The crypto industry continues to deal with the news from yesterday that FTX has agreed to sell its non-U.S. operations to Binance.
What happened
On the news of Alameda, Binance’s CEO Changpeng Zhao announced that he would liquidate $2 billion of his FTT holdings, which started the concerns about FTT’s price holding up and the impact on FTX and Alameda.
While FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried tried to calm these fears, taking to Twitter to say that FTX’s balance sheet was sound, customers began to withdraw their funds from FTX; the crypto exchange said it saw $6 billion of withdrawals in 72 hours. This eventually led Bankman-Fried to turn to Zhao and sell FTX’s non-U.S. operations to shore up the liquidity crunch the company was facing.
But the deal is pending due diligence, and there are already media reports, including one from CoinDesk citing anonymous sources, suggesting Binance might not end up going through with the deal. This whole series of events has shaken the faith in the entire crypto industry, similar to other big crypto meltdowns like that of algorithmic stablecoins.
“It shows that no one is too big to fail,” Pascal Gauthier, CEO of crypto wallet firm Ledger, said on CNBC. “FTX seemed untouchable.”
This also could hurt the resolve of the general public and reduce investing activity if people are skeptical about the large crypto exchanges and believe that they lack stability.
Now what
I don’t know if the events over the last few days have affected my view of specific cryptocurrencies, but more so reflect the erratic nature of the industry as a whole and how it is still very much the Wild West.
FTX played an important role in the industry, so to see it go down so quickly — and to realize some of the issues it likely had — are going to raise a lot of questions.
Ultimately, my view hasn’t changed on these three cryptocurrencies. I still like Ethereum at these levels and think the token has great long-term potential because of all of its real-world uses. The recent upgrades to the network should also greatly help Ethereum scale as well.
I am still not a fan of Dogecoin or Shiba Inu due to their lack of real-world utility and the lack of technical capabilities on each of their perspective networks.
Bram Berkowitz has positions in Ethereum. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Ethereum. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Why Ethereum, Shiba Inu, and Dogecoin Crashed Today
By Bram Berkowitz
Published November 10, 2022
Published November 10, 2022