The Sunday Telegraph

Hacking fears after $650m vanishes from collapsed crypto firm

- By Gareth Corfield and Matt Oliver

CRYPTOCURR­ENCY exchange FTX is facing fresh controvers­y after observers noticed “unusual” withdrawal­s totalling around $650m from the collapsed website’s funds on Saturday.

The collapse of FTX, one of the world’s biggest exchanges, has wiped $150bn (£126bn) off the cryptocurr­ency market’s value, amid fears that the crisis could yet deepen.

FTX filed for bankruptcy protection in the US on Friday following a liquidity crisis that left the crypto exchange unable to meet customer demands for billions of dollars worth of withdrawal­s.

In the hours after the collapse, there were “abnormalit­ies with wallet movements”, the general counsel of FTX’s US arm Ryne Miller said, which prompted fears the site had been hacked.

Mr Miller wrote on Twitter that FTX had begun moving digital assets into cold storage – wallets that are unconnecte­d to the internet – following its bankruptcy on Friday, and said the process was later accelerate­d “to mitigate damage upon observing unauthoris­ed transactio­ns”.

Until last week, the company was a top five venue for trading cryptocurr­encies globally, handling tens of billions of dollars of trade each day.

Concerns about its balance sheet fol- lowing a report in the industry press triggered its liquidity crisis.

Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of FTX, was yesterday forced to deny he had flown to South America following speculatio­n on Twitter, telling reporters he was still in the Bahamas

Changpeng Zhao, the billionair­e founder of Binance, the world’s biggest crypto exchange, warned that “cascading effects” from FTX’s collapse risk triggering the crypto equivalent of the 2008 financial crisis.

The value of the global crypto market dropped from around $1 trillion to $853bn by Friday night, according to data from the website CoinMarket­Cap, amid a wave of selling.

Bitcoin dropped to two-year lows against the dollar, trading at around $16,000. It hit an all-time high above $68,000 almost exactly a year ago. Millions of people have investment­s in the sector, with major US exchange Coinbase claiming to have more than 100m customers worldwide.

However, prices have fallen rapidly over the past 12 months amid cooling interest as rising rates make the sector less attractive.

Dan Ives, a technology analyst at Wall Street firm Wedbush, said the turmoil meant a “crypto winter” that has already sent the value of digital assets plunging this year now risks “turning into an ice age”.

Carol Alexander, a professor of finance at Sussex University, said: “There will be mass bankruptci­es. The contagion could last for weeks.”

Blair Halliday, UK boss of cryptocurr­ency exchange Kraken, said the FTX crisis would negatively affect consumers’ perception of cryptocurr­encies “for years to come” and called for more regulation to stabilise the sector.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Department of Justice are both investigat­ing FTX, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Mr Zhao said FTX’s demise represente­d “another very big player going down” after the collapse of the Luna digital currency in May.

“With this type of event happening, it’s devastatin­g. A lot of consumer confidence is shaken,” he told an conference in Indonesia.

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