No One Will Escape the FTX Fallout
Venture capital investment in crypto is drying up, according to a recent paper released by market data house PitchBook. After a “breakout year” in 2021, in which $21 billion of capital flooded into the industry, appetite for crypto investment is collapsing rapidly. By Q3 2022, funding was down 34.3 percent year-on-year, and the volume of deals had fallen to a two-year low.
In Genesis’ case, investors have been put off by a lack of clarity over the size of the cash injection necessary to plug the hole, says David Bailey, CEO at Bitcoin Magazine, who also leads an activist group that represents the interests of investors in Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, a DCG subsidiary. He describes the shortfall as “massive and unknown in scope.”
Brad Harrison, who leads the team behind decentralized lending protocol Venus, paints a similar picture. A Genesis bankruptcy would come as no surprise in the aftermath of the “tectonic” events that shook the crypto industry over the past year, he says. But as for the specifics, “we’re all just guessing what happens behind closed doors.”
Bailey also claims potential white knights have been spooked by the murky financial relationship between Genesis and DCG. Specifically, the “inappropriate intercompany loans” that were “only disclosed after everything went sideways.” These loans mean that “DCG has direct exposure to Genesis,” he explains. The parent company is “on the hook,” making it “tough to raise the funds it needs.” (DCG has been approached for comment; Silbert has previously suggested these intercompany loans are nothing out of the ordinary.) Genesis declined to comment.
Also “on the hook” is Gemini, the crypto exchange founded by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss. The company’s yield farming service, which allows customers to earn interest on their crypto, sits on top of the Genesis platform. But when the lender halted withdrawals, $900 million of Gemini customers’ assets were left stranded—and will remain so if Genesis declares bankruptcy.
On January 2, having grown frustrated with the lack of progress, Cameron Winklevoss delivered an ultimatum to Barry Silbert, founder of DCG. In an open letter published on Twitter, Winklevoss accused Silbert of “engaging in bad-faith stall tactics” and implored him to “commit to working together to solve this problem by January 8.” Silbert fired back, asserting that Winklevoss had misrepresented the situation, but did not acknowledge the ultimatum. Neither Gemini nor Winklevoss returned a request for clarification over what might happen if this deadline is missed.
Back in November, Max Galka, founder of blockchain analytics company Elementus, told WIRED that Genesis is “an order of magnitude less intertwined than FTX” with other large industry players. The implication was that the ripple effects of a bankruptcy would be less severe, and fewer regular people would be caught up. But he also warned that the FTX fallout would not end with Genesis.
His prediction was confirmed yesterday when the NYSE-listed Silvergate Bank revealed in early quarterly filings that it was forced to offload $8.1 billion in assets to cover a surge in withdrawals triggered by the FTX debacle. The bank, which stores funds for many crypto companies—including FTX and its subsidiaries—said it had suffered losses of $718 million as a result of the forced sale. It will also have to “substantively reduce its workforce” in order to mitigate its new “economic realities.”
US regulators have made unsympathetic noises since the implosion of FTX. In an unprecedented joint statement on January 3, the US Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency told banks they serve cryptocurrency customers at their own peril.
The trio pointed to risks from “fraud and scams” to the potential for crypto firms to misrepresent their financial health. They also claimed that tokens stored on decentralized networks are “highly likely to be inconsistent with safe and sound banking practices.”
Genesis has tangled itself in its own financial gymnastics, while Silvergate has been caught in the crypto crossfire—and tarnished by association. The plight of both suggests that few in the crypto industry will escape the FTX saga unscathed. “Whenever there’s a hole like this,” Bailey says, “someone has got to eat shit.”