Every financial system is based on trust. Aside from risks that you consciously take, you are only willing to invest with someone if you are confident that you will get your funds back. For example, someone purchasing a speculative stock through a broker believes that they can sell it quickly at a price, obtaining the proceeds even if that represents a sizable loss.
With the collapse of FTX, we learned yet again that participants in much of the crypto world cannot be so confident. Buying crypto instruments through exchanges that are beyond the regulatory perimeter is far less safe than trading speculative equities through a registered broker-dealer or regulated exchange. Crypto investors who hold their funds in such intermediaries cannot count on having access to the assets that they believe they own.
The run on FTX reflects a classic loss of trust. It exemplifies the problems that plague a financial system in the absence of legal protections and public oversight. Ironically, the crypto movement arose from a desire to create a financial system that does not require legal rules or government intervention to establish trust. Leaving aside diehard believers, the story of FTX (as well as other crypto disasters earlier this year) should expose this for the fantasy that it is….
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