FTX in Shambles, Part Deux
At peak crypto mania, there was a sense that the brainiacs writing this revolutionary blockchain software would be able to sidestep all the bloat and greed associated with traditional finance.
The future was decentralized. If everyone had a stake in the larger whole, the kinds of blowups and bailouts that harm Main Street without touching Wall Street would be over.
Yet, at the end of the day, the FTX disaster was basically just a good ole fashion run on the bank.
- When times are good, and people are turning in fiat dollars for crypto, balance sheet holes can be easily masked
- Limiting counterparty risk was the big unlock that blockchains promised, but the issue of exchange risk was always lurking in the background. Big exchanges like Coinbase and FTX seemed about as risk-free as a Fidelity or Schwab, but the story was very different under the hood
- FTX saw nearly $5 billion in withdrawals in a single day this past week, and it had nowhere near enough cushion to take that kind of hit
- The scramble for funding any and everywhere is in full gear, but the odds of anyone wanting to take on this toxic waste are slim
SBF has taken full responsibility for the mess, saying, “I f*cked up twice.” The apology rings pretty hollow when your holdings go to zero.
It’s a story as old as time. Likable founder promises a new future and attracts massive assets as a result. The temptation to juice returns on that float always comes, and risky bets are made with investor funds.
That founder’s net worth hits a “b,” and they think they’ve conquered the world. Everything they touch turns to gold, so they might as well keep it goin’. Then before they know it, the rug gets pulled, and they’re insolvent overnight.
This incident isn’t going to kill crypto. It’s sunk its teeth into the world of finance and beyond and will continue to occupy a seat at the table. But hopefully, these exchanges can be reined in, and the freewheeling gambles they make with people’s cash will end.
The big question: Will the FTX mess push people towards holding crypto themselves in hot/cold wallets rather than trusting exchanges to hold it for them?
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