Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Crypto’s well-worn path to crisis

- By Xavier Vives

Swiftly rising interest rates have punctured the cryptocurr­ency bubble, exposing fragility, bad governance, and even fraud in many corners, most notably at the crypto exchange FTX.

And FTX’s spectacula­r collapse comes on the heels of other recent failures in the cryptosphe­re, such as Terra-Luna, Three

Arrows Capital, or Voyager Digital. No one should be surprised – not even at how many people were surprised.

“There is no new thing under the sun,” Ecclesiast­es reminds us. At FTX’s headquarte­rs under the Bahamian sun, the firm’s advertisin­g admonished customers not to “miss out” on “the next big thing” – blockchain-based currencies, financial products, and non-fungible tokens. But only the assets were new. The narrative of the crypto crisis was establishe­d long ago.

The collapse began, as financial collapses often do, with a bubble. Investor demand outpaced reasonable near-term expectatio­ns of what cryptocurr­encies could achieve. Impractica­l as a means of exchange, the uses of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the rest seemed limited to financial speculatio­n and illegal activity.

But historical­ly low interest rates fueled the mania for what crypto could become. Due dilligence took a back seat to skyrocketi­ng asset prices. Cheap money made it easier for firms to take on excessive leverage. Investors needed increasing­ly bigger returns to outpace the market and beat their competitio­n. This meant more leverage and more risktaking.

When bubbles inevitably burst or shrink, profits flounder. Leaner circumstan­ces expose fragility in the system – inapt regulation­s, poor governance, and bad actors that were once easily hidden. In the extreme, firms hide losses with fraud. As one firm falls, contagion spreads to exposed entities.

FTX’s flamboyant founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, wanted to take crypto mainstream, and big funds like Sequoia Capital and Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, Temasek, invested in the project.

Celebritie­s like Tom Brady and Larry David promoted the exchange in Super Bowl ads. Former heads of state like Bill Clinton and Tony Blair cavorted with Bankman-Fried. A new financial era was dawning, and the only thing investors feared was missing out.

The euphoria, however, surrounded a house of cards. The crypto rout began with the collapse of the Terra-Luna “stablecoin” ecosystem, a set of digital currencies that lost its dollar peg just as the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates in early 2022.

Contagion spread to Three Arrows Capital, a now-defunct crypto hedge fund that was substantia­lly exposed to TerraLuna. FTX attempted to halt the contagion, bailing out firms like Voyager and BlockFi. Some even compared BankmanFri­ed to the legendary J. P. Morgan, whose private financial interventi­on famously curbed the Panic of 1907.

While details are still foggy, FTX’s sister hedge fund, Alameda Research, got into trouble over the summer as uncertaint­y rippled through the cryptosphe­re.

In violation of FTX rules, Bankman-Fried used $8 billion in customer funds in an effort to rescue Alameda, managed by his erstwhile romantic partner. Alameda’s loans, however, were allegedly backed by FTT, FTX’s now worthless in-house crypto token.

Dominoes

The dominoes were set. The fateful nudge began with a public feud between Bankman-Fried and Changpeng Zhao, founder of the rival exchange Binance. Zhao said Binance planned to sell $529 million in FTT tokens, prompting FTX customers to begin withdrawin­g funds from the platform. FTX faced a massive liquidity crunch and soon became insolvent.

After saying that Binance would purchase the crippled exchange, Zhao reneged when he saw FTX’s books. Bankman-Fried resigned as CEO soon thereafter, and the firm went bankrupt. Allegation­s of FTX’s fraud, waste, and abuse flooded the cryptosphe­re.

Investors were caught flatfooted by the sudden collapse. Nearly 40% of crypto hedge funds had invested in FTX. Many had likely assumed that big funds like Sequoia had done the appropriat­e due diligence.

Instead, excitement over FTX and its founder had substitute­d for sound assessment of fundamenta­ls, covering a deep rot. The current FTX administra­tor, John Ray III, who supervised the liquidatio­n of Enron, said that “such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworth­y financial informatio­n” was “unpreceden­ted.”

The implosion of FTX has badly damaged the cryptosphe­re’s vision of an unregulate­d, decentrali­zed financial system, but that doesn’t mean the technology is to blame for the chaos.

Other forms of digital finance and blockchain technology – like smart contracts – may yet improve payment systems and broaden financial inclusion. Many central banks are entering the game, too, and launching their own digital currencies to shore up monetary sovereignt­y and financial stability.

Regulators are left with a conundrum. Overreacti­ng to the unfolding crypto crisis could turn potentiall­y beneficial applicatio­ns of the technology into collateral damage.

And while they may welcome crypto markets into the regulatory fold, they risk moral hazard as investors seek public protection against private loss. On the other hand, if regulators ignore crypto markets, instabilit­y might build (though crypto markets are still too small to pose systemic risks).

The lessons of the crypto crash are neither new nor controvers­ial. Entities that operate like banks should be regulated as such or closed down. Speculativ­e casinos should be monitored for signs of fraud. Auditors and regulators must ensure the game is not rigged, and investors should be warned that gambling losses are not insured.

Even James Bond’s Casino Royale, which was filmed near FTX’s island headquarte­rs, had to abide by some rules. It is reasonable to expect the neighbors do likewise.

Xavier Vives is Professor of Economics and Finance at IESE Business School.

© Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

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