East Bay Times

They made millions on Luna, Solana and Polygon: Crypto's boom beyond Bitcoin

- By David Yaffe-Bellany

Etienne vantKruys, a globe-trotting cryptocurr­ency investor from Amsterdam, was hunting for a new investment two summers ago when he met some early backers of Luna, a digital coin that offers a framework for decentrali­zed finance. Impressed by their commitment to the project, he bought $25,000 of Luna for 20 to 35 cents a coin.

These days, despite a recent fall in cryptocurr­ency prices, the value of a Luna coin is up to around $50. VantKruys' original investment? It's now worth about $5 million on paper.

“Dude, man,” he said on a recent call, “we're in some happy country.”

You have probably heard of Bitcoin, Ether and even Dogecoin millionair­es. But over the past two years, their ranks have rapidly expanded, as speculator­s recorded huge profits from more obscure cryptocurr­ency projects, some with names that sound cribbed from a children's cartoon. Now there are Solana millionair­es, Luna millionair­es, Polygon millionair­es.

Even after the drop in cryptocurr­ency prices dampened some of the hype, the gains remain staggering. The value of Solana, a cryptocurr­ency platform that provides an alternativ­e to Ethereum, has grown by more than 6,000% since January 2021. The price of Cardano, another crypto platform with its own currency, is up 500%.

The wealth generated by these coins shows how widespread the cryptocurr­ency phenomenon has become. More than 11,000 digital currencies exist, and anybody can create one with a bit of coding. Some of the coins are tied to complex “DeFi” projects, which offer decentrali­zed borrowing and lending options, while others serve as currency in video games like Axie Infinity. These currencies, usually created for some kind of practical applicatio­n, are distinct from meme coins like Dogecoin, a joke currency that soared in value last year.

“Every type of financial service is now being replicated in these decentrali­zed environmen­ts,” said Stephen McKeon, a cryptocurr­ency expert at the University of Oregon. “This is what's driving all the investment.”

The investors profiting from obscure coins come from a variety of background­s. There are industry aficionado­s who had already made money on Bitcoin and Ether, and newcomers who have notched impressive gains practicall­y overnight.

In interviews, members of this new class of crypto millionair­es said they were still figuring out what to do with their growing wealth. Some have made splashy purchases, renting fancy apartments or partying in foreign countries. Others have relocated to tax havens like Puerto Rico or quit their day jobs as they plowed even more money into an ever-expanding set of tokens.

In January, Cal Graham, 28, a British cryptocurr­ency speculator, invested $200,000 in a new token called LooksRare, which is part of a trading platform for the unique digital collectibl­es known as NFTs, or nonfungibl­e tokens. He sold all his LooksRare holdings less than two weeks later, walking away with nearly $500,000 in profits.

Graham, who lives in a luxury apartment in London, became a crypto millionair­e through his investment in Ether, the second-most-valuable digital currency behind Bitcoin. He said he had made at least $1 million more by trading lesser-known currencies like LooksRare.

“I'm a simple man, I like simple pleasures,” he said. “I will be buying myself an expensive car and an expensive Rolex at some point.”

A former human resources officer, Graham described himself as “semiretire­d,” with a daily routine that often consists of several hours of intensive tweeting (he doles out market analysis to his 90,000 followers), boxing practice at the local gym and movies in the evening. Eventually, he plans to funnel his LooksRare profits back into the cryptocurr­ency market.

But as some people mint millions from little-known cryptocurr­encies, others have seen impressive gains disappear overnight. For every Solana or Luna, there's an outof-the-way token that shoots up in value, only for its price to collapse. Some of these projects are scams, or what industry experts call “rug pulls,” in which someone aggressive­ly markets a coin, then immediatel­y liquidates the holdings, leaving investors with major losses.

“There's too many pockets of froth that lure a lot of people who are just getting crushed and duped,” said Ed Moya, a cryptocurr­ency analyst at the trading company OANDA. “You have a lot of social media influencer­s that are pumping up certain coins that are worthless.”

Even paper gains from a successful investment in a legitimate coin can turn out to be just that: paper gains. That's because it's difficult and labor-intensive to convert large amounts of cryptocurr­encies into dollars. Some little-known coins are unavailabl­e on mainstream exchanges like Coinbase, meaning they first have to be converted into a better-known cryptocurr­ency, like Ether or Bitcoin, said Philip Gradwell, the chief economist at the crypto tracking firm Chainalysi­s.

A sudden conversion of a large amount of cryptocurr­ency can also be dangerous, causing the price of the coin to collapse as it's turned into dollars.

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