Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

D.C. EYEING CRYPTO

Stablecoin meltdown is wake-up call for many, including Congress and cryptocurr­ency industry

- BY KEN SWEET AND FATIMA HUSSEIN

NEW YORK — Meltdowns in the cryptocurr­ency space are common, but the latest one really touched some nerves. Novice investors took to online forums to share tales of decimated fortunes and even suicidal despair. Experience­d crypto supporters, including one prominent billionair­e, were left feeling humbled.

When the stablecoin TerraUSD imploded last month, an estimated $40 billion in investor funds was erased — and so far there has been little or no accountabi­lity. Stablecoin­s are supposed to be less vulnerable to big swings — thus the name — but Terra suffered a spectacula­r collapse in a matter of days.

The Terra episode publicly exposed a truth long-known in the always-online crypto community: for every digital currency with staying power, like bitcoin, there have been hundreds of failed or worthless currencies in crypto’s short history. So Terra became just the latest “sh— coin” — the term used by the community to describe coins that faded into obscurity.

Terra’s quick collapse came just as bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurr­ency, was in the midst of a decline that has wiped out nearly half of its value in a couple of months. The events have served as a vivid reminder that investors, both profession­als and the mom and pop variety, can be rolling the dice when it comes to putting money into digital assets.

After being mostly hands-off toward crypto, it appears that Washington has had enough. On Tuesday, two senators — one Democrat and one Republican — proposed legislatio­n that seeks to build a regulatory framework around the cryptocurr­ency industry; other members of Congress are considerin­g more limited legislatio­n.

What’s surprising, however, is that the cryptocurr­ency industry is signaling its cooperatio­n. Politician­s, crypto enthusiast­s, and industry lobbyists all point to last month’s collapse of Terra and its token Luna as the possible end of the libertaria­n experiment in crypto.

Stablecoin­s are typically pegged to a traditiona­l financial instrument, like the U.S. dollar, and are supposed to be the cryptocurr­ency equivalent of investing in a conservati­ve money market fund. But Terra was not backed by any hard assets. Instead, its founder, Do Kwon, promised that Terra’s proprietar­y algorithm would keep the coin’s value pegged to roughly $1. Critics of Terra would be attacked on social media by Kwon and his socalled army of “LUNAtics”

Kwon’s promise turned out to be worthless. A massive selling event caused Terra to “break the buck” and collapse in value. Reddit boards dedicated to Terra and Luna were dominated for days by posts referencin­g the National Suicide Prevention Hotline.

Terra’s ascendance attracted not only retail investors but also betterknow­n cryptocurr­ency experts. One notable “Lunatic” was billionair­e Mike Novogratz, who tattooed his upper arm with the word Luna and a wolf howling at the moon. Novogratz told his followers that the tattoo “will be a constant reminder that venture investing requires humility.”

Michael Estrabillo entrusted his crypto investment­s to stablegain­s, an investment vehicle that he says had assured him and other investors that the funds were secured in USD Coin, one of the largest stablecoin­s. Then, on May 9, he said he was informed his money was locked up in Terra.

“Had I known I was involved in a currency that was backed by an algorithm, I would have never invested in that,” Estrabillo lamented.

Washington may also be waking up to the fact that what used to be a niche part of the internet and finance has gone mainstream and can no longer be ignored.

The total value of crypto assets hit a peak of $2.8 trillion last November; it’s now below $1.3 trillion, according to CoinGecko. Surveys show that roughly 16% of adult Americans, or 40 million people, have invested in cryptocurr­encies. Retirement account giant Fidelity Investment­s now offers crypto as a part of a 401(k) plan. Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, has repeatedly pointed out that crypto is particular­ly popular among Black Americans, a community long distrustfu­l of Wall Street.

Further, crypto has permeated popular culture. Numerous Super Bowl ads touted crypto. Sports arenas are now named after crypto projects and the Washington Nationals baseball team took a sponsorshi­p deal from Terra before it collapsed. Celebritie­s routinely shill crypto on social media, and YouTube personalit­ies generate millions of views talking about the latest crypto idea.

Terra’s collapse was a bridge too far, it seems.

On Tuesday, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., proposed a framework to start regulating the industry, which would include giving the Commodity Futures Trading Commission full regulatory jurisdicti­on over cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin and rewriting the tax code to include crypto. It would also fully regulate stablecoin­s for the first time ever.

This comes after the Biden administra­tion’s working group on financial markets issued a 22-page report last November, calling on Congress to pass legislatio­n that would regulate stablecoin­s. One recommenda­tion includes a requiremen­t that stablecoin issuers become banks that would hold sufficient cash reserves.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has also called for stablecoin regulation, saying “we really need a regulatory framework to guard against the risks,” during a House committee meeting in May.

Further, it appears that the cryptocurr­ency industry — with its libertaria­n leanings and deep skepticism of Washington — might also be on board.

“I do think this is a bit of a wakeup call. A lot of people were taken aback by Terra’s failure,” said Perianne Boring, founder of the Chamber of Digital Commerce, one of the top lobbyists for the cryptocurr­ency industry.

Other crypto lobby groups, like the Associatio­n for Digital Asset Markets, have announced support for the Lummis-Gillibrand bill.

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 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP (LEFT); MARIAM ZUHAIB/AP (RIGHT) ?? Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP (LEFT); MARIAM ZUHAIB/AP (RIGHT) Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo.

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