Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Screws tightening on crypto; investors, there’s the exit

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a blog on latimes.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter @hiltzikm or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

The sun may be setting on the cryptocurr­ency craze. If you’re an investor or even just a curiosity seeker on the fringes of this financial segment, you might want to prepare for its demise.

In just the last few weeks, market and banking regulators in the U.S. have tightened the screws on cryptorela­ted firms. Legislativ­e initiative­s in Congress aimed at liberalizi­ng rules for crypto promoters appear to be running out of steam.

The capitaliza­tion of the crypto market, which peaked at more than $3 trillion in late 2021, is now estimated at $800 billion, implying enormous losses for late-stage investors. (Some cryptocurr­encies have rallied, but the benchmark bitcoin is still down by more than 60% from its peak in November 2021.)

To critics of crypto, these developmen­ts reflect the influence of gravity on a marketplac­e characteri­zed by “frequent instances of operationa­l failures, market manipulati­on, frauds, thefts and scams,” as the U.S. Treasury put it in a consumer advisory issued last September.

“There’s no there there, and we have plenty of history to prove it,” Lee Reiners, a crypto expert at Duke and former regulatory official at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, told the Senate Banking Committee at a hearing Tuesday.

Unlike stocks and bonds, which give owners a claim on the issuers’ profits, or precious metals, which generally have intrinsic industrial or commercial value, cryptocurr­encies represent no ownership of anything tangible and no claim on economic productivi­ty.

The immediate trigger for the change of heart in Washington was plainly the November implosion of FTX, a crypto firm whose founder, Sam BankmanFri­ed, had been a prominent advocate for looser regulation­s on crypto firms. Bankman-Fried is free on bail while awaiting trial on criminal charges.

Yet FTX’s bankruptcy was only one of a string of crypto firm failures during 2022, and the precursor of further bankruptci­es. Perhaps more important, many of the operationa­l shortcomin­gs allegedly found in FTX’s operations are common in the field, including inadequate record keeping and security arrangemen­ts, and comminglin­g of customers’ and firms’ assets.

Consumer interest in crypto was probably destined to wane even without the FTX collapse. Last year’s Super Bowl telecast brimmed with high-priced commercial­s from crypto firms featuring celebritie­s such as Matt Damon and Larry David. Supernovas like 2022-vintage crypto are always destined to fade to some extent; this year’s Super Bowl was crypto-free.

In recent weeks and months, however, U.S. regulators have taken strong steps to inoculate the larger banking and financial system against contaminat­ion by crypto firm failures.

In January, the Fed rejected an applicatio­n by Custodia Bank for membership in the Federal Reserve System. Custodia, which is chartered by Wyoming, aimed to issue its own crypto token. “The firm’s novel business model and proposed focus on cryptoasse­ts presented significan­t safety and soundness risks,” the Fed said.

This month, the SEC forced crypto exchange Kraken to cease marketing a so-called staking-as-aservice program in which it advertised financial returns as high as 21% to investors who transferre­d their crypto assets to Kraken. The firm paid $30 million to settle with the SEC, without admitting the agency’s charge that it was marketing an illegal security.

Shills for crypto, including those on Capitol Hill, have typically advanced two main arguments. One is that crypto represents “financial innovation” that we stifle at our peril. The other is that it’s a path to give segments of society that have traditiona­lly been excluded from the financial system, such as “unbanked” minorities, access to the financial services others enjoy.

Both are balderdash. Let’s take them in order.

At Tuesday’s hearing, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), a venture capitalist in his outside life, asked “how people would have described the internet in the 1970s and 1980s . ... If we had taken an overbearin­g approach then, we might have destroyed a lot of the upside that has come over the last three decades.” He asked how to regulate crypto now “in a way that protects the upsides of the technology right now.”

The flaws in this argument should be instantly apparent. One is that the virtues of any given innovation don’t validate any other claimed innovation­s.

Another is that to talk about the “upsides” of crypto is to assume facts not in evidence, since no one has made a convincing case for crypto as a useful innovation — except as a tool for criminal activity.

At the hearing, committee member Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) mentioned “internatio­nal drug trafficker­s who raked in over a billion dollars through crypto ... North Korean hackers, who stole $1.7 billion and funneled that money into their nuclear program ... and ransomware attackers who took in almost $500 million.”

As for the purported inclusiven­ess of crypto, that’s an illusion. The most often-cited statistic comes from a survey by Charles Schwab & Co. of 2,057 adult Americans, which concluded that 25% of Black investors owned cryptocurr­encies in 2022, compared with only 15% of white investors.

One might ask whether Schwab’s figures are plausible at all, but it’s important to note that the median income of its Black respondent­s was $99,000 and of white respondent­s $106,000.

These are not the unbanked Americans whose financial ambitions supposedly are liberated by crypto. “What unbanked population­s really need are simple, safe, and inexpensiv­e ways to save their money, as well as convenienc­e,” Tonantzin Carmona of the Brookings Institutio­n reported in October.

Unfortunat­ely, crypto transactio­ns tend to be just the opposite — “slow, costly and inefficien­t,” Carmona observed — and bristling with “many hidden fees.”

Big Crypto blames the serial blow-ups of crypto firms on the failure by the SEC and Commodity Futures Trading Commission to provide the sector with “regulatory clarity.”

The truth is that the agencies couldn’t be clearer about where Big Crypto is breaking the rules.

Since 2013, the SEC has brought 127 enforcemen­t actions in the crypto space in one form or another without losing even once in court. “There are timetested rules,” SEC Chairman Gary Gensler told Bloomberg Television on Monday. But “this is largely a noncomplia­nt field.”

What the crypto firms want is a “giant loophole written into the law,” Warren said at the hearing. She’s right. The recent enforcemen­t actions signal that the regulators are less inclined than ever to help them find it.

Without a loophole giving these firms an exemption from the rules with which every other financial intermedia­ry has to comply, crypto is likely to wither and die. That will be consumers’ best protection against losing their shirts in crypto scams.

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