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LISBON, PORTUGAL — Matadors and bitcoin maximalists are regulars at Campo Pequeno, a neo-Moorish bullring within the northernmost reaches of the Portuguese capital metropolis.
The two aren’t all that totally different. Both are sometimes defiant and cussed, engaged in a seemingly hopeless battle that pits man in opposition to beast, the place the objective is not simply survival however whole domination. Each fights in opposition to the established order — one in opposition to the legal guidelines of nature, the opposite in opposition to the monetary institution. In the case of the maxis, these rebels don cryptographic code as a substitute of capes, pinning their revolution on the decentralized ledger expertise they consider will change the world as we all know it.
Every month, bitcoin’s greatest followers in Lisbon — an eclectic bunch of largely expat digital nomads — descend on this nineteenth century enviornment to sip Licor Beirão, speak store and extol the virtues of a world run on bitcoin. The storied venue can be a becoming metaphor for the bull run that many of those bitcoiners maintain out hope for throughout crypto winter, the title given to the interval of extended, depressed pricing in digital belongings that may final for years.
Software engineer Lorenzo Primiterra has been residing largely in Lisbon for the previous two years.
CNBC
Software engineer Lorenzo Primiterra has been going to the gatherings since they started. He’s a Peter Pan-type with black chipped nail polish and small black hoop earrings complimenting the tattoo on his proper inside forearm that reads, in all caps, ‘WHAT’S MY AGE AGAIN?”
Primiterra hails from Italy but has spent two of his last seven years on the road in Portugal. Sitting at a picnic table adjacent to the 10,000-person capacity arena, he tells CNBC that the inaugural bitcoin gathering took place in this same venue in spring 2022, the weekend after the collapse of Terra Luna — a popular U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin project that imploded overnight, erasing half a trillion dollars from the sector’s market cap in the process.
“Lots of people acquired burned in that,” Primiterra said of the stablecoin’s failure. “I suppose lots of people turned bitcoiners from that occasion. They understood the significance of self custody of bitcoin, bitcoin on bitcoin blockchain, not on different chains.”
The cascade of crypto bankruptcies, failed tokens and the revelation that some of the titans of the industry were running allegedly criminal enterprises laid bare to many that bitcoin is king.
But Lisbon as a city remains largely blockchain agnostic.
Every night of the week, there is some sort of industry gathering — recurring events like Web3 Wednesdays and Crypto Fridays at The Block, a popular clubhouse where industry enthusiasts can rent out co-working space. The city also plays host to major industry conferences like Web Summit and NearCon.
“I bear in mind, two years in the past, there was purported to be an ethereum occasion right here, after which solana organized one other occasion after which they mentioned, ‘Well, let’s do a blockchain week,’ after which it turned a blockchain month,” said Primiterra.
“I went to the opposite blockchain occasions through the bull market, as a result of each blockchain was providing drinks, and I’m like, ‘Why not?'” he mentioned.
Aerial view shot of the April 25th Bridge and the Tagus River at sunset, Almada, Lisboa Region, Portugal
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Crypto investment firm Greenfield recently named Lisbon the most important crypto hub on the planet, outranking New York, Berlin and Singapore. In the recently released State of European Crypto Report, researchers point to its “profound DeFi scene” and the country’s tax breaks as two big reasons for its top status.
Even as the government looks to roll back aggressive incentives for foreigners, the tax regime is still a lot more favorable than elsewhere on the continent — especially as the collective crypto market cap is nearly 60% off its all-time high. Add perks like the newly launched digital nomad visa and the fact that the city offers lower prices than other Western European hubs, and Lisbon has all the fixings of an ideal expatriate enclave for tech enthusiasts looking to save cash while they talk code.
This is a big part of why Primiterra, who has been in roughly 50 countries in seven years, is staying put in Portugal. He bought an apartment during the pandemic in an up-and-coming neighborhood outside the main city center — and has no plans to uproot anytime soon. Another big draw? A community of like-minded people.
“I like tech usually, so even when I do know {that a} mission is extremely coded tech clever — I’m like, ‘OK, inform me how you propose to unravel that double-spend drawback,'” he said. “I can take heed to it, I can counter-argue a few of the stuff.”
“I’ve buddies within the ethereum neighborhood, and it’s very fantastic for me,” added Primiterra, though he noted that one of his big side projects of the moment is looking to launch a co-working space dedicated to bitcoin.
Sunrise over Lisbon, Portugal
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The San Francisco of Europe
A walk through Portugal’s capital feels eerily similar to a stroll in San Francisco. Both boast a cityscape defined by steep streets and sudden vistas; hilly terrain sloping down to beaches dotted by kite surfers and sailboats; red, dual-towered suspension bridges marking the edge of the city bounds; and brightly colored old-fashioned trams snaking through narrow streets.
The two coastal cities are also honey pots for techies.
Jemson Chan is a software tester from Singapore who has been living in Portugal for nine months. Chan is currently working for a company that is not crypto related, but he says his passion firmly lies in bitcoin and decentralized tech.
“I got here to Lisbon for the standard of life, the variety of tech startups and the very burgeoning tech scene,” mentioned Chan.
Jemson Chan is a software tester from Singapore who has been living in Portugal for nine months.
CNBC
Guy Young, the CEO and founder of crypto startup Ethena Labs, says the ambience drew him to Lisbon, calling it one of those ideal cities that strikes a good balance between picturesque architecture, a rich history, top-notch restaurants, great weather — and a solid community of crypto people.
Young’s anecdotal take on the Iberian Peninsula reflects a common sentiment. In 2022, Portugal ranked sixth on the Global Peace Index, and it tops the list of best countries for expats. The number of foreign residents in Portugal has been on the rise for seven straight years, increasing by more than 40% in the past decade.
It also helps that there are clear ground rules on crypto in Europe, thanks to a law known as Markets in Crypto-Assets, or MiCA. While the guidelines aren’t Portugal-specific, the comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets makes it easier to navigate operating a crypto business or investing in virtual tokens in the eurozone.
Chan, who has a side hustle hosting his own educational podcast on bitcoin called Orange Pill Uncensored, says Portugal is a far more hospitable backdrop than the U.S. with its regulation-by-enforcement tactics deployed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
“Ever because the FTX collapse and the present ongoing assaults by particularly the U.S. authorities on centralized exchanges, there have been efforts from the grassroots stage to create extra decentralized platforms that cope with the on- and off-ramps to fiat,” added Chan, pointing to decentralized marketplaces like Pocket Bitcoin, RoboSats, Bisque and Peach that allow users to buy and sell bitcoin.
Primiterra used to spend his days working to measure global internet censorship as part of his work with a sub-project of the dark web browser, Tor. But nowadays, he volunteers his coding skills to Bitcoin Map, an open-source tool that lets you search for merchants that accept bitcoin anywhere in the world.
Lisbon may be crypto-friendly, but businesses don’t appear to be all that interested in accepting bitcoin as a form of currency. Primiterra says the list includes a handful of merchants including a ramen place and a dentist.
Seb True is a full-stack engineer who made the move to Lisbon over the summer.
CNBC
Seb True is a full-stack engineer who made the move to Lisbon over the summer. The British national initially traveled to Portugal on what was meant to be a short trip to make a presentation at the monthly bitcoin gathering. Soon after his arrival, he was hooked and committed to a three-month sublet.
True quit his full-time job so he could focus on traveling the world and teaching people about bitcoin from the perspective of sound money and the philosophy of libertarianism. He has dubbed his educational modules The Bitcoin Student, and he’s looking to expand the brand by capitalizing on his engineering background.
Lisbon has been a relief for True, who previously ran underground workshops in Egypt where bitcoin is illegal.
“Apparently they throw folks in jail for speaking about it and simply engaged on it or doing something with it,” he said. “That’s truly the primary place I began giving shows on bitcoin.”
He says he knew the risks but ultimately ignored warnings about his safety, because he felt the population could greatly benefit from learning more about decentralized virtual money that existed outside the reach of governments or central banks.
“It’s a rustic that has skilled over 50% inflation simply this 12 months, persons are struggling, they do not perceive why and they do not know who accountable,” continued True.
“Their view was, ‘Oh, bitcoin, somebody controls that, too, absolutely, so it is not going to be any higher,'” he said, adding that it didn’t take long to “orange tablet” them, a phrase used by bitcoiners to describe the process of indoctrinating someone in the ways of bitcoin.
True has now shifted his focus to Portugal, describing Lisbon, in particular, as the ideal base to grow his enterprise.
“The folks right here that I’m assembly are doing issues, truly creating content material, they’re lively about making a distinction, and they’re excited by collaborating,” True told CNBC.
“I’ve already had folks contacting me asking to make content material for me or for my mission, not for any cash, not for any fame … however simply because they’re passionate, as a result of they consider within the mission,” continued True. “They consider within the concept, and that is actually what’s made me suppose, ‘Wow, I ought to actually keep right here. This is the place the neighborhood clearly is.'”
Lisbon’s skyline, showing the city’s Ponte 25 de Abril spanning the river Tagus.
Stephen Knowles Photography | Moment | Getty Images
Tax breaks on bitcoin
Before making the move from Asia to Europe, Chan pored over tax law in the European Union, narrowing down the ideal jurisdiction to either Switzerland or Portugal.
“If something about Switzerland, it is a millionaires’ and billionaires’ paradise,” said Chan. “Looking at me, I do not suppose I’ve achieved that stage of success but, so I selected the poor man’s Switzerland.”
The tax perks in Portugal are certainly a big draw.
The resident-non-habitual (NHR) status is a fiscal regime that in some cases grants expats living in Portugal total exemption from paying taxes on their income for a period of up to 10 years.
In addition, unlike the U.S., which treats virtual currency as property, taxing it in a manner similar to stocks or real property, Portugal views cryptocurrencies as a form of payment. That distinction is a game-changer with respect to taxes.
Up until the end of 2022, capital gains resulting from crypto transactions, such as cashing out and crypto-to-crypto trades, were not subject to personal income taxes. The government has since added more caveats to its crypto tax breaks, including a requirement that an investor hold a digital asset for more than a year before selling in order to avoid paying taxes on the sale.
This means that gains from buying or selling cryptocurrency, as with other fiat currencies, are not taxed if the trader holds on to their coins for at least 12 months. Meanwhile, profits made on crypto held for less than a year is taxed at a rate of 28%.
“This makes Portugal a very engaging place for crypto customers to dwell,” explained Shehan Chandrasekera, a CPA and head of tax strategy at crypto tax software company CoinTracker.io.
The only exception to the country’s generous crypto scheme relates to companies registered in Portugal that deal in crypto. These businesses face some taxes under certain circumstances, like if they earn cryptocurrency by providing services in Portugal.
Cyclists photographed in Lisbon, Portugal, in October 2018.
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Expats tell CNBC the process of establishing residency is relatively smooth. It doesn’t require owning any property, and unlike other crypto tax havens, such as Puerto Rico, foreigners aren’t required to spend a certain number of days in the country.
Citizens of the European Union have the right to permanent residence in Portugal, and for non-EU citizens, it offers expats a few paths to residency, including the golden visa and the D7 Visa (also known as the retirement visa or passive income visa), both of which tend to attract wealthy foreigners.
The Portuguese golden visa is given to those who buy property, or invest a certain amount of money in the country.
There are also steps that involve getting a tax identification number, opening a bank account and formally applying for residency. Companies such as Plan B Passport streamline the application process for expats.
Plan B CEO Katie Ananina tells CNBC the company has helped hundreds of people from countries such as the U.S., the U.K., Australia and Canada obtain a second passport in one of seven countries, including Portugal. Plan B works in tandem with each government’s residence- or citizenship-by-investment programs.
One drawback to Lisbon’s burgeoning popularity: As more crypto fans flood the city, some of the longtime natives are complaining about rising prices, similar to other tech hubs around the world.
“There’s been fairly a kind of inflow of foreigners which have are available not too long ago,” says Ethena’s Young. “And there’s been a little bit of pushback round property costs, what is going on on with kind of the costs in a few of the eating places and stuff like that. But as a foreigner who’s come right here, I’ve no complaints.”
‘It’s just paradise’
Wout Deley — who has been researching cryptocurrencies and their underlying technology since 2013 — was working as an international sales manager for a galvanization company in Ghent, Belgium, when he decided to sell his house, invest in tokens and hit the road.
After a few months traveling through Europe during the early days of the Covid pandemic, he ultimately settled in Portugal.
Deley invested two-thirds of the house-sale proceeds in cryptocurrency and then lived off the final third.
“At any given time, I’ve possibly — at a most — 10,000 euros ($11,450) in my checking account,” said Deley. “All the remainder is at all times in crypto.”
For Deley, establishing residency in Portugal was a no-brainer.
“Cryptocurrencies in Belgium are massively taxed, and I used to be taking a look at seven figures of revenue,” said Deley, who said that he would have faced a tax obligation of close to 40% had he remained in Belgium.
“You need to double your revenue? Just transfer to Portugal,” he mentioned.
Praça do Comércio is a popular tourist destination in Lisbon’s city center.
Imazins | Image Bank Film | Getty Images
Deley lives in Lagos in the southwest tip of Portugal. He says that he found a villa available as a long-term rental which was “very low-cost” and that was enough to establish residency.
The living is easy in Portugal, according to Deley, who says the southern coastline of the Algarve offers the perks of Los Angeles — a warm climate and great surf — but without the traffic jams. And there is a solid social scene.
“It’s filled with expats. It’s simply paradise,” continued Deley. He says that he knows of at least three bitcoin billionaires who live nearby — plus another 12 people at least, mostly from the U.K., who are moving to Portugal in the next few months for the crypto tax benefits.
Deley doesn’t speak Portuguese, but he says that’s not a problem because everyone speaks English. He is also surrounded by a lot of like-minded crypto investors. “Everyone has cryptocurrency right here. Everyone is aware of bitcoin. Everyone has it,” he said.
Deley says the crypto investor migration is good for Portugal, too.
“They have an enormous mind drain. Younger persons are leaving. So they’re making an attempt to be extra open to folks with capital, digital nomads,” said Deley.
Meanwhile, Didi Taihuttu of the ‘Bitcoin Family’ wants to disrupt the typical expat experience in Portugal by building a crypto village.
The family is currently shopping for real estate. They’ve narrowed their options down to three different plots of land, one as big as 250,000 acres, in the Algarve.
The plan is to run the community in a decentralized fashion, in which the land is divvied up by the square meter and sold as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, in order to signify ownership.
Taihuttu also wants to mine for bitcoin with solar and wind power and then use the heat produced by the rigs to warm houses in the winter, in a sort of closed-loop system.
The working plan, for now, is to use a decentralized autonomous organization, or DAO, to govern the community. DAOs run on blockchain technology.
“We need to construct a decentralized life-style, which is the long run,” he said.
In the meantime, the Taihuttus found an abandoned inn and are retrofitting it to be the first web3 hotel in the Algarve that is financed and owned by the community.
Source: www.cnbc.com