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Abstract:Two of the most prominent figures in the cryptocurrency industry, Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of crypto exchange FTX, and Changpeng Zhao (CZ), co-founder and CEO of Binance, the largest cryptocurrency exchange in the world, are engaged in a heated Twitter debate that is roiling the market.
Early Tuesday trading saw significant losses for digital assets due to concerns about the bankruptcy of the FTX bitcoin exchange. Following reports that Sam Bankman-business Fried's had stopped handling blockchain withdrawals due to its rapidly deteriorating balance sheet, rumours gained steam this morning.
After Bankman-Fried tweeted that he and Binance had agreed to a strategic transaction to sell FTX, the situation took an unexpected turn. Although the details are unknown, the news sounds like a last-minute bailout amid a liquidity crisis.
Prior to 11:00 am ET, nothing was confirmed, but panic selling immediately spread throughout the market, bringing down Bitcoin and Ethereum by more than 6% and 9%, respectively. Stocks of companies involved in the crypto industry also suffered greatly, with Coinbase Global (COIN) falling 12% and MicroStrategy (MSTR) falling roughly 17% at some time before midday.
At a time when the Fed's aggressive tightening cycle is still dampening risk appetite, sentiment is unlikely to improve until FTX's liquidity worries are resolved and allayed. However, if reports were accurate, the sell-off might worsen amid growing industry instability fears.
There were rumours that FTX's financial stability was precarious. Numerous users of its FTX service, who use it to purchase and store their digital currencies, hurried to withdraw their money. The cryptocurrency research company Nansen announced on Monday night that over $500 million had left the platform the previous day.
However, the CEO of FTX, Caroline Ellison, claimed that the company had a solid financial position and made an offer to purchase all 23 million FTT tokens from Binance for $22 apiece, which CZ rejected. FTX tokens (FTT) are currently $17.33, a decrease of more than 23% over the previous 24 hours.
According to the Block, a crypto research company, FTX briefly stopped handling withdrawals on Tuesday. The exchange appeared to be in a “liquidity crunch,” meaning it lacked the funds to process all of the withdrawal requests.
Binance will take care of all FTX-related liabilities, but the larger exchange needs to be confident that it can close the gap, or it wouldn't have stepped in to help the rival exchange. In any event, the market appears to be happy about the industry's consolidation because cryptocurrencies have fully recovered from the session's losses.
The markets are divided on whether Binance will actually go through with its proposed acquisition. Some argue that this sudden catastrophe shows an uncanny resemblance with the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.
Disclaimer:
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