Crypto's 2022 Slump: From Bitcoin Market Drop to Terra, FTX Fall - Bloomberg
Crypto's 2022 Slump: From Bitcoin Market Drop to Terra, FTX Fall - Bloomberg
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Crypto enthusiasts were brimming with optimism at the beginning of 2022. As the year went on, the crypto winter’s chill gave rise to a blizzard of contagion.

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As 2021 came to a close, crypto enthusiasts were brimming with optimism. After all, it had been a banner year: Nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, had crossed into the mainstream. Casual investors were talking to their friends about the relative merits of Bitcoin versus Ether. Some people even pretended to understand algorithmic stablecoins.

Fast forward a year, and the primary topics of conversation among even the most devout of the crypto faithful were more likely to be about Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced crypto co-founder of the fallen FTX empire, or whether they’d ever retrieve the coins trapped on bankrupt exchanges and lending platforms after a series of big digital-asset collapses.

“Crypto winter” is the industry term for the chill that descended on the market in 2022, and contagion was the name of the game. After the collapse of the TerraUSD algorithmic stablecoin, major crypto players fell like dominos: Three Arrows Capital. Voyager Digital, Celsius Network, FTX, BlockFi.

The hits kept coming, but it wasn’t all downside – at least at first. The Super Bowl, one of the largest sporting events in the US, featured splashy, celebrity-filled commercials for crypto companies including Coinbase, Crypto.com and the aforementioned FTX, which was still riding high. There were crypto conferences in the Bahamas and Miami, with sessions about the future of Bitcoin by day and glitzy parties by night. And the industry’s prominence grew in Washington, as lavish political giving and an army of lobbyists signaled its increasing influence there.

Still, crypto prices kept falling. Bitcoin – the largest token by market value – plunged more than 60%, leading a rout in digital assets that erased some $2 trillion in total market value from the highs reached in November 2021. Bankman-Fried went from being described as a modern John Pierpont Morgan to being arrested and accused of multiple crimes including fraud. And NFT prices fell back to earth.

Market events

Hacks

Bankruptcies

Enforcement

Layoffs

1.5

$2.5 trillion

1.0

2.0

2022

January

February

Wormhole hack

SEC fines BlockFi

March

Ronin hack

April

May

Terra collapses

CFTC sues Gemini

SEC investigates Binance

June

Celsius freezes withdrawals

Coinbase cuts 18% of staff

Horizon Bridge hack

Three Arrows files for bankruptcy

July

Voyager Digital files for bankruptcy

Celsius files for bankruptcy

August

MicroStrategy’s Saylor drops CEO role

US sanctions Tornado Cash

Alameda co-CEO Trabucco resigns

September

Wintermute hack

Kraken’s Powell drops CEO role

October

SEC investigates Yuga Labs

November

Binance says will sell FTX native tokens

FTX Group files for bankruptcy

Blockfi files for bankruptcy

December

SBF arrested in Bahamas; charges filed by SEC, CFTC & DOJ

2023

January

Market events

Hacks

Bankruptcies

Enforcement

Layoffs

1.5

$2.5 trillion

1.0

2.0

2022

January

February

Wormhole hack

SEC fines BlockFi

March

Ronin hack

April

May

Terra collapses

CFTC sues Gemini

SEC investigates Binance

June

Celsius freezes withdrawals

Coinbase cuts 18% of staff

Horizon Bridge hack

July

Three Arrows files for bankruptcy

Voyager Digital files for bankruptcy

Celsius files for bankruptcy

August

MicroStrategy’s Saylor drops CEO role

US sanctions Tornado Cash

Alameda co-CEO Trabucco resigns

September

Wintermute hack

Kraken’s Powell drops CEO role

October

SEC investigates Yuga Labs

November

Binance says will sell FTX native tokens

FTX Group files for bankruptcy

Blockfi files for bankruptcy

December

SBF arrested in Bahamas;

charges filed by SEC, CFTC & DOJ

2023

January

Market events

Hacks

Bankruptcies

Enforcement

Layoffs

1.5

$2.5 trillion

1.0

2.0

2022

January

February

Wormhole hack

SEC fines BlockFi

March

Ronin hack

April

May

Terra collapses

CFTC sues Gemini

SEC investigates Binance

June

Celsius freezes withdrawals

Coinbase cuts 18% of staff

Horizon Bridge hack

Three Arrows files for bankruptcy

July

Voyager Digital files for bankruptcy

Celsius files for bankruptcy

MicroStrategy’s Saylor drops CEO role

August

US sanctions Tornado Cash

Alameda co-CEO Trabucco resigns

September

Wintermute hack

Kraken’s Powell drops CEO role

October

SEC investigates Yuga Labs

November

Binance says will sell FTX native tokens

FTX Group files for bankruptcy

Blockfi files for bankruptcy

December

SBF arrested in Bahamas;

charges filed by SEC, CFTC & DOJ

2023

January

One of the central tenets of crypto, and of the blockchain, is the idea of decentralization: that no one entity is in charge, and no one player could destabilize the rest. What 2022 showed, more than once, is that the digital-asset ecosystem is significantly more interconnected and concentrated than even its biggest participants might have realized.

The Terra ecosystem operated two major tokens: Luna, a cryptocurrency, and TerraUSD (UST), a stablecoin that tried to stay at $1 by maintaining a ratio with the amount of Luna in circulation. In May, UST began a steady decline away from its dollar peg, eventually tanking both coins to zero. Shock waves from the implosion reverberated throughout the market, setting the stage for more blowups in the weeks and months that followed.

Crypto CEOs, not a group that could ever be described as shy or retiring, are pointing fingers at each other and at regulators for the multiple failures that marked the year. Meanwhile retail investors – some of whom lost their life savings to market wipeouts, hacks, or potential fraud – are left holding the bag, with many wondering whether they should have gotten involved in the first place.

Is there a fix for all the ways crypto broke in 2022? Skeptics and fans alike expect more rules and more regulations, especially in the realm of consumer protection. For some, it will be too little too late.

Edited by: Anna Irrera, Philip Lagerkranser and Yue Qiu

With assistance by: Paul Murray and Beth Williams

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