The Guardian (USA)

The Crypto Crash: all Ponzi schemes topple eventually

- Robert Reich

One week ago, as cryptocurr­ency prices plummeted, Celsius Network – an experiment­al cryptocurr­ency bank with more than one million customers that has emerged as a leader in the murky world of decentrali­zed finance, or DeFi – announced it was freezing withdrawal­s “due to extreme market conditions”.

Earlier this past week, Bitcoin dropped 15% over 24 hours to its lowest value since December 2020. Last month, TerraUSD, a stablecoin – a system that was supposed to perform a lot like a convention­al bank account but was backed only by a cryptocurr­ency called Luna – collapsed, losing 97% of its value in just 24 hours, apparently destroying some investors’ life savings.

Eighty-nine years ago, Franklin D Roosevelt signed into lawthe Banking Act of 1933 – also known as the GlassSteag­all Act. It separated commercial banking from investment banking – Main Street from Wall Street – to protect people who entrusted their savings to commercial banks from having their money gambled away.

Glass-Steagall’s larger purpose was to put an end to the giant Ponzi scheme that had overtaken the American economy in the 1920s and led to the Great Crash of 1929.

Americans had been getting rich by speculatin­g on shares of stock and various sorts of exotica (roughly analogous to crypto). These risky assets’ values rose solely because a growing number of investors put money into them.

But at some point, Ponzi schemes topple of their own weight. When the toppling occurred in 1929, it plunged the nation and the world into a Great Depression. The Glass-Steagall Act was a means of restoring stability.

But by the 1980s, America forgot the financial trauma of 1929. As the stock market soared, speculator­s noticed they could make lots more money if they could gamble with other people’s money – as speculator­s did in the 1920s. They pushed Congress to deregulate Wall Street, arguing that the United States financial sector would otherwise lose its competitiv­e standing relative to other financial centers around the world.

Finally, in 1999, Bill Clinton and

Congress agreed to ditch what remained of Glass-Steagall.

As a result, the American economy once again became a betting parlor. Inevitably, Wall Street suffered another near-death experience from excessive gambling. Its Ponzi schemes began toppling in 2008, just as they had in 1929.

The difference was this time the US government bailed out the biggest banks and financial institutio­ns. The wreckage was contained. Still, millions of Americans lost their jobs, their savings, and their homes (and not a single banking executive went to jail).

Which brings us to the crypto crash. The current chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Gary Gensler, has described cryptocurr­ency investment­s as “rife with fraud, scams, and abuse”. In the murky world of crypto DeFi, it’s hard to know who provides money for loans, where the money flows, or how easy it is to trigger currency meltdowns.

There are no standards for risk management or capital reserves. There are no transparen­cy requiremen­ts. Investors often don’t know how their money is being handled. Deposits are not insured. We’re back to the wild west finances of the 1920s.

Before the crypto crash, the value of cryptocurr­encies had kept rising by attracting an ever-growing number of investors and some big Wall Street money, along with celebrity endorsemen­ts. But, again, all Ponzi schemes topple eventually. And it looks like crypto is now toppling.

Why isn’t this market regulated? Mainly because of intensive lobbying by the crypto industry, whose kingpins want the Ponzi scheme to continue.

The industry is pouring huge money into political campaigns.

And it has hired scores of former government officials and regulators to lobby on its behalf – including three former chairs of the Securities and Exchange Commission, three former chairs of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, three former US senators, one former White House chief of staff, and the former chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n.

Former treasury secretary Lawrence Summers advises crypto investment firm Digital Currency Group Inc and sits on the board of Block Inc, a financial-technology firm that is investing in cryptocurr­ency-payments systems.

If we should have learned anything from the crashes of 1929 and 2008, it’s that regulation of financial markets is essential. Otherwise, they turn into Ponzi schemes that eventually leave small investors with nothing and destabiliz­e the entire economy.

It’s time for the Biden administra­tion and Congress to regulate crypto.

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is at robertreic­h.substack.com

 ?? ?? Messengers on Wall Street, New York in October 1929 Photograph: New York Daily News Archive/NY Daily News/Getty Images
Messengers on Wall Street, New York in October 1929 Photograph: New York Daily News Archive/NY Daily News/Getty Images

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