SEC rejects VanEck’s spot Bitcoin ETF as BTC price falls below $63K

The SEC claimed any rule change in favor of approving the ETF would not be “‘designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices” nor “protect investors and the public interest.”

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, has officially disapproved asset manager VanEck’s spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund months after the firm submitted its application.

According to a Friday filing, the SEC rejected a proposed rule change from the Cboe BZX Exchange to list and trade shares of VanEck’s Bitcoin (BTC) Trust. Specifically, the SEC said any rule change in favor of approving the ETF would not be “‘designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices” nor “protect investors and the public interest.”

“The Commission concludes that BZX has not met its burden under the Exchange Act and the Commission’s Rules of Practice to demonstrate that its proposal is consistent with the requirements of Exchange Act Section,” said the SEC, adding:

“It is essential for an exchange listing a derivative securities product to enter into a surveillance-sharing agreement with markets trading the underlying assets for the listing exchange to have the ability to obtain information necessary to detect, investigate, and deter fraud and market manipulation, as well as violations of exchange rules and applicable federal securities laws and rules.”

The regulatory body had a maximum of 240 days to approve or deny the offering following its publication in the Federal Register on March 19, giving the SEC until Nov. 14 to make a decision after extensions on April 28 and Sept. 8. Industry expert Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said the SEC was highly unlikely to approve the VanEck fund given its track record of denying offerings from investment firms with exposure to crypto, a prediction which ultimately came to pass.

“[The SEC] address the inconsistency with not deeming CME a regulated mkt of sig size in spot denial but then approving futures ETFs,” said Balchunas. “It’s such a good point, but SEC doesn’t care. Not having it. Basically logic and reason are trumped by technical legality.”

Though the rejection may be a blow to many investors, the SEC has already approved ETFs linked to Bitcoin futures contracts. In October, shares of digital asset manager Valkyrie’s and ProShares’ BTC Strategy ETF launched on U.S. stock exchanges. ProShares’ ETF has since risen to the top 2% of all ETFs in terms of total trading volume — roughly $400 million worth of shares traded on Nov. 10.

Related: Report suggests BlackRock has ‘no current plans’ to launch crypto ETF as deadline for VanEck’s offering approaches

The impact on the price of Bitcoin saw the crypto asset briefly dip to $62,300 before returning to more than $63,000. The price marks a 9.7% fall since Bitcoin reached a new all-time high of $69,000 on Nov. 10. 

Report suggests BlackRock has ‘no current plans’ to launch crypto ETF as deadline for VanEck’s offering approaches

Senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg Eric Balchunas said he gave the odds of the SEC approving the VanEck fund at less than 1%.

BlackRock Financial Management’s global head of iShares and index investments said the financial firm will likely not be launching exchange-traded funds (ETFs) linked to crypto assets anytime soon.

According to a Friday report from Financial News, BlackRock executive Salim Ramji said the firm with $9.5 trillion in assets under management has “no current plans” to launch a cryptocurrency exchange-traded fund until there was additional regulatory clarity in the United States. He added that BlackRock would be unlikely to be among the first in this emerging market for investments with exposure to crypto, but the firm needed to practice due diligence.

“Before we wrap or put our brand on [crypto], we want to be certain that clients are going to be happy with us five years from now, 10 years from now,” said Ramji. “The regulatory arena for cryptocurrencies is still incredibly opaque and not clear at all.”

Bitcoin (BTC) Strategy ETFs from digital asset manager Valkyrie and ProShares launched on U.S. stock exchanges in October. Both funds allow U.S. investors direct exposure to cryptocurrency futures, with filings likely sparked from Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler hinting in August the agency could be open to approving exchange-traded products exposed to regulated BTC futures contracts.

ProShares’ fund reached more than $1 billion in assets under management in its first week of trading. In addition, the BTC Strategy ETF has since risen to the top 2% of all ETFs in terms of total trading volume — roughly $400 million worth of shares traded on Nov. 10.

Related: Why now? SEC took eight years to authorize a Bitcoin ETF in the US

While Valkyrie’s and ProShares’ BTC Strategy ETFs launched within a few days of each other, asset manager VanEck’s offering has yet to be approved for listing on any exchange despite conflicting media reports identifying a firm launch date. VanEck filed a prospectus for its Bitcoin Strategy ETF with the SEC on Aug. 9 but is also awaiting approval or denial for its spot Bitcoin ETF from the regulatory body, expected to reach a decision by Nov. 14.

Senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg Eric Balchunas said he gave the odds of the SEC approving the VanEck fund at less than 1% given its track record of denying offerings from investment firms with exposure to crypto.

“Eagles have better chance of winning SuperBowl,” said Balchunas.

Ethereum ‘has to bounce’ as ETH bulls pin $5K rally hopes on critical support channel

Many analysts agree that the “dynamic support” could boost accumulation sentiment in the ETH market.

Ethereum’s native token, Ether (ETH), could see yet another strong rebound in the sessions ahead as its price falls into a trading zone with a recent history of attracting buyers.

The rising trendline has been triggering ETH’s price rebounds since the beginning of October and comes as a part of a broader ascending channel range.

ETH/USD 4-hour price chart featuring the ascending channel setup. Source: TradingView

As a result, Ether’s path of least resistance has been to the upside despite pullbacks at the channel’s upper trendline, with its quarter-to-date returns currently sitting at over 38%.

Most recently, the rising trendline was instrumental in limiting sell-offs that followed Ether’s rally to a new record high above $4,870. That prompted analysts to expect another strong price rebound in the future, with a “swing long” setup posted by Forexn1 on TradingView calling for a bull run to $5,000.

ETH/USD 8-hour price chart featuring “swing long” setup. Source: Forexn1, TradingView

MacroCRG, a Twitter-based independent market analyst, said Ether “has to bounce” as it manages to hold the rising trendline as support following the latest price pullback.

Meanwhile, another analyst, Pentoshi, also anticipated a rebound but discussed the prospects of corrections below the rising trendline. In a Nov. 12 tweet, he stated:

“I would love a 20-30% wipeout on alts. Usual bull run dip. Just bc I want it doesn’t mean it will happen. Greed to fear, please.”

Pentoshi’s downside target in the event of extended price correction was near $4,000, as shown in the chart below.

ETH/USD 4-hour price chart featuring the ascending channel’s bearish breakout target. Source: Pentoshi, TradingView

Macro fundamentals support ETH bulls

Ether’s ability to limit price corrections and — atop that — form new highs appears to have more than just technical factors behind it.

Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Financial Pty, cited fears of high inflation as the common denominator that has boosted demand for potential hedging assets across the crypto market, leading to Ether’s 500-plus percent and Bitcoin’s 130-plus percent price rallies in 2021.

To investors, “Crypto is where the fast money is at,” Weston said in a note.

Additionally, Mike McGlone, senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Index, last week said he expects a $5,000 price for Ether, saying that investment “portfolios of some combination of gold and bonds appear increasingly naked without some Bitcoin and Ethereum joining the mix.”

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The analyst cited declining supply as a major bullish backstop for Ether.

Namely, Ethereum’s software upgrade in August, dubbed the London hard fork, implemented a code-change that started burning a portion of gas fees paid to miners via ETH, effectively reducing the supply. 

Related: Ascending channel pattern and Ethereum options data back traders’ $5K ETH target

The upgrade has resulted in the removal of over 860,500 ETH — now worth over $3.2 billion — since implementation, according to data provided by Ultrasound.money. At the current rate, the Ethereum network expects to burn 5.3 million ETH every year versus 5.4 million ETH issued.

Ethereum fee burn. Source: Ultrasound.money

McGlone noted that a declining supply rate would keep Ether on its bullish course against rising demand:

“Simply staying the course is the more likely outcome, as we see it. Ethereum has joined Bitcoin with a supply trajectory that is in decline by code. The first-born crypto is the store-of-value, and the No. 2 is the DeFi building block.”

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

How traders can use Twitter to anticipate altcoin price moves

Data shows that a spike in Twitter mentions preceded massive price rallies in at least five altcoins.

When crypto traders win big, they often take to Twitter to share the joy. They tend to do the same for sharing painful stories of getting wrecked, discussing promising new assets, or sharing insight and predictions on which projects can become the next big thing. Sometimes these waves of social attention can even create positive feedback loops whereby the tokens that command the chatter see their prices soar precisely for that reason.

The volume of tweets referencing a particular asset can indicate a lot of different things. This month, the five tokens that saw the greatest month-to-month increases in daily tweet volume — Loopring’s LRC, NuCypher’s NU, Enjin Coin (ENJ), ANKR and The Sandbox’s (SAND) — also saw some of the heftiest monthly gains. This in itself is not at all shocking, as the assets that see huge rallies tend to attract the Twitter crowd’s attention.

Volume of tweets mentioning LRC, NU, ENJ, ANKR and SAND, Oct. 9 – Nov. 9. Source: The TIE

What is remarkable, however, is that in all five cases, the record-breaking tweet volume peaks were actually registered not in response to monthly price highs but ahead of them. In other words, the sprawling Twitter conversations around these coins anticipated price action rather than followed it. How could traders catch the signs of this extraordinary social activity early?

Heads-up from the crowd

If you do not follow just about everyone on Crypto Twitter, there are few ways to reliably capture each surge in tweets around a particular asset. Subscribers of Markets Pro, Cointelegraph’s proprietary data intelligence platform, have it easy: A dedicated panel featuring five assets that are seeing an unusually high tweet volume is helpfully displayed in real time right on the dashboard.

CT Markets Pro Unusual Twitter Volume panel, Nov. 11. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

Furthermore, tweet volume is one of several metrics used to calculate the VORTECS™ Score, an algorithmic indicator that compares patterns of past market and social activity around a digital asset with years’ worth of historical data performance to evaluate how bullish the coin’s outlook is.

In the case of the top Twitter darlings of the month, a look at raw Twitter data would be sufficient, as all of these coins appeared on the Unusual Twitter Volume panel as their tweet volume peaked.

LRC/USD: A 744.44% increase in tweet volume followed by a +350.79% monthly price change

One of the ingredients of the monstrous rally of LRC this month is the fact that the layer-two protocol continues to offer lower transaction fees compared with its counterparts, which comes in handy amid exorbitant gas fees on the Ethereum network.

LRC price vs. VORTECS™ Score (yellow/green), Oct. 8 – Nov. 8. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

Having surpassed 3,000, the volume of daily tweets mentioning the project exceeded the monthly average by more than 740% on Nov. 3 (the red circle in the chart) as the asset was nearing the local price peak at $1.54. After a brief correction, fueled by the influx of social attention, LRC continued to climb even higher, breaching $2 six days later.

NU/USD: A 598.87% increase in tweet volume triggered a +179.18% monthly price change

Nobody knows for sure where NU’s 10x-plus pump on Oct. 15 came from, but it saw the coin pop from around $0.30 to above $3 in just a few hours. Some Twitter users credited its listing on South Korean exchange Upbit for the uptick, yet chances are there could have been something else at play. Most likely, people were simply trying to figure out what was going on.

NU price vs. VORTECS™ Score (yellow/green), Oct. 8 – Nov. 8. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

At any rate, the Unusual Twitter Volume indicator began to flash just two hours into the rally, with the highest rate showing up shortly before the price high of $3.17. Interestingly, social excitement around NU persisted for some time after the hard price correction, beginning to wane only a day after the price crumbled back to around $1.20.

ENJ/USD: A 354.32% surge in tweet volume accompanied a +90.35% monthly price change

Enjin Coin emerged as one of the beneficiaries of the metaverse tokens’ spree triggered by Facebook’s rebrand to Meta at the end of October.

ENJ price vs. VORTECS™ Score (yellow/green), Oct. 8 – Nov. 8. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

The Twitter discussion around blockchain gaming platform Enjin reached its height on Oct. 31 against a price of $2.51 as ENJ was cooling off after a parabolic rally. The onslaught of Twitter mentions foreshadowed the next leg of the action, which took the coin to the next high at $3.45.

ANKR/USD: A 329.08% surge in tweet volume backed a +39.51% monthly price change

ANKR had a massive showing around the same time as metaverse assets skyrocketed, rising from $0.081 on Oct. 28 to $0.139 a week later.

ANKR price vs. VORTECS™ Score (yellow/green), Oct. 8 – Nov. 8. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

As the token’s price briefly plateaued for a breather amid the hike, the Twitter numbers went into overdrive, hitting 2,400 daily mentions. After that, the token’s price made one more leap to the monthly high registered on Nov. 3.

SAND/USD: A 328.12% increase in tweet volume was followed by a +222.12% monthly price change

The Sandbox was yet another metaverse wonder whose token price skyrocketed following the Facebook/Meta news.

SAND price vs. VORTECS™ Score (yellow/green), Oct. 8 – Nov. 8. Source: Cointelegraph Markets Pro

SAND’s healthy social outlook manifested when its daily tweet volume more than tripled compared with the month-to-month average, hitting a record high above 2,600 15 hours before a peak price of $3.38 was recorded.

Granted, the abnormal volume of tweets mentioning a certain asset is not in itself a recipe for an imminent price hike. Traders should delve into the actual context of what is going on around the token to render an informed decision. Yet, being alerted to massive spikes of attention to particular assets can be incredibly useful for focusing one’s analysis on the most likely candidates for a continued rally.

Cointelegraph is a publisher of financial information, not an investment adviser. We do not provide personalized or individualized investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are volatile investments and carry significant risk including the risk of permanent and total loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Figures and charts are correct at the time of writing or as otherwise specified. Live-tested strategies are not recommendations. Consult your financial advisor before making financial decisions.

Are institutional investors the key silent partners of crypto?

More participation? The approval of the BTC ETF in October exacerbated the trend. “There is a much easier path to gaining this exposure.”

Imagine an institutional investor like an insurance company or pension fund decides that it wants to test the cryptocurrency waters. Or maybe a large corporation is looking to buy some Bitcoin (BTC) to diversify its treasury holdings. One thing they’re unlikely to do is announce their intention beforehand.That could drive up the price of the digital asset they are trying to buy.

Thus, there’s often a lag between a large institution’s action — purchasing $100 million in Bitcoin, say — and its public announcement of such. “Institutional participation flows in cycles,” Diogo Mónica, co-founder and president of crypto custody bank Anchorage Digital, told Cointelegraph. “By the time you’re hearing about a new company adding crypto, we’ve typically been talking to them for many months.”

Has something like that been going on in the recent price run-up — when Bitcoin, Ether (ETH) and many other cryptocurrencies reached all-time highs? Were corporations and institutional investors stealthily gobbling up crypto through the early fall — so as not to raise the price while they were in accumulation phase — with its impact only this week being made manifest?

Wherefore the largest investors?

Kapil Rathi, CEO and co-founder of institutional cryptocurrency exchange CrossTower, told Cointelegraph, “Institutions have definitely been initiating or increasing Bitcoin allocations recently.” Much of it might have begun in early October, he allowed, as large investors were probably trying to get in ahead of the ProShares exchange-traded fund (ETF) launch — and it then became a seller after the launch — but still, “there has been strong passive support that has kept prices stable. This buying support has looked much more like institutional accumulation than retail buying in the way it has been executed.”

James Butterfill, investment strategist at digital asset investing platform CoinShares, cautioned that his firm’s data is only anecdotal — “as we can only rely on institutional investors telling us if they have purchased our ETPs” — but “we are seeing an increasing number of investment funds get in contact to discuss potentially adding Bitcoin and other crypto assets to their portfolios,” he told Cointelegraph, further explaining:

“Two years ago, the same funds thought Bitcoin was a crazy idea; a year ago, they wanted to discuss it further; and today, they are becoming increasingly anxious that they will lose clients if they do not invest.”

The key investment rationale, Butterfill added, “seems to be diversification and a monetary policy/inflation hedge.”

This participation may not necessarily be from the most traditional of institutional investors — i.e., pension funds or insurance companies — but skewed more toward family offices and funds of funds, according to Lennard Neo, head of research at Stack Funds, “but we do see an increase in risk appetite and interest, particularly so for specific crypto sectors — NFTs, DeFi, etc. — and broader mandates outside of just Bitcoin.” Stack Funds is getting two to three times more requests from investors than what it was getting early in the third quarter, he told Cointelegraph.

Why now?

Why the apparent heightened institutional interest? There are myriad reasons ranging from “the speculative to those who want to hedge against global macro uncertainties,” said Neo. But several have recently declared that they viewed “blockchain and crypto becoming an integral part of a global digital economy.”

Freddy Zwanzger, co-founder and chief data officer of blockchain data platform Anyblock Analytics GmbH, saw a certain amount of fear of missing out, or FOMO, at play here, telling Cointelegraph, “Where in the past, crypto investments were a risk for managers — it could go wrong — now it increasingly becomes a risk not to allocate at least some portion of the portfolio into crypto, as stakeholders will have examples from other institutions that did allocate and benefited greatly.”

The fact that large financial companies like Mastercard and Visa are beginning to support crypto on their networks and even purchasing nonfungible tokens has only intensified the FOMO, Zwanzger suggested.

“Interest from institutional investors and family offices has been rising gradually throughout the year,” Vladimir Vishnevskiy, director and co-founder at St. Gotthard Fund Management AG, told Cointelegraph. “The approval of the BTC ETF in October only exacerbated this trend, as now there is a much easier path to gaining this exposure.” Inflation worries are high on the agenda of many institutional investors, “and crypto is seen as a good hedge for this along with gold.”

Public companies looking at crypto for their balance sheets

What about corporations? Have more been purchasing Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies for their corporate treasuries?

Brandon Arvanaghi, CEO of Meow — a firm that enables corporate treasury participation in crypto markets — told Cointelegraph that he is seeing a new receptivity on the part of corporate chief financial officers vis-a-vis crypto, particularly in the wake of the global pandemic:

“When inflation is at 2% and interest rates are reasonable, corporate treasurers don’t think about looking into alternative assets. […] COVID flipped the world on its head, and inflationary pressures are making corporate treasurers not only open to but actively seek alternative yield sources.”

“From our vantage point, we’re seeing more companies buy crypto to diversify their corporate treasuries,” commented Mónica. In addition, “Banks are reaching out to us to meet the demand for these types of services, which indicates a bigger trend beyond just companies adding crypto to their balance sheet. […] It means soon, more people will have direct access to crypto through the financial instruments they already use.”

Macro trends are encouraging companies to add crypto to their balance sheets, Marc Fleury, CEO and co-founder of fintech firm Two Prime, told Cointelegraph. “Consider the fact that liquid corporate cash for U.S. publicly traded companies has soared from $1 trillion in 2020 to $4 trillion in 2021, and you can see why many are looking for new places to deploy this extra cash and why this trend will not abate.”

Meanwhile, the number of publicly traded companies that have announced they are holding Bitcoin has risen from 14 this time last year to 39 today, with the total amount held at $13.7 billion, said Butterfill.

Speaking of corporations, are more companies ready to accept crypto as payment for their products and services? Recently, Tesla was rumored to be on the verge of accepting BTC as payment for its cars (again).

Mónica told Cointelegraph, “Fintechs are reaching out to us to help them support not only Bitcoin, but a variety of digital assets, suggesting in the broader scheme, large companies are becoming more willing to support crypto payments.”

Fleury, for his part, was doubtful that cryptocurrencies — with one notable exception, stablecoins — would ever be widely used as a medium of exchange. “Volatile cryptos, like BTC and ETH are not good for payments. Period,” said Fleury. What makes crypto great as a reserve currency makes them poor monies of exchange, almost by design, he said, adding, “Stablecoins are another story.”

Is the stock-to-flow model persuasive?

Much has been made in the crypto community about the so-called stock-to-flow (S2F) model for predicting Bitcoin prices. Indeed, anonymous institutional investor PlanB’s S2F model predicted a BTC price of >$98,000 by the end of November. Do institutional investors take the stock-to-flow model seriously?

“Many institutional investors ask us this question,” Butterfill recounted, “but when they look more deeply into the model, they do not find it to be credible.” Stock-to-flow models often extrapolate future data points beyond a regression set’s current data range — a dubious practice, statistically speaking.

Furthermore, the method that compares an asset’s existing supply (“stock”) with the amount of new supply entering the market (“flow”) — through mining, for instance — “certainly hasn’t worked for other fixed-supply assets such as gold,” said Butterfill, adding, “In more recent years other approaches have been made to enhance the S2F model, but it is losing credibility with clients.”

“I don’t think institutions pay too much heed to the stock-to-flow model,” agreed Rathi, “though it is hard to malign it, as it has thus far proven to be quite accurate.” It seems to be more popular with retail traders than with institutions, he said. Vishnevskiy, on the other hand, wasn’t ready to dismiss stock-to-flow analysis so fast:

“Our fund looks at this model along with 40+ other metrics. It’s a good model, but not to be used alone. You have to use it along with other models and also consider the fundamentals and technical indicators.”

If not institutions, who is driving up prices?

Given that institutional participation in the latest crypto run-up appears to be mostly anecdotal at this point, it’s worth asking: If corporations and institutional investors haven’t been devouring most of the cryptocurrency floating about, who is?

“It makes sense that this has been a retail-led phenomenon,” answered Butterfill, “as we have witnessed the birth of a new asset class, and along with that comes confusion and hesitancy from regulators.” This regulatory uncertainty remains a continuing damper on institutional participation, he suggested, adding:

“In our most recent survey, regulations and corporate restrictions were the most-cited reason for not investing. The survey also found that those institutions with much more flexible mandates, such as family offices, have much larger positions compared to wealth managers.”

Still, even if ironclad data confirmation is lacking, many believe institutional participation in the digital asset market is growing. “As crypto security, technical infrastructure and regulatory clarity have improved over the years, it’s opened the door for broader institutional participation in the sector,” Mónica told Cointelegraph, adding:

“In the coming years, we’re going to see many payment rails through crypto, including stable coins and DeFi. I also expect we’ll see more interconnectivity between blockchain-based payment rails with legacy ones.”

For Fleury, the trend is clear. “Pension funds, endowments, sovereign funds and the like will adopt crypto in their portfolio in the next cycle.” They are cautious investors, however, and it takes time to conduct the necessary due diligence.

Related: Crypto and pension funds: Like oil and water, or maybe not?

But once institutional investors do commit, they tend to scale their commitments rapidly, he added. “We are still in the early innings of this institutional cycle. We will see a lot more interest from pension funds.”

At that point, a single $1-billion crypto transaction — like the one that occurred in late October, setting a record — will be an “everyday occurrence,” said Fleury.

AMC Theatres debuts online Bitcoin payments after months of teasing

AMC Theaters now accepts online payments in Bitcoin, Ether, Bitcoin Cash and Litecoin, with Dogecoin coming next.

American cinema giant AMC Theatres is finally adopting cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC) for online payments following months of teasing the new payment option.

AMC CEO Adam Aron announced Thursday that the company now proudly accepts four major cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ether (ETH), Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Litecoin (LTC) for online payments.

The new payment method already accounts for 14% of AMC’s total online transactions, Aron said, adding that cryptocurrencies join traditional payment options like Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal.

Dogecoin (DOGE), a popular meme cryptocurrency that has skyrocketed 9,000% over the past year, will be the next digital currency accepted for online payments at AMC, Aron noted. He previously promised that AMC will support DOGE payments for tickets after his 140,000-voter Twitter poll convinced the company to accept the cryptocurrency as payment.

Aron eventually conducted a similar poll for Shiba Inu (SHIB), another popular meme cryptocurrency that overtook Dogecoin in market capitalization in late October.

The latest news is part of AMC’s plans to debut Bitcoin payments for movie tickets by the end of 2021. The company announced the plan in August, eventually expanding the list of supported cryptocurrencies to coins like ETH, BCH, LTC and DOGE.

Related: Visa working on blockchain interoperability hub for crypto payments

AMC has been steadily approaching its goal of accepting cryptocurrency payments by year-end, debuting crypto payments for digital gift card purchases in early October.

The firm did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.