In the chaotic aftermath of crypto exchange FTX's unraveling last November, the industry was in disarray. Prices were tumbling, investors were frantically trying to limit their exposure to the sunken platform, and startup funding was evaporating.
Then Changpeng "CZ" Zhao, billionaire founder of Binance and lone surviving titan of crypto after Sam BankmanFried's swift fall, stepped in.
Zhao's plan: to pull together some of the industry's biggest names and raise at least $1 billion to finance promising startups which, due to forces outside their own control, were strapped for cash. Time was of the essence. "The industry needs saving now, not in 2023," Zhao said in a 24 November Bloomberg Television interview.
Not much has come of Zhao's grand plan to rescue crypto. The Industry Recovery Initiative (IRI), as it was called, has deployed less than $30 million since its inception, a Bloomberg News analysis of public digital-asset wallets linked to the project indicates. Only one of nine named participants has invested all the funds it committed. The cryptoasset sector, meanwhile, remains starved for cash and companies are cutting jobs to stay afloat.
The quiet unwinding of the IRI is a stark reminder of crypto's penchant for making bold promises it doesn't always deliver on. It also echoes the much-diminished stature of Binance, which is facing lawsuits from two major US regulators, and of founders like Zhao, who once crisscrossed the world in private jets and mingled with heads of state and celebrities. Bankman-Fried, who just months before FTX's implosion had embarked on an industry bailout of his own, is now on trial on fraud charges in New York.
"It's a matter of accountability, and there wasn't much of that for this recovery fund," said Clara Medalie, director of research at blockchain analytics firm Kaiko.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
A counterintuitive view on education
A book about Shomie Das, principal of three posh schools, serves as a rich distillation of his thoughts on education
The loss of sound in our noisy lives
Sound memory fades faster than visual memory. In a world as rapidly changing as ours, a museum of endangered sounds makes sense
A whole new League
When Arcane first dropped on Netflix, it didn't just break the mold for animated television—it shattered it into shiny fragments, each as intricate as the show's hand-painted aesthetic.
When pets get cancer
Advances in veterinary sciences have enabled several treatments, but early detection can make all the difference
Reduction of energy costs in the telecom sector
With telecom infrastructure companies looking for newer ways to cut back on energy costs, battery restoration technology provides telecom infrastructure firms with a viable, economical and green solution for uninterrupted power supply
Skip cheese and sip wine in Switzerland
Beyond chocolates and cheese, there's another Swiss gem to discover — vineyards that have been passed down through the generations
Bankers aren't always frank about bank regulation
The 'world's banker' Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, speaks his mind even if it means taking swipes at US regulators.
Baku: A climate breakthrough looks depressingly bleak today
The success of fossil fuel-favouring politics threatens the planet
Global solidarity levies can play a vital role in our climate efforts
Solidarity taxes could support redistributive measures and optimize how we collectively tackle a great challenge of our times
Speak for the Earth: It's the least we should do
This year's Booker prize winner turns our gaze to the planet from orbit and reminds us of the climate disaster that looms. Can odes sung to Earth move the world to act in its defence?