Business Crypto Billionaire Fortunes Vanish as Quickly as They Were Made - Seven of the world’s richest crypto founders have lost a combined $114 billion since November as digital-asset values crumble.

By Tom Maloney
June 13, 2022, 9:33 PM UTC

One built a massive fortune that rivaled the wealthiest US tech titans. Another amassed a war chest that he vowed would change politics and philanthropy. Some were given a second chance at riches after past ventures flamed out.

The cryptocurrency craze turned Changpeng Zhao, Sam Bankman-Fried, Mike Novogratz and a handful of other digital-asset evangelists into billionaires several times over. But just as quickly as they became the new faces of global wealth, they’re now seeing their fortunes vanish at an astonishing rate.

Worth as much as $145 billion on Nov. 9, when Bitcoin reached a record high of almost $69,000, seven billionaires with fortunes tied to crypto have since lost a combined $114 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Many others who have bet big on Bitcoin, from Microstrategy Inc. Chief Executive Officer Michael Saylor to El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, are also feeling the pinch as the price of the world’s largest digital token slumped below $23,000 on Monday, the lowest since December 2020.

Crypto Crash​

Seven billionaires lost a combined $114 billion since November's crypto peak

Billionaire9-Nov-2113-Jun-22
Changpeng Zhao$95.8B$10.2B
Samuel Bankman-Fried15.1B8.9B
Brian Armstrong13.7B2.1B
Mike Novogratz8.5B2.1B
Fred Ehrsam4.5B2.1B
Tyler Winklevoss3.8B3.0B
Cameron Winklevoss3.8B3.0B
Source: Bloomberg Billionaires Index
Note: Changpeng Zhao was added to the index Jan. 7, 2022. The November figure reflects his initial valuation.

Once seen as ushering in a new era of decentralized finance, crypto has been rocked by two high-profile implosions in the span of weeks. Celsius, one of the largest crypto lending platforms, announced Sunday that it was freezing all transactions on its network following speculation it would be unable to meet returns promised on some of its products. That followed the collapse in May of so-called stablecoin TerraUSD and its sister token, Luna — which is memorialized as a tattoo on the left arm of Novogratz, the founder of Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd.

While global markets are in turmoil as the Federal Reserve and other central banks plan to aggressively raise interest rates to fight the highest inflation in decades, the speed at which crypto has plunged in recent weeks stands out. And while there’s little evidence of cracks so far in the broader US labor market, the losses in digital assets have led some crypto billionaires to resort to job cuts.

Zhao, founder of Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, said his firm has “a very healthy war chest” and is expanding hiring. Still, the 44-year-old has seen his personal fortune, once the world’s 11th-largest, tumble 89% to $10.2 billion since he debuted on the Bloomberg wealth index in January. His firm has also become a focal point for US investigators seeking to rein in the crypto industry.

Bankman-Fried, the 30-year-old CEO of crypto trading platform FTX, is down 66% since his fortune peaked at $26 billion. That could dent his plans to give away his money and spend big in politics. He poured $16 million into super PACs in April, making him one of the top donors to outside groups, and has said he expects to give more than $100 million during the next presidential election to support Democrats.

Novogratz, 57, whose macro fund at Fortress Investment Group was liquidated in 2015 following two years of losses, has staked his comeback on crypto, recently calling Terra a “big idea that failed.” His fortune fell on Monday to $2.1 billion, lower than when he debuted on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index in December 2020, when Bitcoin traded around $29,000.

Meanwhile, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss saw their fortunes sag to $3 billion each, from as high as $5.9 billion apiece. The 40-year-old twin founders of crypto exchange Gemini, which announced this month that it would cut about 10% of its workforce, are currently touring with their rock band, Mars Junction.
Coinbase Global Inc., the largest US crypto exchange, rescinded employment offers as crypto prices kept plunging. Founders Brian Armstrong, 39, and Fred Ehrsam, 34, once worth a combined $18.1 billion, have seen their fortunes shrink to $2.1 billion each as shares of the company have tumbled 79% since their initial public offering.

As for Saylor, 57, he’s keeping the faith: He tweeted “In Bitcoin We Trust” on Monday, along with a new picture of himself surrounded by lightning. Microstrategy, the software company he founded that plunged in value during the dot-com bubble in 2000, began buying Bitcoin in 2020. Its shares closed at a peak of $1,272 in February 2021, when the 2.36 million shares Saylor currently owns would have been worth $3 billion. They’ve since plummeted about 88%.

Bukele, El Salvador’s 40-year-old president, hadn’t tweeted about Monday’s plunge in crypto as of 4:45 p.m. in New York. About a week ago was the one-year anniversary of his push to make Bitcoin legal tender. At the time, it traded at about $36,000.

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Oh wow, it's almost like proving that you once had a computer cluster big enough to solve a mathematical problem at one point in time isn't a stable source of value and was more of a waster of time, energy and resources.

Fiat currency isn't much better, but it at least has the backing of Government and wider society, Crypto has nothing but pie in the sky ideas and can be summed up as a Solution in search of a problem.
 
Lol @ the /pol/tards who think fiat is more viable currency.

Crypto has kept the site running for years. Stop being mad about proof-of-work and stop wishing for safe alternatives to government spyware money to die because you didn't make a million off it.

Truly, just the worst area of the site with the dumbest fucking niggers.
 
Oh wow, it's almost like proving that you once had a computer cluster big enough to solve a mathematical problem at one point in time isn't a stable source of value and was more of a waster of time, energy and resources.

Fiat currency isn't much better, but it at least has the backing of Government and wider society, Crypto has nothing but pie in the sky ideas and can be summed up as a Solution in search of a problem.
Fiat is the least-worst idea we've come up with so far.

And we all know (Congress excepted) what happens when you just print money without there being actual wealth behind it.

How giving everyone the ability to print money, with even less wealth behind it (dollars at least represent the entire US economy, crypto represents some unaccountable persons computer network) was seen as a good idea? I'll never know.

Well, aside from speculation, the only people who get rich for sure in a gold rush are the shovel salesmen.
 
Because you're a good little niggercattle who doesn't do anything important or risque.
If that's your self-image why are you so bitchy? Crypto currency is a failure because at some point everyone turns it into fiat. Or they turn it into something else, which they eventually turn into fiat. Because fiat pays for their bread and butter. It's a simple equation that a child could understand. That which buys your bread and butter is the real currency with the real value. Call it crypto or gold bullion or a pocketful of mumbles, it's all the same nonsense.
 
Because you're a good little niggercattle who doesn't do anything important or risque.
Right, no one who has a business running on traditional currency has ever done anything important. Certainly nothing as important as running an internet gossip website.

I'm glad it keeps the site going, but the world's biggest wealth transfer from the stupid to the criminal is hardly worth defending. Of all the billionaires out there, the crypto ones are by far the least accomplished or impressive, and they certainly aren't on your side.

When the government pulls the rug, you get civil war, or maybe a world war. When some Pajeet with a white paper pulls the rug, a few computer nerds jump off buildings because a cryptoevangelist convinced them to take out a HELOC to buy CumRocket.
 
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