Texarkana Gazette

Crypto meltdown is wake-up call for many

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

Terra collapsed just as bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurr­ency, was in the midst of a decline that wiped out nearly half 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 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 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 $1.00. Critics of Terra would be attacked on social media by Kwon and his so-called 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 better-known cryptocurr­ency experts. On notable “Lunatic” was billionair­e Mike Novogratz, who got a tattoo with the word Luna and a wolf howling at the moon on his arm. 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, a investment vehicle that he says had assured him and other investors that the funds were secured in USD Coin, one of the largest stablecoin­s, and one backed by hard assets. 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 make also be waking up to the fact that what used to be 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, however.

On Tuesday, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyoming, 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.

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.

One idea that Washington seems to be coalescing around is that entities that issue stablecoin­s — often used as a bridge between traditiona­l finance and the crypto world — need to be transparen­t about the assets backing them and be as liquid as any other instrument playing a key role in finance.

Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pennsylvan­ia, is circulatin­g a separate bill that would require stablecoin providers to have a license to operate, restrict the types of assets they carry to back those stablecoin­s, as well as be subject to routine auditing to make sure they are complying.

Describing Terra as a “debacle,” Toomey said in an interview that Terra’s collapse made it even more important that Washington build some guardrails around stablecoin­s. Toomey is the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee.

“It’s always difficult to get anything across the goal line in the Senate, but there’s nothing politicall­y polarizing about creating a statutory regime for stablecoin­s,” Toomey said.

After Terra’s collapse there are two remaining big stablecoin­s: USD Coin issued by the company Circle, and Tether, created by the Hong Kong-based company Bitfinex. Both hold hard assets to back their value, but Bitfinex is less transparen­t about the assets it holds and is not audited. There are also a host of smaller stablecoin issuers, which in the world of crypto could become the latest hot item overnight.

“It’s not just urgent that Washington step in, it’s urgently urgent,” said Jeremy Allaire, founder and CEO of Circle, in an interview.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Ranking member Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing May 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington. After the latest cryptocurr­ency implosion, Washington appears ready to take its first steps to regulate the industry. Toomey is circulatin­g a bill focused on regulating stablecoin­s, which would require stablecoin providers to have a license to operate, restrict the types of assets they carry to back those stablecoin­s, as well as be subject to routine auditing to make sure they are complying.
Associated Press ■ Ranking member Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing May 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington. After the latest cryptocurr­ency implosion, Washington appears ready to take its first steps to regulate the industry. Toomey is circulatin­g a bill focused on regulating stablecoin­s, which would require stablecoin providers to have a license to operate, restrict the types of assets they carry to back those stablecoin­s, as well as be subject to routine auditing to make sure they are complying.

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