San Antonio Express-News

Crypto industry looks for way forward

Collapse of now bankrupt $32B exchange plunged currency marketplac­e into chaos

- By David Yaffe-bellany

Not long after several Wall Street banks collapsed in 2008, a nine-page document circulated on an obscure mailing list, proposing a new kind of financial system that wouldn’t rely on any “trusted third party.”

The paper was the basis for what became the cryptocurr­ency industry. Using sweeping, idealistic language, its adherents vowed to conduct business in a transparen­t and egalitaria­n way, rejecting the high-risk practices of a small number of powerful financial firms that caused the Great Recession.

But last month, the actions of a single crypto firm — the $32 billion exchange FTX — plunged the emerging industry into its own version of a 2008style crisis. Once considered a safe marketplac­e for people to trade virtual currencies, FTX filed for bankruptcy after the crypto equivalent of a bank run, forcing industry executives, investors and enthusiast­s to grapple with how a technology meant to correct the shortcomin­gs of traditiona­l finance ended up replicatin­g them.

Executives who just a year ago were reveling amid crypto’s seemingly unstoppabl­e growth are now scrambling to prove that they can learn from the mistakes and recapture the industry’s early ideals. Binance, the world’s largest exchange, announced last month that it would release more informatio­n about its finances and recruit independen­t auditors to review those disclosure­s. Coinbase, the biggest U.S. crypto exchange, proclaimed that it was committed to a “decentrali­zed system where you don’t have to trust us.”

Many crypto advocates are pushing for more drastic reforms, urging investors not to store their digital holdings with big companies and instead turn to more experiment­al platforms run solely by code.

But for all the promises of change, FTX’S collapse shows how far crypto remains from fulfilling its original aims and gaining widespread acceptance. Consumer distrust has mounted this year amid major financial losses, criminal investigat­ions and an increasing­ly skeptical regulatory climate in Washington. At a conference last month, Changpeng Zhao, Binance’s CEO, said that FTX’S implosion would set the industry back by years.

The exchange’s downfall

compounded months of losses in the virtual currency market set off by a devastatin­g crash in the spring that unfolded amid a broader pullback from risky assets. The upheaval sent some prominent crypto firms into bankruptcy. Bitcoin, the original and most popular cryptocurr­ency, has been trading at less than $17,000, down about 75 percent from its high of nearly $70,000 almost exactly a year ago.

“You start to go though these problems, and they stack up one after the other after the other,” said John Reed Stark, a former Securities and Exchange Commission official who has become an outspoken crypto critic. “More and more people are seeing this for the scam that it is.”

At first, crypto’s primary use was criminal. Thieves and drug dealers used bitcoin to transfer large amounts of money without relying on a bank or another intermedia­ry to process transactio­ns.

But over the years, law enforcemen­t got better at tracking crypto crime, and the technology evolved to allow more sophistica­ted financial applicatio­ns, like borrowing and lending. People who started their careers on Wall Street — including FTX’S founder, Sam Bankman-fried, who worked at the trading firm Jane Street — got involved in the nascent industry, looking to profit from the technology.

As the industry grew, it started assuming some of the same characteri­stics as the Wall Street institutio­ns that it was designed to replace. Crypto trading became increasing­ly centralize­d, with a large portion of transactio­ns taking place on a handful of big exchanges, including Binance, FTX and Coinbase. In the months leading up to FTX’S collapse,

the trading volume of cryptocurr­encies on Binance alone was greater than the combined totals of its seven closest competitor­s, according to an industry data tracker.

Back in similar crisis

The original vision of crypto “was an attempt to rewrite the rules of finance on a global basis,” said Charley Cooper, managing director at the blockchain company R3. “And here we are again — we’re in an even more centralize­d industry than we’d see in banking.”

Cryptocurr­encies soared in value last year and into 2022 — until May. That was when a popular cryptocurr­ency called luna crashed, sending the crypto economy into free-fall. Two major lending companies, Celsius Network and Voyager Digital, filed for bankruptcy. Enthusiast­s lamented the onset of a “crypto winter” of depressed prices and fading enthusiasm.

Amid the crisis, FTX was considered a relatively trustworth­y force. Based in the Bahamas, the company served as a marketplac­e for people to buy and sell cryptocurr­encies, offering highrisk

but popular trading options that are illegal in the United States. Bankman-fried, 30, who had built FTX into a $32 billion company, bailed out struggling firms and built a reputation as a benevolent figure willing to extend a lifeline to colleagues.

Then last month, a run on deposits exposed an $8 billion hole in FTX’S accounts. The company filed for bankruptcy within a week. The SEC and the Justice Department opened investigat­ions, focused on whether FTX illegally lent its users’ funds to Alameda Research, a crypto hedge fund that Bankman-fried also founded and owned.

Binance operates essentiall­y the same type of business as FTX, but Zhao, the CEO, has recently been careful to differenti­ate himself from Bankmanfri­ed, calling his one-time rival a liar and criticizin­g FTX’S most dangerous practices. On Nov. 25, Binance announced a new “proof of reserves system,” promising to keep users informed about the amount of cryptocurr­ency in its accounts and to dispel fears that it might be vulnerable to the type of run on deposits that destroyed FTX. (But Binance’s plans were heavily criticized for lacking some key informatio­n.)

Coinbase has also tried to alleviate fears of a collapse, publishing a blog post that said it always holds the same amount of money that customers deposited. “There can’t be a ‘run on the bank’ at Coinbase,” the post said.

Still, the mere existence of large companies like Binance, Coinbase and FTX is antithetic­al to the ideals of crypto, some industry experts argue. Since FTX’S collapse, some crypto enthusiast­s have flocked to smaller firms in the experiment­al field of decentrali­zed finance, which allows traders to borrow, lend and conduct transactio­ns without banks or brokers, relying instead on a publicly viewable system governed by code.

‘Clunky technology’

But Defi has its own problems, including vulnerabil­ity to hackers, who have drained billions of dollars this year from the experiment­al projects.

“They’ve based it on clunky technology that is very inefficien­t,” said Hilary Allen, a finance expert at American University. “They’re operationa­lly very fragile.”

Scrutiny in Washington has also intensifie­d. Gary Gensler, chair of the SEC, has vowed to pursue crypto companies for violations of securities law.

The House Financial Services Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing Dec. 13 examining FTX’S collapse.

Bankman-fried has been asked to testify. In interviews with the New York Times, he has at times seemed agonized over FTX’S bankruptcy — and at times been strikingly flippant.

“You know,” he said in one interview, “the crypto winter has been officially extended.”

Wasn’t that a bit of an understate­ment? “Yep,” he replied. “Alas.”

 ?? Pablo Delcan/new York Times ?? The implosion of the exchange FTX shows how the cryptocurr­ency industry has drifted far from its original ideals.
Pablo Delcan/new York Times The implosion of the exchange FTX shows how the cryptocurr­ency industry has drifted far from its original ideals.
 ?? Hiroko Masuike/new York Times ?? Sam Bankman-fried, founder of the cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX that recently filed for bankruptcy, has denied any impropriet­y.
Hiroko Masuike/new York Times Sam Bankman-fried, founder of the cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX that recently filed for bankruptcy, has denied any impropriet­y.

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