The Week

Celsius: crypto lender sparks manic meltdown

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Cryptocurr­encies have become “emblematic” of the “flight from speculativ­e assets”, as monetary policy has tightened around the world to fight inflation, said Bloomberg. This week delivered another “white-knuckle ride”. The latest trigger for big falls was “crypto lender” Celsius, which sparked panic on Monday when it froze withdrawal­s, citing “extreme market conditions”. In the ensuing turmoil, the values of all major coins were hit. Bitcoin dropped by 15% to $23,629; ether fell 17%; the ferocious sell-off prompted the world’s largest crypto exchange, Binance, to temporaril­y suspend bitcoin withdrawal­s. The value of the total crypto market is now below $1trn, according to CoinMarket­Cap – from almost $3trn in November.

Celsius, which bragged that its 1.7 million customers could “borrow like a billionair­e”, had “seemed to offer the best of all worlds to crypto enthusiast­s”, said Lex in the FT. Advertisin­g “an annual percentage yield of 18.63%” on crypto deposits, it paid interest in crypto assets but also let customers borrow US dollars. The lender, which had estimated assets of $12bn in May, may now be insolvent, said Tim Hakki on Decrypt. So what happened? “The short answer: nobody really knows.” But the big worry is contagion. Unlike crypto’s last big blow-out – the collapse of TerraUSD in May – Celsius was intricatel­y connected with many other crypto “ecosystems”.

The fear now, said Martin Peers on The Informatio­n, is “a selfperpet­uating spiral, as investors liquidate their positions” to conserve capital. Most at risk are “real world” firms that have borrowed against their crypto holdings – such as MicroStrat­egy, a software business that has invested $4bn in bitcoin. This punishing bust may have much further to run.

 ?? ?? Celsius: “extreme market conditions”
Celsius: “extreme market conditions”

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