Small players lose faith in crypto after sell-off
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[May 17, 2022] By
Hannah Lang, Savio Shetty and Lisa Pauline Mattackal
WASHINGTON/
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Nofe Isah, a
25-year old based in Nigeria, has been investing in crypto since
January. Last week, she lost all of her $5,000 in savings as
cryptocurrency luna went into free fall.
Isah, a recently unemployed administrative officer, vowed she would
never invest in crypto again.
"I can't believe I fell for crypto," she told Reuters by phone. "I'm
just trying not to get myself depressed. Crypto has taken my money,
fine. It shouldn't take my head.”
The crypto market, known for its wild price swings, slumped last week as
investors yanked money from riskier assets amid worries over soaring
inflation and rising interest rates.
Bitcoin, the world's largest cryptocurrency, fell as low as $25,401 on
Thursday, its lowest since Dec. 2020. It hit a record high of $69,000 in
November.
Small tokens were hit too, with ether, the second-largest token,
dropping more than 15% to its lowest since June. Luna - a digital coin
widely hyped on social media and backed by institutional crypto
investors - shed nearly all of its value.
Small traders such as Isah have flocked to cryptocurrencies in the hope
of quick returns, despite warnings from regulators that the emerging
assets can be high risk.
Platforms such as Robinhood, which has 23 million customers across a
variety of assets, have helped spur retail investing, including in
crypto. Around a quarter of Robinhood's transaction-based revenues came
from cryptocurrencies in the first quarter of this year, Robinhood said
in its latest earnings statement.
Overall user numbers at crypto platforms have ballooned. Binance, the
world's biggest crypto exchange, had some 118 million clients last
month, up from 43.4 million in the first quarter of last year.
But after last week's turmoil, online forums were awash with tales of
woe, as retail investors expressed anguish about their losses.
"I'm 49, big mortgage, 3 kids etc. My retirement party is on ice for the
foreseeable future!", a user with the handle Boring-Fun-3646 said on
Reddit.
Another user with the handle AdventurousAdagio830 posted on Reddit: "It
doesn't seem real that I lost $180,000."
'DEATH SPIRAL'
Emblematic of crypto risks was the collapse last week of terraUSD, a
stablecoin designed to keep a constant value via a complex algorithm
that involved luna.
When the coins came under heavy selling pressure, the system broke down.
TerraUSD - designed to keep a value of $1 - traded around 9 cents on
Tuesday while luna plunged to near-zero, based on CoinGecko data.
Tejan Shrivastava, a 31-year old graphic designer from Mumbai, who has
been investing in cryptocurrencies for the last year, had his $250
investment wiped out by luna's collapse.
"It was stuck in a death spiral. All the money was gone in 15 minutes,"
he told Reuters.
"I don't even know if I'll invest in crypto in the future. I have a
crypto portfolio, but I am planning to liquidate it once it reaches
break even."
Luna's fall wiped out most of its market value which had been above $40
billion as recently as early April, CoinGecko data shows.
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Representations of virtual currency Bitcoin are seen in this picture
illustration taken taken March 13, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Retail investors' online frustration even spilled over into the real world.
Seoul police last week said they were seeking a suspect after an unidentified
individual rang the doorbell of the apartment of Do Kwon, the founder of
terraUSD, and ran away.
Police would investigate whether the suspect had invested in cryptocurrencies, a
Seoul police officer told Reuters.
PATCHY REGULATION
Through its 13-year life, the crypto sector has been peppered by vertiginous
climbs and sudden free falls. In November, for instance, bitcoin slumped by a
fifth in just under two weeks after touching a record $69,000. Six months
earlier, it had tumbled by almost 40% in just nine days.
Yet crypto's latest crash - which pushed the sector's combined value to $1.2
trillion, less than half of where it was last November - led to the crushing of
luna, which on May 1 was the eighth-largest cryptocurrency by market
capitalisation.
Cryptocurrencies are subject to patchy regulation across the world, with traders
of bitcoin and the panapoly of smaller tokens typically unprotected against
price slumps.
But it is difficult to gauge the scale of retail investors' pain from the crypto
plunge and the repercussions on future appetite given the opaque nature of the
market.
In Britain more than 4% of adults - some 2.3 million people - own
cryptocurrencies, data published last year by the UK financial watchdog showed.
Britain's watchdog said understanding of crypto was falling compared with a year
earlier, "suggesting that some crypto users may not fully understand what they
are buying".
Still, some small investors are keeping the faith.
Eloisa Marchesoni, based near Tulum in Mexico and investing with a crypto
syndicate, said she would not give up.
"I am looking to buy the dip - we are all waiting for bitcoin to go down to
$22,000, which is not something too probable but not something that's 'not
probable at all'."
Marchesoni is also hedging her crypto bets with physical assets -- "cars because
you can lease them, watches, real estate".
Bitcoin was hovering around $30,000 on Tuesday, having lost more than 20% so far
this month.
Regulators remain on alert. The British government said last month it will
regulate stablecoins.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is toughening its stance. Gary
Gensler, SEC chair, said this week investors in cryptocurrencies needed more
protections.
(Additional reporting by Alun John in Hong Kong and Soo-hyang Choi in Seoul;
Writing by Carolyn Cohn, Elizabeth Howcroft and Tom Wilson in London. Editing by
Jane Merriman)
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