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Crypto Is Flowing Out of Exchanges: 'Severe' Outflows From Gemini, OKX and Crypto.com, Says JP Morgan

Posted by Andries Van Tonder on November 18, 2022 - 9:29am

Crypto Is Flowing Out of Exchanges: 'Severe' Outflows From Gemini, OKX and Crypto.com, Says JP Morgan

Analysts at the investment bank have also noted that the stablecoin market is taking a beating.

By Mat Di Salvo

A crypto trader at work. Image: Shutterstock

Investors are pulling funds out of major crypto exchanges as a result of the collapse of FTX, JPMorgan analysts have said. 

In a note to investors Wednesday, analysts at the investment bank noted that all major exchanges experienced outflows last week but Gemini, OKX and Crypto.com had the most “severe” draining of funds. 

Analysts also said that the stablecoin market is getting smaller—and this may continue to hurt the price of other major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. 

FTX was one of the most popular digital asset exchanges but last week imploded—losing billions of dollars of investors’ cash. The exchange and its related entities crashed because FTX was using money from the exchange to make bets through trading firm Alameda Research, also founded by the exchange’s CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. 

After a leaked document revealed Alameda’s holdings were primarily in the FTX-issued token FTT and other highly illiquid assets, rival exchange Binance announced it would sell off its entire FTT stash—leading to a bank run and eventually causing a liquidity crisis which collapsed FTX.

The fall of the exchange sent shockwaves through the crypto market, sending prices of major coins and tokens plunging. Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market cap, hit a two-year low following the fallout. 

“We had argued last week that, similar to what we saw after the collapse of TerraUSD last May, the current deleveraging phase that started with the collapse of Alameda Research and FTX is likely to reverberate for at least a few weeks inducing a cascade of margin calls, deleveraging and crypto company/platform failures,” JPMorgan’s analysts wrote, referring to the collapse earlier this year of crypto project Terra, which also lost billions of dollars of investors’ cash.

“Deleveraging,” in this case, is when investors or companies reduce the debt they previously took on to make investments in the crypto sphere. Most market analysts agree that only after the bad debt is flushed out will the crypto market reach its bottom and potentially recover.

Analysts added that unless the stablecoin market doesn’t stop shrinking, the market will struggle to recover. “It would be difficult here to imagine a sustained recovery in crypto prices without the shrinkage of the stablecoin universe stopping,” the note read.

Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency pegged to another asset, like dollars or gold. They are designed to be stable, unlike Bitcoin or other digital assets which are volatile. 

These digital assets are often used by crypto traders to quickly enter and exit positions in other coins or tokens without the need to convert to a fiat currency—like U.S. dollars—and they are considered to be the backbone of the crypto market. 

JPMorgan said that the market cap of largest stablecoins peaked at $186 billion in May before Terra’s collapse but has been declining since then—with $25 billion being chased out via stablecoin redemptions. 

DISCLAIMER

THE VIEWS AND OPINIONS EXPRESSED BY THE AUTHOR ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DO NOT CONSTITUTE FINANCIAL, INVESTMENT, OR OTHER ADVICE.

Andries Van Tonder Thank you Neal for your comment
November 19, 2022 at 9:37am
The Neal and Janet Brown Family Trust We knew this economy was going to be painful to go through, but we are seeing the platforms that were over extended and/or leveraged badly fail. Only Cryptocurrencies that are based on sound Financials are going to come out of this abyss okay. It's not likely to improve much for some time now thanks to yet more failures and losses in the billions. Thankfully I have not used the platforms that failed so spectacularly.
November 18, 2022 at 4:54pm
Andries Van Tonder Thank you Otto
November 18, 2022 at 1:19pm