, and Top Commander.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles can be found here.

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