Charlie Munger, vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, has issued scathing comments on the crypto industry after one of the globally leading exchanges FTX collapsed last week.
FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last week after concerns about the company’s balance sheet triggered a mass withdrawal of funds by depositors, pushing the firm into a liquidity crisis.
Though the company’s filing had initially estimated that there would be 100,000 creditors affected by the collapse, the firm upped the estimate to more than one million in a later filing.
Crypto hedge funds like Ikigai, which maintained a major portion of its assets on FTX, are now in an uncertain position.
Warren Buffet, Legislation
Chairman Warren Buffet, who controls Berkshire Hathaway, is also a strong critic of cryptocurrencies. During the April shareholder meeting, Buffet pointed out that cryptos are not a productive asset as it does not produce anything.He cited investing in apartments and farms as far superior to betting money on cryptos. “The apartments are going to produce rent and the farms are going to produce food,” Buffet said.
As of Nov. 16, the global cryptocurrency market cap was just over $883 billion, which is down by 68.23 percent from a year ago. In November last year, the market cap had hit a peak of nearly $2.9 trillion.
He also blamed the “complete hostility and lack of transparency” by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as another factor.
“These failures have driven crypto development to foreign jurisdictions that have little or insufficient regulation. We’re now seeing the consequences in the failure of @FTX_Official,” he said.
If a “sensible, legislatively authorized” framework for digital assets existed in the country, the impact of FTX’s bankruptcy filing on Americans might have been mitigated, Toomey insisted.