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Crypto stocks slide as FTX prepares for bankruptcy proceedings

(Reuters) – Shares of cryptocurrency and blockchain-related firms dropped on Friday after FTX, one of the biggest crypto exchanges, said it would initiate bankruptcy proceedings in the United States, triggering a potentially massive meltdown in the industry.

Silvergate Capital declined 10%, leading the losses in the sector, while bitcoin holder MicroStrategy Inc slipped 2.6%.

Crypto miners Riot Blockchain and Marathon Digital fell about 5% each.

Bitcoin fell 3.6% to $16,919 as FTX Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried said he will step down from his position.

“The shock was that this guy was the face of the crypto industry and it turned out that the emperor had no clothes,” said Thomas Hayes, managing member at hedge fund Great Hill Capital LLC in New York.

“And I think that the real risk moving forward is confidence is lost in an asset class.”

The announcement comes days after larger rival Binance walked away from a proposed acquisition of FTX, leaving the distressed firm scrambling to raise about $9.4 billion following a frantic pace of customer withdrawals earlier this week.

The turmoil at FTX, which has rescued other players during the crypto market’s recent crash, has raised concerns about the future of the crypto industry.

Robinhood Markets, which counts Bankman-Fried as an investor, edged 3% higher. The online brokerage said on Thursday it does not have a direct exposure to FTX.

MicroStrategy and Silvergate’s tickers were trending on investors-focused social media platform stocktwits.com, indicating increased chatter among retail pundits.

ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF fell 8%, while Short Bitcoin Strategy ETF jumped 7.4%.

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Bansari Mayur Kamdar in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)

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Scaramucci’s SkyBridge Capital looking to buy back stake from FTX – CNBC

(Reuters) – SkyBridge Capital is working to buy back its stake from embattled crypto exchange FTX, the alternative investment firm’s founder Anthony Scaramucci said in an interview with CNBC on Friday.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru)

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Tron founder Justin Sun ready to give billions in aid to FTX – Bloomberg reporter

(Reuters) – Justin Sun, founder of the crypto token Tron, said he was prepared to provide FTX with billions in aid, according to a tweet by a Bloomberg News reporter on Friday.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)

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FTX looks for $9.4 billion in rescue funds, Bahamas freezes some assets

By Angus Berwick and Anirban Sen

(Reuters) – FTX is scrambling to raise about $9.4 billion from investors and rivals, a source said on Thursday, as Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried urgently seeks to save the cryptocurrency exchange that has been buffeted by a rush of customer withdrawals.

Bankman-Fried has discussed raising $1 billion each from Justin Sun, the founder of crypto token Tron, rival exchange OKX and stablecoin platform Tether, according to the source who has direct knowledge of the matter.

He is seeking the remainder from other funds, including current investors in FTX such as venture capital fund Sequoia Capital, the source added.

It was not clear, however, whether Bankman-Fried will be able to raise the funds he needs and these investors would participate.

Tether’s chief technology officer, Paolo Ardoino, tweeted that it had “no plans to invest in or lend assets to FTX.”

One of the 30 to 40 investors in FTX’s data room is Daniel Loeb’s Third Point, but according to a source familiar with the matter the hedge fund is not discussing giving FTX more money.

FTX and Sequoia did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the latest news of talks. OKX also was not immediately available for comment on the latest news of talks. Earlier on Thursday, however, OKX told Reuters it had been approached this week by Bankman-Fried, who described liabilities of $7 billion that needed covering fast.

“That was too much for us,” Lennix Lai, director of financial markets at OKX, told Reuters.

FTX also got hit by the Bahamas Securities Commission, where the company is based, freezing assets of FTX Digital Markets “and related parties”. FTX Digital Markets Ltd is a subsidiary of FTX, licensed in the Bahamas.

“The Commission has proactively dealt with the situation and continues to do so,” the commission said adding “the prudent course of action” was to put the unit into “provisional liquidation to preserve assets and stabilize the company”.

FTX did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In a tweet, FTX said it had reached a deal with Tron to establish a special facility that would allow clients to swap some crypto assets from FTX to external wallets. It said initially $13 million of assets will be deployed to facilitate the swaps.

A spokesperson for Tron said this was the “first step for us” but “we are open to talks about other rescue plans” and that the conversation was ongoing. A credit line was “no doubt one of the topics” but the spokesperson said it had not been discussed in detail.

Earlier in the day, Bankman-Fried said in tweets and a memo to employees seen by Reuters that he was in talks with “a number of players” in the crypto sector, including Sun, after a potential rescue deal with larger rival Binance fell apart.

But he added that he did not want to “imply anything about the odds of success.”

Bankman-Fried also said his trading firm Alameda Research, which sources have said was partly behind FTX’s problems, was winding down trading.

FTX’s predicament marks a stunning downfall for the 30-year-old crypto executive who was once worth nearly $17 billion, but in a matter of days transformed from his status of industry savior to the one who needed saving.

The problems at FTX, one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges, have triggered a broader crisis of confidence in cryptocurrencies, with bitcoin falling below $16,000 overnight for the first time since late 2020.

Graphic: Pain in crypto land Pain in crypto land https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/THEMES/lbvggrkadvq/chart.png

However, a surge in the broader market after better than expected U.S. inflation data buoyed cryptocurrencies. FTX’s native token, FTT, was up nearly 140% at $3.83 in afternoon trading but down more than 80% for the week. Bitcoin was up 13%.

Trading volumes in bitcoin futures and exchange traded funds have exploded amid the turmoil.

FTX said it was not able to process any withdrawals, except some in the Bahamas because of regulations there. Bankman-Fried said FTX.US, the U.S. operations of the exchange, had not been financially impacted.

RAISING FUNDS

The seeds of FTX’s downfall were sown months earlier, in mistakes made by Bankman-Fried after he stepped in to save other crypto firms, sources have said. Sources told Reuters that FTX transferred at least $4 billion to Alameda, including some customer deposits, to prop up the trading firm after a series of losses.

Bankman-Fried told investors that Alameda owes FTX about $10 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported. FTX had lent more than half of its customer funds to Alameda, the newspaper said.

The U.S. securities regulator is investigating FTX.com’s handling of customer funds and crypto-lending activities, according to a source with knowledge of the inquiry.

Reuters could not learn what specific activities were the focus of the probe. Meanwhile the White House said the developments show why “prudent regulation” is needed.

Users rushed to withdraw $6 billion in crypto tokens from FTX within days, after a news report earlier this month raised questions about Alameda’s balance sheet and Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao tweeted that his firm would sell its entire share in FTT, which gives holders discounts on FTX trading fees. The outflow caused a liquidity crunch at FTX.

(Reporting by Angus Berwick and Anirban Sen in New York, Georgina Lee in Hong Kong, Tom Westbrook in Singapore, Elizabeth Howcroft in London, Hannah Lang and Chris Prentice in Washington, Jasper Ward in the Bahamas and Noor Zainab Hussain in Bangalore; Writing by Paritosh Bansal and Megan Davies; Editing by Anna Driver, Matthew Lewis & Shri Navaratnam)

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Mercedes F1 team evaluating FTX sponsorship, branding stays for now

SAO PAULO (Reuters) – The Mercedes Formula One team said on Thursday they were keeping the branding of troubled cryptocurrency exchange FTX on their cars at this weekend’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix in Brazil while watching developments.

FTX, one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges, has been buffeted by a rush of customer withdrawals and is scrambling to raise about $9.4 billion from investors and rivals, a source said on Thursday.

Mercedes, then the reigning Formula One champions, signed a sponsorship deal with FTX in September, 2021.

A team spokesman said they were evaluating the situation and branding would be staying on the race cars of seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton and fellow-Briton George Russell for the time being.

The weekend’s race at Interlagos is the penultimate round of the season, which finishes in Abu Dhabi on Nov. 20.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Ed Osmond)

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Bahamas securities regulators freeze assets of FTX’s unit

(Reuters) – The Securities Commission Of the Bahamas said on Thursday it had frozen assets of FTX Digital Markets, a subsidiary of the cryptocurrency exchange.

The regulator said it had also suspended the registration and applied to the Supreme Court of The Bahamas for the appointment of a provisional liquidator of FTX Digital Markets Ltd.

(Reporting by Aishwarya Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva)

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Crypto broker Genesis discloses locked funds on FTX

(Reuters) – U.S. cryptocurrency broker Genesis Trading disclosed its derivatives business has approximately $175 million in locked funds on FTX, the company said Thursday in a Twitter post.

Gensesis said its operating capital and net positions in FTX “are not material to our business” and that it has no ongoing relationship with FTX or Alameda Research, the crypto trading firm belonging to FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried.

The locked assets on FTX do not impact the company’s market-making activities, Genesis said.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Exclusive-Behind FTX’s fall, battling billionaires and a failed bid to save crypto

By Angus Berwick and Tom Wilson

(Reuters) – On Tuesday morning, Sam Bankman-Fried, owner of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, caught his employees off-guard with a somber message.

“I’m sorry,” he told them. “I fucked up.”

The reason for the mea culpa: His announcement half an hour earlier that FTX’s arch-rival, Binance, planned to mount a shock takeover of its main trading platform to save it from a “liquidity crunch.” Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, whom the billionaire had accused of sabotage, would now be his White Knight.

The seeds of FTX’s downfall were sown months earlier, stemming from mistakes Bankman-Fried made after he stepped in to save other crypto firms as the crypto market collapsed amid rising interest rates, according to interviews with several people close to Bankman-Fried and communications from both companies that have not been previously reported.

Some of those deals involving Bankman-Fried’s trading firm, Alameda Research, led to a series of losses that eventually became his undoing, according to three people familiar with the company’s operations.

The interviews and messages also shine new light on the bitter rivalry between the two billionaires, who in recent months competed for market share and publicly accused each other of seeking to hurt the one another’s businesses. It culminated on Wednesday, with Binance pulling out of its deal and throwing FTX’s future into uncertainty.

Stuck without a buyer, Bankman-Fried was now searching for alternative backers, two people close to him said. After Binance pulled out, he told FTX staff in a message that Binance had not previously told them of any reservations about the deal and he was “exploring all options.”

Neither Binance nor FTX responded to requests for comment. Bankman-Fried told Reuters on Tuesday that “I’ll probably be too swamped” to do interviews. He didn’t respond to further messages.

Binance earlier said it decided to pull out of the deal as a result of its due diligence on FTX and news reports about U.S. investigations into the company.

Zhao’s unveiling of the planned takeover capped a stunning reversal for Bankman-Fried. The 30-year-old had set up Bahamas-based FTX in 2019 and led it to become one of the largest exchanges, accumulating a near $17 billion fortune.

News of the liquidity crunch at FTX – valued in January at $32 billion with investors including SoftBank and BlackRock – sent reverberations through the crypto world.

The price of major coins plummeted, with bitcoin slumping to its lowest in almost two years, heaping further pain on a sector whose value has fallen about two-thirds this year as central banks tightened credit.

By ditching the deal, Binance had also avoided the regulatory scrutiny that would likely have accompanied the takeover, which Zhao had flagged as a likelihood in a memo to employees that he posted on Twitter.

Financial regulators around the world have issued warnings about Binance for operating without a license or violating money laundering laws. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating Binance for possible money laundering and criminal sanctions violations. Reuters reported last month that Binance had helped Iranian firms trade $8 billion since 2018 despite U.S. sanctions, part of a series of articles this year by the news agency on the exchange’s financial crime compliance. 

RELATIONSHIP SOURS

Zhao and Bankman-Fried’s relationship began in 2019. Six months after FTX’s launch, Zhao bought 20% of the exchange for about $100 million, a person with direct knowledge of the deal said. At the time, Binance said the investment was “aimed to grow the crypto economy together.” 

Within 18 months, however, their relationship had soured.

FTX had grown rapidly and Zhao now viewed it as a genuine competitor with global aspirations, former Binance employees said.

When FTX in May 2021 applied for a license in Gibraltar for a subsidiary, it had to submit information about its major shareholders, but Binance stonewalled FTX’s requests for help, according to messages and emails between the exchanges seen by Reuters.

Between May and July, FTX lawyers and advisors wrote to Binance at least 20 times for details on Zhao’s sources of wealth, banking relationships, and ownership of Binance, the messages show.

In June 2021, however, an FTX lawyer told Binance’s chief financial officer that Binance wasn’t “engaging with us properly” and they risked “severely disrupting an important project for us.” A Binance legal officer responded to FTX to say she was trying to get a response from Zhao’s personal assistant, but the requested information was “too general” and they may not provide everything.

By July of that year, Bankman-Fried had tired of waiting. He bought back Zhao’s stake in FTX for about $2 billion, the person with direct knowledge of the deal said. Two months later, with Binance no longer involved, Gibraltar’s regulator granted FTX a license.

That sum was paid to Binance, in part, in FTX’s own coin, FTT, Zhao said last Sunday – a holding he would later order Binance to sell, precipitating the crisis at FTX.

Graphic: Binance dominance https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/egvbynrnypq/chart_eikon.jpg

“TRYING TO GO AFTER US”

This May and June, Bankman-Fried’s trading firm, Alameda Research, suffered a series of losses from deals, according to three people familiar with its operations.

These included a $500-million loan agreement with failed crypto lender Voyager Digital, two of the people said. Voyager filed for bankruptcy protection the following month, with FTX’s U.S. arm paying $1.4 billion for its assets in a September auction. A Voyager spokesman said the company only used $75 million of Alameda’s credit line.

Reuters could not determine the full extent of losses Alameda suffered.

Seeking to prop up Alameda, which held almost $15 billion in assets, Bankman-Fried transferred at least $4 billion in FTX funds, secured by assets including FTT and shares in trading platform Robinhood Markets Inc, the people said. Alameda had disclosed a 7.6% share in Robinhood that May.

A portion of these FTX funds were customer deposits, two of the people said, though Reuters could not determine their value.

Bankman-Fried did not tell other FTX executives about the move to prop up Alameda, the people said, adding he was afraid that it could leak.

On Nov. 2, however, a report by news outlet CoinDesk detailed a leaked balance sheet that allegedly showed that much of Alameda’s $14.6 billion in assets were held in FTT. Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison tweeted that the balance sheet was merely for a “subset of our corporate entities,” with over $10 billion of assets not reflected. Ellison did not return requests for comment.

That failed to douse growing speculation over what Alameda’s financial health might mean for FTX.

Then Zhao said Binance would sell its entire share in the token, FTT, worth at least $580 million, “due to recent revelations that have come to light.” The token’s price collapsed 80% over the next two days and a torrent of outflows from the exchange gathered pace, blockchain data show.

WITHDRAWAL SURGE

In his message to staff this week, Bankman-Fried said the firm saw a “giant withdrawal surge” as users rushed to withdraw $6 billion in crypto tokens from FTX in just 72 hours. Daily withdrawals normally totaled tens of millions of dollars, Bankman-Fried told his employees.

After Zhao’s tweet that Binance would sell its FTT holding, Bankman-Fried projected confidence that FTX would weather its rival’s attacks. He told staff on Slack that withdrawals were “not shockingly, way up,” but they were able to process the requests.

“We’re chugging along,” he wrote. “Obviously, Binance is trying to go after us. So be it.”

But by Monday the situation became dire. Unable to quickly find a backer, or sell other illiquid assets short-notice, Bankman-Fried contacted Zhao, according to a person familiar with the call. Zhao later confirmed that Bankman-Fried had called him.

Bankman-Fried signed a non-binding letter of intent for Binance to buy FTX’s non-U.S. assets. This valued FTX at several billion dollars, two people familiar with the letter said – enough for the exchange to cover all withdrawal requests but a fraction of its January valuation.

Zhao announced the potential deal several hours later, with Bankman-Fried tweeting “a huge thank you to CZ.”

“Let’s live to fight another day,” Bankman-Fried told staff on Slack.

His employees were shocked. Even executives had been in the dark about the Alameda shortfall and takeover plan until Bankman-Fried informed them that morning, two people working with him said. Both people said they had been unaware that the withdrawal situation was so serious.

Then came Binance’s announcement on Wednesday scrapping the takeover. “The issues are beyond our control or ability to help,” Binance said. Zhao tweeted “Sad day. Tried,” with a crying emoji.

(Reporting by Angus Berwick in New York and Tom Wilson in London; additional reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington and Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Chris Sanders)

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Analysis-FTX debacle sparks investor rethink of battered crypto market

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss and Elizabeth Howcroft

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – With major cryptocurrency exchange FTX on the brink of collapse, some investors are beginning to question the viability of a sector already bruised by the bitcoin bubble bursting and closures of key market players.

Crypto markets have come under intense pressure this year, as rising interest rates prompt investors to ditch risky or speculative assets. The collapse of several crypto lenders, including Celsius and Voyager, major tokens terraUSD and Luna, and hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, had rung alarm bells even before the fiasco at FTX, headed by Sam Bankman-Fried.

He was racing on Thursday to find finance to prop up his embattled crypto exchange, according to a Slack message to FTX staff seen by Reuters, after rival Binance scrapped a proposed bailout following a review of the company’s structure and books.

A spokesperson for FTX did not comment on the Slack message. Bankman-Fried later said in a series of tweets that FTX was seeking to raise liquidity.

FTX is scrambling to raise about $9.4 billion from investors and rivals, a source said on Thursday.

Some in the industry say this fundraising challenge could be beyond Bankman-Fried’s reach, however, as concerns over patchy oversight and counterparty risk begin to overwhelm likely returns from the asset class, at least in the near-to-medium term.

“From a financial side, it’s fair to say that confidence is going to be somewhat shaken because if you can’t trust FTX then what can you trust?” Yat Siu, co-founder of Hong Kong-based investor Animoca Brands, told Reuters on Wednesday.

FTX’s swift fall from grace followed heavy speculation about its financial health that triggered $6 billion of withdrawals in just 72 hours earlier this week. The company had published a valuation of $32 billion as recently as January.

“What makes this new phase of deleveraging more problematic is that the number of entities with stronger balance sheets able to rescue those with low capital and high leverage is shrinking within the crypto ecosystem,” analysts at JP Morgan said in a note to clients.

“Now that the balance sheet strength of Alameda Research and FTX is under question only a few months after being perceived as strong balance sheet entities, it creates a confidence crisis and reduces the appetite of other crypto companies to come to the rescue.”

Speaking at the Token2049 crypto conference in London on Wednesday, Andrei Kazantsev, global head of crypto trading at Goldman Sachs, said “counterparty risk is starting to be top of mind” for some clients once drawn to crypto trading by high volatility and yield.

Unlike traditional corporations and financial firms, crypto entities operate in a regulatory gray area. For instance, deposits at crypto lenders are not insured by the government.

In the case of FTX, U.S. residents cannot trade on its global platform due to strict regulations for the crypto space in the United States. FTX has a U.S. partner, FTX.US, but its offerings are more limited than the global platform.

Ken Lo, co-founder at Hong Kong-based crypto exchange and custodian Hong Kong Digital Asset Exchange, said counterparty risk, which comes from a lack of transparency and information disclosure, underscores the need for “clear regulatory framework and vision statement.” ‘POSTER CHILD’ NO MORE It was only a few months ago that Bankman-Fried, 30, had been seen as a crypto white knight, salvaging beleaguered crypto firms that faltered as prices cratered. “The show must go on, the industry needs to keep growing, but it’s definitely a step-back in itself when you see the poster child of the industry being put in this position,” said Jean-Marie Mognetti, chief executive of crypto asset manager CoinShares. “It is a lesson which seems to keep repeating itself,” he added, citing certain star traders in various companies that ended up in trouble.

While the meltdown would not stop companies from creating new blockchain-based products, Animoca’s Siu said it “probably will create a little bit of a chill effect” for institutional investors entering crypto markets.

To be sure, some investors continued to have faith in the sector and bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, rebounded 12.5% to $17,853.

In an interview with CNBC on Thursday, Microstrategy Chairman Michael Saylor said he will continue to acquire bitcoin when the opportunity presents itself. On Wednesday ARK Invest, led by high-profile crypto proponent Cathie Wood, bought shares in FTX rival exchange Coinbase Global. FTX’s snowballing troubles rocked digital currencies on Wednesday. Bitcoin hit a two-year low of $15,632, down about 77% from an all-time peak of $69,000 from November 2021. Ether, the second-largest, hit its lowest level since July before steadying on Thursday.

FTT, the smaller token tied to FTX, plunged. Its market cap dropped to around $360 million, down from around $3 billion at the start of the week, according to CoinGecko data. Max Boonen, co-founder of digital asset liquidity provider B2C2, said FTX’s problems have set the crypto space back by six months. Speaking at the Token2049 crypto conference in London, he suggested that investors will to have to rely more on credit asset managers doing due diligence on private financials.

Graphic: Top crypto exchanges by volume Top crypto exchanges by volume https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/jnpwygnndpw/chart.png

(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss in New York; Additional reporting by Georgina Lee in Hong Kong; Editing by Alden Bentley, Catherine Evans and Matthew Lewis)

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Tron says open to talks with FTX on rescue plans

(Reuters) – Justin Sun’s Tron is focused on enabling the withdrawal of its tokens from FTX but is open to talks about other rescue plans for the struggling cryptocurrency exchange, a spokesperson said on Thursday.

FTX rescue talks include the possibility of a credit line, the spokesperson said. They added that a deal on Thursday to establish a special facility that would allow clients to swap some crypto assets from FTX to external wallets was a “first step.”

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft)

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Ontario Pension says any loss from FTX investment to have limited impact

TORONTO (Reuters) – The Ontario Teachers Pension Plan (OTPP) said on Thursday it had invested a total of $95 million to the troubled cryptocurrency exchange FTX and any financial loss from the exposure will have limited impact on the pension plan.

OTPP, Canada’s No. 3 pension fund, said it made the investments in FTX International and FTX U.S. exchange through its Teachers’ Venture Growth fund, representing less than 0.05% of the pension fund’s total net assets, it said.

FTX is scrambling to raise funds investors and rivals as Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried urgently seeks to save the cryptocurrency exchange that has been buffeted by a rush of customer withdrawals.

(Reporting by Divya Rajagopal)

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Coinbase cuts jobs again as cryptocurrencies extend fall

(Reuters) – Crypto exchange Coinbase Global Inc cut over 60 jobs in its recruiting and institutional onboarding teams, a spokesperson said on Thursday, at a time when pummeled digital coins risk another contagion in the sector and bigger rival FTX inches closer to a collapse.

The job cuts, the second time this year, follow a week after “crypto market headwinds” contributed to Coinbase’s net loss of $544.6 million for the three months ended Sept. 30, compared to a profit of $406.1 million a year ago.

The job cuts will help operate as efficiently as possible,” the spokesperson said.

In June, Coinbase cut 1,100 jobs, or 18% of its workforce, weeks after it said it would extend a hiring freeze and rescind a number of accepted offers.

Cryptocurrencies languished this year as higher interest rates and exacerbating worries of an economic downturn cratered prices that eliminated key players such as Voyager Digital, Three Arrows Capital and Celsius Network.

But the bigger blow to digital assets came since FTX showed early cracks. The larger crypto exchange, which had developed a penchant for bailing out troubled crypto firms, is exploring options since a liquidity crunch came to light and now faces scrutiny from U.S. regulators over its handling of customer funds, as well as its crypto-lending activities.

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

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Key U.S. senator urges probe into FTX collapse

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown said on Thursday it is critical that U.S. financial agencies investigate what led to cryptocurrency exchange FTX’s collapse and he pledged to take steps to ensure the stability of American markets.

“It is crucial that our financial watchdogs look into what led to FTX’s collapse so we can fully understand the misconduct and abuses that took place,” the Democratic senator said.

“I’m committed to finding the best path forward to protect consumers and the stability of the U.S. markets and banking system.”

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chris Reese)

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White House: Crypto needs oversight to avoid harming Americans

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cryptocurrencies risk harming everyday Americans without proper oversight and latest news involving crypto underscores these concerns, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Thursday.

She said the White House will continue to monitor developments on cryptocurrencies.

(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Steve Holland, Editing by Franklin Paul)

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Trading in crypto derivatives surges as investors hedge positions after FTX shock

By Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) – Trading volumes in bitcoin futures and exchange traded funds (ETFs) has exploded as investors scrambled to hedge their positions after this week’s slump in digital tokens triggered by turmoil at crypto exchange FTX.

CME bitcoin futures November contracts traded at $17,250, with a volume of 13,292 at 11:24 a.m. EST (1624 GMT), which was a 3% discount to the spot price of $17,770.

Trading volumes soared on Tuesday and Wednesday as FTX’s woes worsened, touching 48,554 and 32,168 contracts respectively, significantly higher than volumes over the past two months which hovered between 4,902 and 27,309.

Bitcoin bounced 10% on Thursday after touching a late-2020 low earlier in the day as largest crypto exchange Binance walked away from a bailout of FTX, leaving the firm’s urgent push to plug a reported $8 billion hole in its finances.

The ProShares short bitcoin strategy ETF, a bearish play on CME bitcoin futures, witnessed record trading volume on Wednesday as investors hunted for “regulated, transparent futures market,” ProShares Global Investment Strategist Simeon Hyman said.

“This suggests an overwhelmingly strong unison desire to hedge, with shorts being the predominant force of leveraged exposure at the moment,” said Vetle Lunde, analyst at Norway-based crypto research firm Arcane Research.

Meanwhile, ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF, which was halted for trading on Wednesday, has witnessed a 300% jump in trading volume in the from its previous high on October 21, 2022.

Assets under management for the BITO fund has shrunk by almost a third since its launch nearly a year ago to about $500 million, according to Refinitiv Lipper data.

Funding rates that represent sentiment in the perpetual swaps market, a major part of the bitcoin derivatives world, were negative 0.0219% on Thursday, according to Coinglass, trading near levels last seen in March 2020, Arcane Research’s Lunde said.

Negative funding rates imply sentiment is bearish as investors must pay to hold a short position.

Some market participants reported facing issues with borrowing and shorting cryptocurrencies.

“We’ve traded some spot in the last few days and trading desks are being very conservative with risk management right now so it wouldn’t surprise me that futures markets are getting a bit tricky to navigate,” said Greg King, chief executive officer at Osprey Funds.

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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Tether says it holds $39.7 billion in U.S. Treasury Bills

LONDON (Reuters) – The largest stablecoin, Tether, increased its holdings of U.S. Treasury bills to $39.7 billion and reduced its commercial paper to around $50 million as of Sept. 30, 2022, according to a reserves attestation published on Thursday.

Tether said its reserves are “extremely liquid” with 82% of investments in cash, cash equivalents and other short-term deposits. Treasury bills make up over 58% of the total $68 billion in reserves, Tether said.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Gareth Jones)

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FTX signs deal with Tron to let users swap some assets

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency exchange FTX has set up an agreement with Justin Sun’s blockchain network Tron that will allow holders of TRX and some other crypto tokens to swap assets from FTX to external wallets.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)

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Exclusive-Bankman-Fried seeks $9.4 billion package for FTX rescue-sources

By Anirban Sen

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Sam Bankman-Fried is seeking to put together a rescue package of up to $9.4 billion for his troubled cryptocurrency exchange FTX, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said on Thursday.

Bankman-Fried is discussing raising about $1 billion from crypto-token Tron founder Justin Sun, $1 billion from cryptocurrency exchange OKX, $1 billion from cryptocurrency firm Tether and $2 billion from a consortium of investment funds, the source said.

The remainder would come from other investors, the source added. One of the investors in talks with FTX is Daniel Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point, according to the source.

Bankman-Fried has had little progress so far in putting the rescue package together, according to the source. Yet he has resisted filing for bankruptcy and has refused to appoint restructuring advisers, the source said. The situation is fluid and the deliberations could quickly change, the source added.

The source requested anonymity because the matter is confidential. FTX, Sun, OKX and Third Point did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

(Reporting by Anirban Sen in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis)

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Crypto exchange FTX reopens withdrawals – CoinDesk

(Reuters) – Crypto exchange FTX has reopened withdrawals, CoinDesk reported on Thursday, citing on-chain data provided by analytics firm Nansen.

The company’s website, however, still displayed an earlier message that said it was unable to process withdrawals.

FTX Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried has launched an urgent push to raise funds to save his firm as the crypto exchange looks to plug a reported $8 billion hole in its finances, according to tweets and a memo to employees.

A spokesperson for the company did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)

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FTX approaches crypto exchange Kraken for funds – Axios

(Reuters) – FTX has approached Kraken as potential rescue partner, Axios reported on Thursday, citing two people familiar with the matter, just hours after Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried said he had launched an urgent push to raise funds.

Bankman-Fried had earlier in the day said he was in talks with “a number of players” in the crypto sector, including Justin Sun who is the founder of crypto token Tron to rescue his cryptocurrency exchange.

FTX did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Separately, the Wall Street Journal reported that FTX tapped into billions of dollars worth of customer assets to fund risky bets by its sister crypto trading company Alameda.

Bankman-Fried had told an investor this week that Alameda owed FTX about $10 billion, the report said, citing a person familiar with the matter said.

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)