As contagion spreads, FTX loans out hundreds of millions to two of the largest yield-generating shops in the space. What does this mean for BlockFi and Voyager?
The below is an excerpt from a recent edition of Bitcoin Magazine Pro, Bitcoin Magazine’s premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, subscribe now.
Read last week’s issues here:
- Monday’s issue – Celsius Exchange Halts Withdrawals: What Went Wrong?
- Tuesday’s issue – Celsius And stETH – A Lesson On (il)Liquidity
- Wednesday’s issue – Three Arrows Capital Faces Liquidation
- Thursday’s issue – Fears of Further Contagion
- Friday’s issue – 3AC And The Leaning Tower Of Babel
The Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) FTX and Alameda Research rescue tour is well underway in the broader cryptocurrency space, with both BlockFi and Voyager taking $250 million and $200 million loans respectively from SBF company bailouts.
“I do feel like we have a responsibility to seriously consider stepping in, even if it is at a loss to ourselves, to stem contagion” – SBF on the state of the exchange/lendor ecosystem.
Currently, very few of the bitcoin and “crypto” yield-generating counterparties look to be solvent or safe — whether that’s reinforcing messaging to clients, complete shutdowns in services or efforts to raise cash to cover deposit liabilities. As price draws down, risks are exposed and the liquidity tide goes back out, we’re finding out which institutions will survive this new environment and which ones took on too much risk.
Today, FTX announced a $250 million revolving line of credit, or injection, to BlockFi in an effort to help them “navigate the market from a position of strength.” This bailout comes at a time when BlockFi has been in the process of closing an additional funding round at more than an 80% discount compared to their previous $5 billion-plus valuation just last year. They have also reduced their staff by 20% this month.
In BlockFi’s case, the loan will be used to strengthen the balance sheet with some unclear, legal language on how that supports client deposits.
The Voyager deal is $200 million credit and 15,000 BTC with 5% interest through 2024.
Now, there’s nothing inherently wrong with companies going out to the market and raising extra capital in an attempt to survive the unfolding bear market, but it does raise red flags about the health of each business, the safety of customer deposits and the deleveraging contagion risks of the entire industry.
Injecting more liquidity into large, troubled players as an attempt to stop further bank runs and instill market confidence is in FTX’s best interest. Another institutional blowup means yet another major selloff and death-spiral event for bitcoin and broader cryptocurrency assets. This comes at a time when all three institutions are trying to grow their retail customer base so a healthy, sustainable industry (along with higher prices) is good for business.
Final Note
Given the nature of the last two weeks specifically, we strongly recommend that users get their funds into their own custody.