I never shared this publicly before, but since @pmarca opened the floodgates on @joerogan’s pod, it feels appropriate to shed more light on this.
As a reminder, Libra (then Diem) was an advanced, high-performance, payments-centric blockchain paired with a stablecoin that we built with my team at @Meta. It would’ve solved global payments at scale. Prior to announcing the project, we spent months briefing key regulators in DC and abroad. We then announced the project in June 2019 alongside 28 companies. Two weeks later, I was called to testify in front of both the Senate Banking Committee and the House Financial Services Committee, which was the starting point of two years of nonstop work and changes to appease lawmakers and regulators.
By spring of 2021 (yes they slow played us at every step), we had addressed every last possible regulatory concern across financial crime, money laundering, consumer protection, reserve management, buffers, and so much more, and we were ready to launch.
We had worked on a slow rollout of a limited pilot that some members of the Fed’s Board of Governors were supportive of. At last, Chair Jay Powell was ready to let us move forward in a limited way. The story, as I heard it, is that Jay Powell was told by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at one of their biweekly meetings that allowing this project to move forward was “political suicide,” and she would not have his back if he let it happen. I wasn’t in the room when this conversation happened, so take these words with a grain of salt, but effectively this was the moment Libra was killed.
Shortly thereafter, the Fed organized calls with all the participating banks, and the Fed’s general counsel read a prepared statement to each of them, saying: “We can’t stop you from moving forward and launching, but we are not comfortable with you doing so.” And just like that, it was over.
One essential point is worth making here. There was no legal or regulatory angle left for the government or regulators to kill the project. It was 100% a political kill—one that was executed through intimidation of captive banking institutions. That was the hardest part of this story for me personally. Not that we had failed, but that America, this country I immigrated to and became a proud citizen of because of its rule of law and value system, behaved in such a way for political reasons. It was a very tough pill to swallow.
The bright side of the story, though, was the many learnings from this wild ride. By the end of the project, we had made so many concessions to get a thumbs-up that the whole design of the network became a Frankenstein of our initial ambitions.
We also learned the biggest lesson of all, which is that if you’re trying to build an open money grid for the world—eventually moving trillions of dollars a day, designed to be here 100 years from now—you have to build it on the most neutral, decentralized, unassailable network and asset, which, hands down, is Bitcoin.
And now this is what many of us who went through this scarring journey are building together at @Lightspark. And this time, we won’t stop until we get it done!
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I’ve decided to talk more about our inner workings at @Lightspark to share more of the journey with the community of builders out there. In that spirit, this week, we spent time challenging ourselves quite hard on our choice to build on Lightning. Here’s what happened 🧵 1/12
I always tend to push hard on avoiding to continue on a current glide path because of sunk costs. It’s healthy to challenge past decisions when new information becomes available and either recommit and double down, or change direction. 2/12
We want to help build a truly open, interoperable, extremely cheap, protocol for money/payments on the Internet. One that settles in near realtime, and enables anyone to send and receive small or large amounts cost effectively with a great user experience. 3/12
Follow-up of my last tweet. A small 🧵 about how the EU keeps falling behind when it has all the talent and resources to be a leading region in the world. In the early days of Libra, I had fascinating conversations with senior leaders at the ECB. 1/14
The short version of it was that Europe resented the fact that the vast majority of transactions were settled on US payment networks. 2/14
In their minds, the US leveraged its reserve currency and payments networks to overreach with unilateral sanctions, impacting EU member states. 3/14
Today with Facebook becoming Meta, we're unifying our payments and financial services unit and products under the @Novi brand. Let me unpack what this will mean across @Meta. 1/7
We've been in the business of facilitating payments across our apps for over a decade, and we've processed over $100B in the last 12 months across our products. 2/7
These experiences range from person-to-person payments in the 🇺🇸 in @Messenger, in 🇧🇷 and 🇮🇳 in @WhatsApp, enabling our donations product, facilitating checkout for merchants, enabling advertisers to easily buy ads, and now allowing xborder payments with the @Novi pilot. 3/7
I don’t think we fully internalize the compounding effects of the labor market issues combined with our supply chain disruption and macro trends. A mini 🧵 as I’d love to head expert opinions on this topic. 1/5
I was talking to the CEO of one of the largest hotel chains in the country, and he confirmed what I had heard at a smaller scale from restaurant owners. The sector can’t adequately re-hire people. People have received govt stimulus checks, they’re not eager to go back. 2/5
Meanwhile, because of our unprecedented disruptions in our supply chain, we can’t get the products we need/want fast enough (shout out to @typesfast for his heroic work to fix this). 3/5
Remittances are a critical way to achieve financial inclusion. Today, we’re rolling out a small pilot of the @Novi digital wallet app in two countries — the US and Guatemala. People can send and receive money instantly, securely, and with no fees. 1/8
We’re doing a pilot to test core feature functions, and our operational capabilities in customer care and compliance. We’re also hopeful this will demonstrate a new stablecoin use case (as a payments instrument) beyond how they are typically used today. 2/8
The 🇺🇸-🇬🇹 remittance corridor is an important one. In Guatemala, 56% of people lack access to financial services, despite nearly 100% having mobile phones. Money sent from family & friends abroad contributes more than 14% of GDP and 90% of those remittances come from the US. 3/8
Excited with the progress of @Libra_ in the last 9 months. I keep on thinking about all the people and small businesses that could benefit from the Libra Network already being operational — especially now during these times of unprecedented hardship. 1/8
The Libra Association is now funded by its members (with less than 10% of the funding coming from Facebook), and has adapted its plans after engaging with key stakeholders globally. 2/8
Most notable evolutions are:
a) the creation of single currency stablecoins, e.g. ≋USD, ≋EUR, ≋GBP, in addition to Libra Coin (≋LBR), which will now be a Move smart contract “stitching” together fixed nominal weights of underlying stablecoins. 3/8