The sudden demise of the cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which filed for bankruptcy Friday, has stunned the crypto world — and its effects are already rippling into traditional financial markets.
Hear more about this story from Benjamin Powers:
- What does FTX’s collapse mean for the future of crypto?
- The not-so-stable coins: How Terra’s collapse is dragging down crypto markets
- The crypto market is on the rise as crypto banks like Signature collapse. Why?
- Bad Takes, Episode 15: SBF was not for real
- Prosecutors Push Judge to Ignore Sam Bankman-Fried’s Arguments to Toss Criminal Charges
The stunning developments will almost certainly lead to further regulatory scrutiny of the industry. The collapse is also likely to reset the increasing investment and interest in crypto from investment banks, pension plans and other actors in traditional finance. The investors in FTX included the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, the Japanese conglomerate SoftBank and the U.S. venture-capital firm Sequoia Capital.
“You have asset managers, investment funds and other entities that have investments in crypto companies and crypto-related companies marking those assets down,” said Howard Fischer, a former senior trial counsel at the SEC and a partner at law firm Moses and Singer. “The investors in those companies have seen their assets decrease, and there’s the potential ripple effect that will cause many people and companies and investors to be pressured to liquidate other assets to make up for the shortfall from FTX.”
The fall
By Tuesday of this week, FTX had halted customer withdrawals.
The beginning of the end came Thursday, when an even larger crypto exchange, Binance, decided against bailing out its rival after signing a letter of intent to buy the company on Tuesday, pending due diligence. Binance ditched the deal after reviewing FTX’s balance sheets to determine whether the overall worth of the exchange outweighed the $6 billion hole on its balance sheets.
Unlike a traditional commercial or savings bank, FTX was not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation — a layer of protection created in response to widespread bank runs during the Great Depression. For FTX customers, this meant there was never any guarantee the exchange would have funds on hand to withdraw when those customers wanted them.
FTX investors have lost millions, and customers are selling off the balances of their frozen accounts for pennies on the dollar — and some might never see their funds again, despite Bankman-Fried’s assurances that all funds are safe.
In addition to Sequoia Capital, other major financial firms such as Galaxy Digital, Amber Group, Tiger Global and Genesis Global Trading all lost funds or have them frozen on the exchange. Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA, an online multi-asset trading services, currency data and analytics platform, said that before the FTX crisis, cryptocurrencies were on a path toward legitimacy — and becoming a standard part of trading portfolios.
A reset on the horizon?
Now that’s all coming undone.
“It’s becoming clear that there was not enough regulation put in place,” said Moya. “The shutdown seems to be driven by making risky bets using clients’ money. And that story is not going to go away any time soon.”
The FTX collapse could set the crypto industry back years, he added, and reshape how traditional financial firms view the industry.
“I’m not saying this is not all like a Lehman [Brothers] moment for everyone, but for crypto it is,” said Moya, referring to the shocking collapse of the long-standing financial services firm during the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis.
Fischer said the full effects won’t be known for some time, since the FTX situation is far from settled. “There’s going to be downward price pressure on those other assets, and they could be crypto assets or non-crypto assets,” he said.
To Howard, one of the ironies of all of this is that it will likely hasten stricter regulation of the cryptocurrency industry.
“If this was a regulated product, and this industry was treated as other financial services industries were, then regulators might have gone in the books, looked at the risk, looked at the assets and liabilities, and been able to determine that there was an issue long before it became a catastrophe,” he said.
“I’m curious how many of the 134 companies filing for bankruptcy knew they were filing for bankruptcy,” said Nikhilesh De, CoinDesk’s managing editor for global policy and regulation, in a Grid Twitter Space on Friday about the news of the FTX bankruptcy.
You are now signed up for our newsletter.
- What Ramadan really means to me — and nearly 2 billion MuslimsGrid
- France protests, explained in five words: ‘Life begins when work ends’Grid
- Medical residents nationwide are unionizing. What does that mean for the future of healthcare?Grid
- Ramadan fashion hits the runways. Muslim women say it’s been a long time coming.Grid
- Who is Shou Zi Chew – the TikTok CEO doing all he can to keep his app going in the U.S.?Grid
- The SVB collapse has made deposits more valuable than ever — and banks will have to compete for themGrid
- Ukraine War in Data: 74,500 war crimes cases — and countingGrid
- Can China really play a role in ending the war in Ukraine?Grid
- ‘No Dumb Questions’: What is Section 230?Grid
- Trump steers allies and opponents on the right to a new enemy: Manhattan District Attorney Alvin BraggGrid
- World in Photos: In France, no-confidence vote and fresh protestsGrid
- Bad Takes, Episode 32: The lesson elites should have learned from IraqGrid