Coinbase Up 14% on Claiming No Exposure to Bankrupt Celsius, Voyager

2022/07/22By:

In Brief

  • Coinbase said in a blog post that it had “no financing exposure” to bankruptcrypto companies Celsius Network, Voyager Digital and Three Arrows Capital.
  • The company did, however, make a “non-material” investment in Terraform Labs, the Singapore-based companybehind crashed stablecoin project Terra.
  • Coinbase Shares jumped 14% on Wednesday.

 

Coinbase said it had no counterparty lending exposure to several bankrupt crypto companies, seeking to mitigate fears about the impact of the industry’s liquidity crisis on its business.

 

Coinbase “had no financing exposure” to Celsius Network, Voyager Digital and Three Arrows Capital, the company clarified in a blog post Wednesday. All three companies filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after a plunge in crypto token prices triggered a cascade of liquidations of highly leveraged positions.

 

Shares of the company closed up more than 14% on Wednesday.

 

“Many of these firms were overleveraged with short-term liabilities mismatched against longer duration illiquid assets,” the company said.

 

“We have not engaged in these types of risky lending practices and instead have focused on building our financing business with prudence and deliberate focus on the client,” it added.

 

While Coinbase denied any credit exposure to Celsius, 3AC and Voyager, it says it did make “non-material investments” in Terraform Labs, the Singapore-based company behind failed stablecoin project Terra, through its venture capital business.

 

The update is an attempt by Coinbase to reassure investors it won’t suffer the same fate as some of its peers. The company’s stock has plunged roughly 70% since the start of 2022, as interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve shook investors in both crypto and stocks.

 

The crypto market has been in a state of disarray ever since the demise of Terra, a so-called “algorithmic” stablecoin that tried to maintain a $1 value using code. This led to liquidity issues at Celsius and 3AC, two companies that made risky crypto gambles using borrowed funds.

 

As cryptocurrencies started falling this year, investors wanted to take their funds out of firms like Celsius and 3AC. But a drop in the value of the assets held by such companies meant they were unable to process those redemption requests. As a result, Celsius, Voyager and others halted withdrawals before eventually filing for bankruptcy protection.

 

Bitcoin climbed above the $24,000 mark Wednesday, for the first time in over a month, alongside a broad recovery in crypto prices. The world’s top digital coin is still down roughly 50% year to date.

 

Investors are hoping the Federal Reserve won’t be as aggressive as feared with an expected interest rates hike next week.

 

Central banks are racing to contain runaway inflation with tighter monetary policy, but this has spooked stocks and other risky assets (including cryptocurrencies) that benefited from the massive stimulus during the Covid-19 pandemic.

 

Read More:

What Is Liquidity in Crypto?

Celsius Bankruptcy: A Timeline of the Crypto Lender’s Crash

5 Best Crypto Apps For Cryptocurrency Trading In July 2022

3 Top Trending Altcoins of July 2022: ETH, AVAX And MATIC

XRP Price Prediction: 2022-2030, Ripple vs. SEC Lawsuit Entangles

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