Archive for Cryptocurrencies – Page 10

WEF will “spectacularly fail” unless it advances crypto rules

By George Prior

The World Economic Forum (WEF), which starts today in Davos, Switzerland, will “spectacularly fail” unless it advances cryptocurrency regulation, warns the CEO and founder of one of the world’s largest financial advisory, asset management and fintech organizations.

The stark warning from Nigel Green of deVere Group comes as business, financial, economic, political, media, academic and civic leaders head to the Swiss mountain resort for the annual four-day conference.

It’s returning to its traditional timeslot and destination after two years of pandemic-triggered disruption.

Its return coincides with Bitcoin, the world’s biggest crypto by market capitalisation, recording a staggering 28% jump in value since the beginning of January.

The deVere CEO says: “The leaders assembled in Davos at the WEF must next week return home to their governments who then need to insist that their financial regulators must stop ‘talking the talk’ and begin to up the ante on regulating the cryptocurrency market.

“The time for endless platitudes on greater regulatory scrutiny is over. Action is required.

“Should those in attendance at the WEF not advance the agenda of crypto regulation as a result of the 2023 summit, they will have spectacularly failed.”

Nigel Green, who has long been an internationally high-profile champion of digital currencies such as Bitcoin, cites three key reasons why regulation is needed.

“First, as more and more institutional investors – including pension funds, mutual funds, investment banks, commercial trusts and hedge funds – as well as individual investors, increase their exposure to crypto, and as mass adoption increasingly takes hold, inevitably cryptocurrencies will play an ever-greater role in the international financial system.

“Yet crypto remains a relatively young market and, therefore, a volatile one.

“As such, in the interests of avoiding wide-scale disruption to the safety and soundness of the broader global financial system, crypto must be brought into the regulatory tent and held to the same standards as the rest of the system.”

He continues: “Second, after a year of significant crypto firm collapses, accusations of top-level fraud and prison sentences for insider trading, there’s no denying that greater scrutiny would help protect investors.

“Third, regulation could provide a potential long-term, sustainable economic boost to those countries which introduce it as crypto is widely regarded as the future of finance.”

What is needed now, says Nigel Green, is a workable internationally agreed and recognised regulatory framework that “is sensible and doesn’t hamper innovation or compromise the inherent nature of the digital assets and market.”

After Bitcoin reached above $21,095 on January 13 for the first time since November 8 2022, he told the media that: “The ‘crypto winter’ is thawing amid growing signs that inflation is beginning to cool. Of course, the crypto market will not go in a straight line – no market ever does – but we expect the bears to go into hibernation and bulls are ready to run!”

He concludes: “Cryptocurrencies are here to stay and the market is only set to grow exponentially.

“There can be no doubt that regulation of the crypto ecosystem is required, and it should be a priority at this year’s WEF in Davos.”

About:

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

Bitcoin hits $21k: the ‘bulls are ready to run!’

By George Prior

The Bitcoin price rally demonstrates that cryptocurrency investors are pricing in more favourable market conditions in 2023 as inflation looks set to peak, affirms the CEO and founder of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory, asset management and fintech organizations.

Nigel Green of deVere Group, a high-profile crypto entrepreneur, is commenting after Bitcoin reached above $21,095 on January 13 for the first time since November 8 2022, before falling back slightly.

At the time of this release, the largest crypto by market capitalisation is $20,890, according to the exchange deVere Crypto.

He says: “We are technically still in a bear market, but the signs are the bulls are beginning to take back control.

“Bitcoin price has jumped yet again– another 3.8% in the last 24 hours – on top of gains made through the week.  It’s estimated that around $70 billion has been traded in crypto over the last day alone.”

He continues: “The relief rally began on the back of the latest U.S. inflation data which was released on Thursday. It revealed U.S. CPI slowed to 6.5% in December from 7.1% the previous month.

“As inflation in the world’s largest economy is, it seems, being brought under control thanks to the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes, it makes it more likely that the central bank will begin to take its foot off the brake of the economy by slowing the hikes.

“The Fed will continue hiking rates for a while yet (albeit at a slower pace) as they can’t afford to slide backwards. Officials will continue to sound hawkish too in order to avoid over-excitement in the markets and wider complacency.”

The asset classes that have fallen hardest due to central banks’ policy tightening in 2022 may be the strongest performers during the unwinding of the rate hike programmes, predicts the deVere CEO.

“These include cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin, which alongside tech stocks, were hit hard.

“As the central banks begin to stop tightening the screws, and the cyclical upturn gets underway, these asset classes could outperform others.

“Knowing they are likely to be rewarded for doing so, many crypto investors are positioning themselves now for the pivot.”

The developments will be welcomed by crypto enthusiasts after Bitcoin lost over 60% of its value in 2022, with many other tokens experiencing similar losses, due to the bleak macro outlook, the collapse of several crypto firms, and greater regulatory scrutiny.

Nigel Green concludes: The ‘crypto winter’ is thawing amid growing signs that inflation is beginning to cool.

“Of course, the crypto market will not go in a straight line – no market ever does – but we expect the bears to go into hibernation and bulls are ready to run.”

About:

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

 

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC, SOL, AVAX). Overview for 13.01.2023

By RoboForex.com

The BTC grew to 18,813 USD. Weekly growth amounts to 11.9%.

As long as the market closed the previous session above the resistance level at 18,500 USD, buyers may freely set new goals. Now they may reach 21,500-22,000 USD.

Currently, the BTC correlates with the US stock indices (S&P 500 and Nasdaq) by more than 80%. This means that the anticipated slow-down in increasing the US interest rate is good not only for stocks but for crypto as well.

Is it crypto spring at last?..

Capitalisation of the crypto sector on Friday grew to 904,108 billion USD, the BTC taking up 40.1% already, and the ETH – 19.1%.

Solana activity increased

The SOL sky-rocketed to two-month peaks because the network got active. Transaction volumes and the number of active accounts returned to the highs of the last four months. The number of active addresses amounts to 240 thousand.

BTC is becoming more complex

On 15 January, the BTC network will live through a record increase in complexity of mining. First thing, the hashrate will grow, i.e. more hashes will be needed for mining a BTC block.

AVAX reacted to news about Amazon

The price of the AVAX token grew noticeably after on the Internet they spoke about cooperation of Amazon Web Services (AWS) with Ava Labs. This is meant to implement blockchain technology deeper in enterprises and governments.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC, USDC). Overview for 11.01.2023

By RoboForex.com

The BTC is trying to grow and for now it is doing a good job. On Wednesday, the crypto is chiefly moving around 17,431 USD. This is very close to a new intermediate resistance level of 17,500 USD that can open a pathway to 18,500 USD.

The market enjoys good dynamics of American stock indices, and correlation between the BTC and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq benchmarks recovered. Jerome Powell, the head of the Federal Reserve System who delivered a speech yesterday, never touched upon financial policy, so the markets remained balanced.

Now we wait for the US December inflation report as it will be the most interesting event of the week.

In the middle of the week, capitalisation of the crypto market is 857.617 billion USD. The BTC takes up 39.2% and the ETH – 19.0%.

USDC transaction volume increased noticeably

After the crash of the FTX exchange, the USDC stablecoin became much more popular than earlier. Daily transaction volume is 4-5 times larger than that of the USDT. The imbalance becomes even more pronounced when we recall that the USDT has a 23 billion USD larger capitalisation.

Shiba Inu and Bugatti launch NFT collection

A crypto project Shiba Inu alongside its affiliate Bugatti announced launch of a collection of Bugatti X Shiboshi NFTs. To present a limited series of physical objects, the affiliates will organize a special event. The digital collection will hold 299 unique tokens at a price of 0.14 ETH minimum.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC, SOL, TON). Overview for 28.12.2022

By RoboForex.com

The BTC is stuck in place again, generally fluctuating near 16,654 USD.

The situation at the exchange is vague. Investors are afraid to buy due to trouble with mining and trust issues after the crash of the FTX crypto exchange. All these problems cannot be resolved at once, so no one rushes at solving them.

In fact, investors are tired of waiting, and on such a background, the price may fluctuate a lot. During winter holidays, care should he taken at the crypto market.

Technically, the BTC remains in a flat between 16,500 and 17,200 USD. Few investors believe that conditions will form at all for an attack on 17,200 USD, from where a pathway to 18,500 USD may open. However, all the highlights should be kept before one’s eyes. An important support level is 15,500 USD.

Capitalisation of the crypto market has dropped to 799.679 billion USD. The BTC takes up 40.1%, the ETH — 18.3%.

SOL and TON dropped noticeably

The SOL and TON tokens lost more than 10% yesterday, having no fundamental reasons for such a decline. The XCN and APT coins also got under some pressure.

Kraken leaves Japan

The Kraken crypto exchange leaves the Japanese market. The company has announced that starting 31 January 2023, it renounces its FSA registration as a crypto asset operator. The company made this decision to give priority to other more promising investment options.

FTX borrowed 511 million USD from Alameda

The bankrupt crypto exchange FTX loaned 511 million USD from its subsidiary Alameda Research in order to buy stocks of the Robinhood trading platform. This is clear from the documents retrieved by the court. The purchase of the block of shares was carried out by a shell company. The problem is that Alameda also borrowed the same sum from BlockFi (the company has already gone bankrupt) on the interest of those very Robinhood shares. The block of shares will now be the subject of most acute disputes.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

FTX’s collapse mirrors an infamous 18th century British financial scandal

By Amy Froide, University of Maryland, Baltimore County 

Enron. Bernie Madoff. FTX.

In modern capitalism, it seems as if stories of companies and managers who engage in fraud and swindle their investors occur like the changing of the seasons.

In fact, these scandals can be traced back to the origins of publicly traded companies, when the first stockbrokers bought and sold company shares and government securities in the coffee houses of London’s Exchange Alley during the 1700s.

As a historian of 18th century finance, I am struck by the similarities between what’s known as the Charitable Corporation Scandal and the recent collapse of FTX.

A noble cause

The Charitable Corporation was established in London in 1707 with the noble mission of providing “relief of the industrious poor by assisting them with small sums at legal interest.”

Essentially, it sought to provide low-interest loans to poor tradesmen, shielding them from predatory pawnbrokers who charged as much as 30% interest. The corporation made loans available at the rate of 5% in return for a pledge of property for security.

The Charitable Corporation was modeled on Monti di Pietà, a charitable institution of credit established in Catholic countries during the Renaissance era to combat usury, or high rates of interest.

Unlike the Monti di Pietà, however, the British version – despite its name – wasn’t a nonprofit. Instead, it was a business venture. The enterprise was funded by offering shares to investors who, in return, would make money while doing good. Under its original mission, it was like an 18th century version of today’s socially responsible investing, or “sustainable investment funds.”

Raiding the fund

In 1725, the Charitable Corporation diverted from its original mission when a new board of directors took over.

These men turned the corporation into their own piggy bank, taking money from it to buy shares and prop up their other companies. At the same time, the company’s employees began to engage in fraud: Safety checks ceased, books were kept irregularly and pledges went unrecorded.

Investigators would ultimately find that £400,000 or more in capital was missing – roughly $108 million in today’s U.S. dollars.

In the autumn of 1731, rumors began to circulate about the solvency of the Charitable Corporation. The warehouse keeper at the time, John Thomson, who was in charge of all loans and pledges but also in league with the five fraudulent directors, hid the company’s books and fled the country.

At the shareholders’ quarterly meeting, they found that money, pledges and accounts had all gone missing. At this point, the proprietors of the Charitable Corporation stock appealed to the British Parliament for redress. One-third of those who petitioned were women, a proportion that equaled the percentage of women who held shares in the Charitable Corporation.

Many women were drawn to the corporation because of its public mission in providing small loans to working people. It’s also possible that they had been intentionally targeted for fraud.

The parliamentary investigation led to various charges being leveled against both managers and employees of the Charitable Corporation. Many of them were forced to appear before Parliament and were arrested if they did not. The managers and employees deemed most responsible for the 1732 fraud, such as William Burroughs, had their assets seized and inventoried in order to help pay back the shareholder losses.

Bankruptcy proceedings were started against the banker and broker, George Robinson, and the warehouse keeper, Thomson. Both Sir Robert Sutton and Sir Archibald Grant were expelled as members of the House of Commons, with Grant being prevented from leaving the country and Sutton ultimately prosecuted in several courts.

In the end, the shareholders received a partial government bailout – Parliament authorized a lottery that reimbursed only 40% of what the corporation’s creditors had lost.

The risks of concentrated power

There are several key characteristics that stand out in the collapses of both the Charitable Corporation and FTX. Both companies were offering something new or venturing into a new sector. In the former’s case, it was microloans. In FTX’s case, it was cryptocurrency.

Meanwhile, the management of both ventures was centralized in the hands of just a few people. The Charitable Corporation got into trouble when it reduced its directors from 12 to five and when it consolidated most of its loan business in the hands of one employee – namely, Thomson. FTX’s example is even more extreme, with founder Sam Bankman-Fried calling all the shots.

In both cases, the key fraud was using the assets of one company to prop up another company managed by the same people. For example, in 1732, the corporation’s directors bought stock in the York Buildings Company, in which many of them were also involved. They hoped to juice stock prices. When that didn’t happen, they realized they couldn’t cover what they had taken out of the Charitable Corporation’s funds.

Fast forward nearly 300 years, and a similar story seems to have played out. Bankman-Fried allegedly took money out his customer accounts in FTX to cover his cryptocurrency trading firm, Alameda Research.

News of both frauds also came as a surprise, with little advance warning. Part of this is due to the ways in which managers were well respected and well connected to both politicians and the financial world. Few public figures mistrusted them, and this proved to be a useful screen for deceit.

I would also argue that in both cases the company’s connection to philanthropy lent it another level of cover. The Charitable Corporation’s very name announced its altruism. And even after the scandal subsided, commentators pointed out that the original business of microlending was useful. FTX’s founder Bankman-Fried is an advocate of effective altruism and has argued that it was useful for him and his companies to make lots of money so he could give it away to what he deemed effective causes.

After the Charitable Corporation’s collapse in 1732, Parliament didn’t institute any regulation that would prevent such a fraud from happening again.

A tradition of loose oversight and regulations has been the hallmark of Anglo-American capitalism. If the response to the 2008 financial crash is any indication of what will come in the wake of FTX’s collapse, it’s possible that some bad actors, like Bankman-Fried, will be punished. But any regulation will be undone at the first opportunity – or never put in place to begin with.The Conversation

About the Author:

Amy Froide, Professor of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC, AXS). Overview for 12.12.2022

By RoboForex.com

The BTC failed to keep balance and on Monday dropped to 16,934 USD.

The second attempt in a row to rise above the intermediate support level of 17,200 USD failed. The market stepped back to the comfortable consolidation area. Now the support levels of 16,600 USD and 16,300 USD turn out working. If they are broken away, a pathway for sellers to 15,500 USD will open.

Nothing new is going on. If the crypto market had a global idea that could balance digital assets out after a decline, the dynamics would be better and prospects would be clearer. However, there is no general idea.

Capitalisation of the crypto market is 840.74 billion USD, the BTC taking up 38.7% and the ETH – 18.1%.

Florida believes in BTC

A US state of Florida is number one among the states in terms of acception of digital currencies and the development of blockchain-basee infrastructure. Firstly, this state accomodates for the largest number of BTC cash machines in the US. According to Invezz information, this is where blockchain startups prefer to open.

AXS became leader of growth over week

The AXS token turned out the most active over a week. It grew by 22%, at certain moments rising by 52%. AXS is a crypto of the Axie Infinity game.

David Schwartz: three reasons for FXT crash

Technical director of Ripple David Schwartz explained the three main reasons for the crash of the FXT exchange. The first one is the fact that Alameda Research used the clients’ money. Another reason is the deliberate mixture of the clients’ deposits and assets for high-risk investing. The third reason is no mechanisms for risk-management.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC). Overview for 07.12.2022

By RoboForex.com

The BTC is being dragged down again. On Wednesday, the leading crypto is declining to 16,827 USD. And while yesterday there was a good chance to return above the resistance level of 17,200 USD, today this scenario just has no reason to be considered realistic.

There is no correlation with the US stock markets, neither there is any connection to the real situation around. The crypto market is in a standby mode.

The risk factor is the same: trust and safety issues. After the epic crash of the FXT exchange and some problems with Genesis, investors tend to doubt everything they see.

Capitalisation of the crypto market today is 837.97 billion USD; the BTC takes up 38.5%, the ETH — 17.9%.

Director general of ICE: crypto must be regulated as securities

Jeffrey Sprecher, director general of ICE, the operator of the NYSE, thinks that cryptocurrencies need to be regulated like securities are. This method would provide optimum protection to clients. Moreover, nothing has to be developed from scratch: all the legislation already exists.

Amber Group: new layoffs

A crypto broker from Hong Kong, the Amber Group, initiated new layoffs again. It had to run to decreasing the financial load and stopped looking for new investors due to the sudden death of its head. It was reported earlier that the company planned to attract 3 billion USD.

Bitwave attracted 15 million USD

The Bitwave platform (Crypto accounting, tax and compliance) gathered 15 million USD in a serious A round of financing. The project needs finance to launch new products, including Bitwave Institutional. It is aimed for helping organisations that store and carry out transactions and use digital assets.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

The cryptocurrency market digest (BTC). Overview for 23.11.2022

By RoboForex.com

The BTC is recovering and looking good: the leading cryptocurrency has returned to 16,582 USD upon falling below it. However, the whole situation is troublesome.

We may suppose that the current pullback is purely technical because fundamentally speaking, the market is stressed.

Genesis keeps fighting for its life. The company has hired counselors to work out all the ways of remaining afloat. Bankruptcy is also being discussed. Moreover, experts are looking for creditors that could help deposit the company’s balance for 500 million and up to 1 billion USD.

Market players are clearly seeing the risks that have impacted other players of the sector as well. Asset withdrawal from any platform may be rough and merciless. And no one seems insured from this.

On Wednesday, capitalisation of the crypto market is 823.61 billion USD: it has restored from the bottom hit yesterday. The BTC takes up 38.7%, the ETH – 17.3%.

Salvador: times of regulations

Salvador authorities have started working on regulating digital asset services and crypto emission. They plan to create a special commission that will be registering crypto companies and control their business. Moreover, the draft bill mentions creation of a department that will be managing, storing, and invest funds.

New York State authorities have banned PoW-based mining

Governor of the New York state Kathy Hochul has signed a law that puts a two-year ban on Proof-of-Work (PoW) crypto mining. Earlier a ban was imposed on opening new companies that use environmentally dirty mining.

CRV sky-rocketed

The quotes of the CRV (Curve DAO Token) have grown by 43% overnight. Now the coin is number 82 in the Top 100 rating of crypto. The LTC have also demonstrated sufficient dynamics, growing by 29% overnight.

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

Dramatic collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange FTX contains lessons for investors but won’t affect most people

By D. Brian Blank, Mississippi State University and Brandy Hadley, Appalachian State University 

In the fast-paced world of cryptocurrency, vast sums of money can be made or lost in the blink of an eye. In early November 2022, the second-largest cryptocurrency exchange, FTX, was valued at more than US$30 billion. By Nov. 14, FTX was in bankruptcy proceedings along with more than 100 companies connected to it. D. Brian Blank and Brandy Hadley are professors who study finance, investing and fintech. They explain how and why this incredible collapse happened, what effect it might have on the traditional financial sector and whether you need to care if you don’t own any cryptocurrency.

1. What happened?

In 2019, Sam Bankman-Fried founded FTX, a company that ran one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges.

FTX is where many crypto investors trade and hold their cryptocurrency, similar to the New York Stock Exchange for stocks. Bankman-Fried is also the founder of Alameda Research, a hedge fund that trades and invests in cryptocurrencies and crypto companies.

Within the traditional financial sector, these two companies would be separate firms entirely or at least have divisions and firewalls in place between them. But in early November 2022, news outlets reported that a significant proportion of Alameda’s assets were a type of cryptocurrency released by FTX itself.

A few days later, news broke that FTX had allegedly been loaning customer assets to Alameda for risky trades without the consent of the customers and also issuing its own FTX cryptocurrency for Alameda to use as collateral. As a result, criminal and regulatory investigators began scrutinizing FTX for potentially violating securities law.

These two pieces of news basically led to a bank run on FTX.

Large crypto investors, like FTX’s competitor Binance, as well as individuals, began to sell off cryptocurrency held on FTX’s exchange. FTX quickly lost its ability to meet customer withdrawals and halted trading. On Nov. 14, FTX was also hit by an apparent insider hack and lost $600 million worth of cryptocurrency.

That same day, FTX, Alameda Research and 130 other affiliated companies founded by Bankman-Fried filed for bankruptcy. This action may leave more than a million suppliers, employees and investors who bought cryptocurrencies through the exchange or invested in these companies with no way to get their money back.

Among the groups and individuals who held currency on the FTX platform were many of the normal players in the crypto world, but a number of more traditional investment firms also held assets within FTX. Sequoia Capital, a venture capital firm, as well as the Ontario Teacher’s Pension, are estimated to have held millions of dollars of their investment portfolios in ownership stake of FTX. They have both already written off these investments with FTX as lost.

2. Did a lack of oversight play a role?

In traditional markets, corporations generally limit the risk they expose themselves to by maintaining liquidity and solvency. Liquidity is the ability of a firm to sell assets quickly without those assets losing much value. Solvency is the idea that a company’s assets are worth more than what that company owes to debtors and customers.

But the crypto world has generally operated with much less caution than the traditional financial sector, and FTX is no exception. About two-thirds of the money that FTX owed to the people who held cryptocurrency on its exchange – roughly $11.3 billion of $16 billion owed – was backed by illiquid coins created by FTX. FTX was taking its customers’ money, giving it to Alameda to make risky investments and then creating its own currency, known as FTT, as a replacement – cryptocurrency that it was unable to sell at a high enough price when it needed to.

In addition, nearly 40% of Alameda’s assets were in FTX’s own cryptocurrency – and remember, both companies were founded by the same person.

This all came to a head when investors decided to sell their coins on the exchange. FTX did not have enough liquid assets to meet those demands. This in turn drove the value of FTT from over $26 a coin at the beginning of November to under $2 by Nov. 13. By this point, FTX owed more money to its customers than it was worth.

In regulated exchanges, investing with customer funds is illegal. Additionally, auditors validate financial statements, and firms must publish the amount of money they hold in reserve that is available to fund customer withdrawals. And even if things go wrong, the Securities Investor Protection Corporation – or SIPC – protects depositors against the loss of investments from an exchange failure or financially troubled brokerage firm. None of these guardrails are in place within the crypto world.

3. Why is this a big deal in crypto?

As a result of this meltdown, the company Binance is now considering creating an industry recovery fund – akin to a private version of SIPC insurance – to avoid future failures of crypto exchanges.

But while the collapse of FTX and Alameda – valued at more than $30 billion and now essentially worth nothing – is dramatic, the bigger implication is simply the potential lost trust in crypto. Bank runs are rare in traditional financial institutions, but they are increasingly common in the crypto space. Given that Bankman-Fried and FTX were seen as some of the biggest, most trusted figures in crypto, these events may lead more investors to think twice about putting money in crypto.

4. If I don’t own crypto, should I care?

Though investment in cryptocurrencies has grown rapidly, the entire crypto market – valued at over $3 trillion at its peak – is much smaller than the $120 trillion traditional stock market.

While investors and regulators are still evaluating the consequences of this fall, the impact on any person who doesn’t personally own crypto will be minuscule. It is true that many larger investment funds, like BlackRock and the Ontario Teachers Pension, held investments in FTX, but the estimated $95 million the Ontario Teachers Pension lost through the collapse of FTX is just 0.05% of the entire fund’s investments.

The takeaway for most individuals is not to invest in unregulated markets without understanding the risks. In high-risk environments like crypto, it’s possible to lose everything – a lesson investors in FTX are learning the hard way.The Conversation

About the Author:

D. Brian Blank, Assistant Professor of Finance, Mississippi State University and Brandy Hadley, Associate Professor of Finance and the David A. Thompson Professor in Applied Investments, Appalachian State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.