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With the sudden dive in the bitcoin price, here’s how to make sense of the industry-shaking collapse of FTX

Currencies / opinion
With the sudden dive in the bitcoin price, here’s how to make sense of the industry-shaking collapse of FTX
Falling bitcoin
Source: 123rf.com Copyright: jittapon

The crypto industry is known for dramatic twists, roller-coaster prices and fortunes that appear and disappear overnight.

But even by crypto standards, what happened this week was bonkers.

To non-crypto watchers, the news — the collapse of FTX, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges — might sound boring or esoteric, the kind of story you’d happily scroll past on your way to reading about Elon Musk’s latest Twitter tempest.

But within the crypto world, it is already being referred to as the industry’s “Lehman moment” — a reference to the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers, which set off a global financial panic and made it clear to laypeople just how much trouble Wall Street was in.

Indeed, FTX’s fall — including a failed attempt to sell itself to rival crypto exchange Binance — may turn out to be the most gripping crypto narrative of the year, a “Succession”-level drama involving feuding billionaires, rumors of sabotage and high-stakes battles over the future of the industry. It’s a stunning, sudden fall from grace for one of the crypto world’s biggest celebrities. And it signals that the industry, already reeling from a brutal year of losses, may be in for even tougher times.

Making sense of this deal, though, requires knowing some of the complicated back story that got us here. Here’s a rough outline:

  • There are two exchanges where a majority of cryptocurrency trading around the world happens: Binance and FTX.
  • Binance, the bigger of the two exchanges, is run by Chinese-born billionaire Changpeng Zhao, who is known in crypto circles as C.Z. Binance’s operations are somewhat murky — it has no official headquarters, and it has tangled with authorities and regulators in many countries where it operates — but it has been extremely successful, and currently controls roughly half of the cryptocurrency exchange market.
  •  FTX, which has its headquarters in the Bahamas, is run by Sam Bankman-Fried, a 30-year-old American billionaire and major Democratic donor. It had a valuation of $32 billion as of its last fundraising round. FTX is also better-known than Binance in the United States, partly because it has spent millions of dollars on Super Bowl ads, naming rights for sports stadiums (the Miami Heat play at FTX Arena) and throwing fancy conferences where celebrities such as Bill Clinton and Tom Brady show up.
  •  FTX is also regarded (or was, until this week) as one of crypto’s “blue chip” companies — the kind of stable, well-capitalized businesses that survived even when the rest of the crypto market was in free fall. In fact, it spent much of this year bailing out <em>other</em> crypto firms, and was generally regarded by investors as a responsible, grown-up firm that didn’t engage in risky, speculative trading or gamble with customers’ funds.
  •  Bankman-Fried, known as S.B.F., has become very famous as a result of FTX’s success — a sort of poster boy for the entire crypto industry. He is a quirky, unpretentious nerd who wears cargo shorts and sports frizzy, unkempt hair, and he has been cultivating a reputation as the law-abiding crypto mogul. (On a recent cover, Fortune magazine called him “the next Warren Buffett.”)
  • Zhao, on the other hand, is known as something of a renegade. He has resisted calls for more crypto regulation, and Binance has been banned in several countries for operating without proper licenses. (Under pressure from regulators, Binance blocked U.S. users from its main platform in 2019 and set up Binance.us, a separate exchange that was meant to operate legally in America.)
  • This year, as the industry came under scrutiny in Washington, Bankman-Fried and FTX began lobbying on Capitol Hill, spending millions to win over skeptical lawmakers and get crypto-friendly regulations put into place. These lobbying efforts have been divisive. Some crypto fans supported FTX’s push for more regulation, but others accused Bankman-Fried of trying to throw the rest of the crypto industry under the bus by pushing for laws that would hurt competitors but leave FTX’s business intact.
  • Zhao was among those who objected to FTX’s lobbying push. “We won’t support people who lobby against other industry players behind their backs,” he wrote on Twitter. He and Bankman-Fried had once been friendly — Binance was an early investor in FTX, and received a large number of FTT tokens, the native cryptocurrency token of FTX’s exchange, when it sold its stake in the company last year. But the two billionaires drifted apart as their companies’ goals diverged. And now, they are officially feuding over the lobbying efforts.
  • Last week, the crypto news outlet CoinDesk reported on a leaked document that claimed Bankman-Fried’s crypto hedge fund, Alameda Research, had unusually large holdings of FTT tokens. The report suggested that FTX and Alameda, which were nominally separate businesses, were in fact closely related. (Some crypto watchers have speculated that Zhao and Binance may have leaked the document in order to sow doubts about FTX’s stability, but Binance has denied this.)
  • After the report, Zhao announced that Binance would sell its entire stake of FTT tokens — worth about $500 million — because of “recent revelations” about Alameda and FTX. The announcement caused FTT’s value to plummet.
  • Fearful of losing their money, investors pulled more than $6 billion out of FTX’s exchange over a three-day period, leaving the firm scrambling for cash to cover its obligations. Bankman-Fried tried to reassure investors, tweeting that “FTX is fine” and that “a competitor is trying to go after us with false rumors.” But the panic continued, and after unsuccessfully trying to arrange a bailout from private investors, Bankman-Fried announced Tuesday that he would sell his firm (except for the U.S.-regulated part, known as FTX.us) to Zhao and Binance.
  • On Wednesday, Binance changed its mind and announced that it would walk away from the deal, saying that after examining the company’s books, it decided that FTX’s “issues are beyond our control or ability to help.”

All of this played out in real time on Twitter, where Zhao and Bankman-Fried are active. (And where Zhao, as of last week, is a part owner — Binance invested about $500 million in Elon Musk’s takeover of the company.)

As crypto Twitter reeled from the news of FTX’s collapse, FTX’s employees and investors tried to make sense of what had happened. Bankman-Fried, in a letter to investors, apologized for not taking better precautions.

“I’m sorry I didn’t do better,” he wrote.

Zhao, on the other hand, appeared to revel in the conquest of his biggest rival, tweeting out lessons like “Never use a token you created as collateral.”

The sudden collapse of FTX raises lots of questions about crypto’s future.

First, what will happen to FTX’s customers and their money? Unlike deposits in a traditional bank account, deposits on crypto exchanges aren’t insured by the government, and there are questions about whether FTX has enough assets to make its remaining customers whole. If the company files for bankruptcy protection, as the crypto firms Voyager Digital and Celsius Network did this year, investors could be left to fight for their money — or what remains of it — through the courts.

Second, is crypto’s regulatory future in jeopardy? FTX, after all, was one of only a handful of U.S. crypto firms that had invested heavily in lobbying, and Bankman-Fried was seen as a “white knight” who stood the best chance of persuading skeptical lawmakers of crypto’s value. Now, it appears that those efforts have stalled, at best — and that regulators who want to portray crypto as an out-of-control Wild West will have one more example to point to. Katherine Wu, a crypto investor, tweeted Tuesday that it was a “truly sickening news day- can’t even begin to assess the potential damage our industry will have to face.”

Third, will FTX’s collapse set off a broader market failure, as the collapse of Lehman Brothers did in 2008?

Already, the news has rippled out into the rest of the crypto market. Bitcoin and Ether prices both fell Tuesday, and the price of Solana (a cryptocurrency that FTX has supported) fell about 20%. Shares in publicly traded crypto companies, such as Coinbase, were down as well. FTX’s investors, which included Sequoia Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners and SoftBank, will most likely lose most or all of their investments. And given how interwoven FTX was with the rest of the crypto economy, it may be a while before we know the full extent of the damage.

The hope, of course, is that in contrast to 2008, when Wall Street’s collapse cascaded into a global financial crisis that led to millions of Americans losing their jobs and homes, the fallout from FTX’s collapse will stay mostly contained to the crypto industry. But it’s still too early to tell.

And lastly, what will become of Bankman-Fried? Until this week, he was the undisputed king of crypto — and an increasingly powerful force in American politics, thanks to his big donations to Democratic candidates and causes. His fortune, which was estimated at more than $15 billion before the Binance sale, has propped up philanthropies (he is a major donor to the effective altruism movement), media organizations (he is an investor in Semafor) and companies both inside and outside crypto (he is a major shareholder in Robinhood, the stock-trading app).

Bankman-Fried’s days as a crypto mogul may be over. (On Tuesday, Bloomberg estimated that his net worth had fallen 94% and that he was no longer a billionaire.) But the bigger question, for crypto investors, is whether his empire was unusually wobbly, or whether it was just the first to fall.


This article originally appeared in The New York Times and is here with permission.

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60 Comments

I wonder if that's where my 50 bucks got to?

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6

On sale baby! What's inflation going to do to your NZ Pesos over the next 5 years?

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Very well when bench marked to housing.

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6

Very well when bench marked to housing.

Not sure to what extent is the supply of NZD introduced into the economy through the housing ponzi, but it will be substantial. 

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Good article, very informative.

By comparison, perhaps Adrian Orr is not as bad as some here would have you think, after all.

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8

Wierd, I've never even heard of FTX until today.

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16

Its going tits up after all, I just predicted the wrong Christmas.

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4

The day people learn to separate bitcoin from everything else "crypto" will be most monumental.

While Bankman-Fried should be sent to prison, bitcoin will continue doing it's thing.

Tick tock, next block. 

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6

Bitcoin certainly is the Semper Augustus of crypto.

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14

Oh haha, a tulip joke. Nice one bro. 

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... at least  , if it all goes tits up , you can eat a tulip bulb ...

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Agreed

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Funny we're writing about this after Bitcoin is down -70% from it's peak last year in November 2021. and this last drop is somewhat meaningless in comparison at a meagre additional 6%, but hey... whatever...

Seeing parabolic charts should always be red flags to anybody with any sense, but greed is a very powerful thing

I was getting worried last year when novice investor co-workers who know zero about crypto were wanting to get into it based purely on the fact it was going up. Their likely regretting it now - hopefully they didn't lose too much or listen to the broker who says it'll come back and hold onto it....

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4

Funds are no longer safu

(I really hope somebody else gets the reference). 

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Look we are not all dumbies!  safu = safe in a Japanese accent.

Ask a hard one next time.

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... how does having a Japanese accent make one safe ?

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bitecoin

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.... buttcoin ...

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Price action implies that some market-making businesses got carried out on a stretcher yesterday.

https://www.ft.com/content/54e76900-c5fb-485b-93b5-ea1436239e94

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ROI on dollar cost averaging montlhy ($1, $5, $100, $1000....any amount)  into Bitcoin in NZD (as of today):

Past 12 months: +10%

Past 2 Years: +7%

Past 3 Years: +131%

Past 4 Years: +249%

Past 5 Years: +298%

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3

there's a Fibonacci sequence in there somewhere

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5

Looking at the BTCNZD chart over the past 12 months I find the 12 month figure impossible to believe. Half the time you'd have been buying north of 50k. And we're at a 12 month low. There's just no way.

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16

That's the magic of cryptomania. If you don't get the returns you think you're entitled to based on hundreds of hours of reading Bitcoin blogs, you simply apply dollar cost averaging, use linear regression techniques, tilt the graph sideways, and squint just hard enough until you see numbers which make you feel like the tech-savvy investor you're sure you were born to be.

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22

That's the magic of cryptomania. If you don't get the returns you think you're entitled to based on hundreds of hours of reading Bitcoin blogs, you simply apply dollar cost averaging, use linear regression techniques, tilt the graph sideways, and squint just hard enough until you see numbers which make you feel like the tech-savvy investor you're sure you were born to be.

Or more simply, look at Current Price x Total Amount Purchased - Total Amount Purchased x Average Price Paid. That's what I do. 

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Even simpler: current value of portfolio minus funds invested.

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I’ve put in $20k and portfolio is now $6k. That’s a 9% gain right? Right? DCA, FTX, BTC, hY3, C$/. You guys wouldn’t understand. 

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few understand

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How is a gain by holding bitcoin over the last 12 months possible?

It went from 90k to 27k in the last year in NZD, and it is at the lowest price right now.

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Agree with you. I reckon the DCA calculator is nonsense for past 12-month period (and quite possibly other time periods). Did another calculation adjusted for exchange rates and loss is -25%. 

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https://dcabtc.com/ has 12 months at -5.21% 

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https://dcabtc.com/ has 12 months at -5.21% 

Yep, and adjusted for exchange rate. But I'm quite suspicious of this calculator. And I'm going to take it back. 

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I calculate a loss of about 50% in NZD for the last 12 months if you invested monthly and cashed out today.

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You have a data source? I think that's a stretch considering DCA'ing in USD is approx - 42% (https://www.dca-cc.com/)

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This one says -41% for 1yr , and -48% for 2yr.

3 year is about breakeven.

https://uphold.com/get-started/dollar-cost-averaging-calculator

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Cheers. Looks to the best source by far. BTC looks garbage in NZD as an inflation hedge using a fixed sum, monthly DCA strategy compared to gold (not DCA).

Past 12 months - +11%

Past 2 years - +9%

Past 3 years - +  24%

Past 4 years - +60%

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I manually calculated it from google bitcoin price chart. Excel. Calculate the average of the last 12 months price on the 10th of each month, then compare that with todays price.

Bitcoin has gone up in price since I calculated it earlier, it is now sitting slightly better with a loss of 47.4% of value for 12 months investment.

Just out of interest, calculating the two year ROI it is sitting slightly worse at 50.2% loss for a monthly investment period. Makes sense as 2021 had the twin peaks.

Let me see how far back to break even then...

3 years is 35.9% loss.

4 years is a loss of 18.4%

5 years is a loss of 6.3%.

I give up. That is a long time to be DCA'ing and still make a loss.

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Seriously, how did you calculate the 12 month ROI figure? Am I missing something?

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Bitcoin Price 10.11.2021 - NZD 91,939
Bitcoin Price 10.11.2022 - NZD 28,413

Can you explain how this is a 10% ROI? It's more closer to a 10% Remaining on Investment (ROI)

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After more than 13 years of cheap credit, economics is turning back to the basic: Value

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Remember when businesses were valued based on their ability to produce consistent net returns?

Wonder what percentage of jobs are directly tied to loss making but debt serviced businesses.

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Those Crypto kings feeling rich will now need to get a job.

And that is only going to make inflation worse.

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It'll certainly affect the productivity stats.

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Nah all they have to do is get a book ghost written and sell the movie rights.

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A replacement for gold they cried.... Not likely, not ever. Will be worth nothing in the next 12 months, and all that global warming energy consumed in mining wil have been for nought. Every oz of gold mined still exists and 99.99% is still on earth, largely in central banks.

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Actually no central banks not the big holders see here    https://www.visualcapitalist.com/sp/chart-how-much-gold-is-in-the-world/

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No doubt the cumulative weight of wedding rings an trinkets outweighs central bank holdihgs. But that is not financial strategic ownership. 

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Can someone enlighten me. I am still confused about how this played out.

My simple understanding is, FTX is an exchange. i.e. you traded and held crypto through them.

So I understand you never actually held the crypto you were buying, but surely if you bought BTC through them, they should hold some BTC? if not what were you actually buying?

Is this not the very definition of a Ponzi?

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What worries me is that Bitcoin has a "Value" in USD but does that total amount of USD actually exist to back it ? I doubt it, enough USD exists for day to day transactions but if everyone tried to exit the price would plunge because the money simply doesn't exist to pay out. Its the greatest Ponzi ever created, absolutely brilliant because the best Ponzi ever is when the punters cannot see its a Ponzi.

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The amount of USD available isn't really relevant.

It's just that for anyone to exit, someone else has to enter. You can't sell a BTC unless someone else buys it.

The mechanism for making sure there are just as many buyers as sellers is the price.

Just like any asset, if there are no buyers at any price the value is 0.

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Not being a crypto trader I could be way off the mark here, but let me hazard a guess as to how it works

  • You deposit some money with FTX. The second that money hits their account, they run off and do something with it (invest it, pay wages, buy cryptos, etc), however your FTX balance shows you still have that money sitting there waiting to be spent.
  • You decide the time is right to buy some BTC. You make the transaction on their exchange, and your FTX account suddenly shows (say) $0 and 1 BTC, however no BTC has been bought or sold at this point. Your FTX account has simply been updated to show the results of the transaction.
  • Now you decide you want the BTC in your wallet, so your transfer it from the exchange. FTX goes out and buys 1 BTC (or takes one they already own), and transfers it to your wallet.
  • Alternatively, you decide you want to cash out. You sell the BTC, your FTX account is updated with the spot price, and they pay the sum back into your fiat bank account out of their own coffers.

Obviously there are some major risks here (what happens when everybody wants to cash out all at once?), but in FTX's case, there were a couple of additional complicating factors:

  • They were making bad investments with customer money (apparently handing it over to one of the CEO's other companies, among other things)
  • They were heavily exposed to a form of crypto which FTX created themselves (FTT), and which their biggest competitor (Binance) happened to hold a lot of

So they were basically in trouble to start with, but then Binance dumped all their FTT, sending the price plummeting and leaving FTX with insufficient equity with which to meet their obligations. That's bankruptcy by definition, and anyone who thought they had crypto or fiat with FTX is going to be pretty disappointed when they find out they don't

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I have an FTX account that I've never used. From memory, I could only fund it with fiat currency via credit card payment, stablecoins, or existing crypto like BTC. 

On my cold wallet, I could buy and sell via FTX without my coins ever leaving cold storage. That was a pretty cool feature if you ask me. Obviously, no good now. 

https://www.ledger.com/swap-ftx

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Cheers Chebbo- makes perfect sense to me.

What I don’t understand is how Binance expect to survive after effectively killing their main competitor by dumping their   FTT?

Surely Binance takes a massive hit on the sale and threatens their own future by the creating a massive panic in the market?

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2

Once you buy your Bitcoin through a exchange you download to to a cold wallet - never leave it on the exchange. FTX started loaning out client funds...and got simply got caught out.

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I suspect a BTC profit in the last 12 months is still possible but only  if you were running half a dozen mining rigs hooked up to the public library next door...(privatize profits and socialize losses like a true capitalist)...so clearly it is possible that some folk are profiting even in the downturn ... cheap or free electricity is required...I would never consider buying Bitcoin. Seems to me the time to jump on any Crypto is when its launching (Bitcoin never broke 40 cents  for a while 2010). Think of how much todays smashed down value compares to 2010? In many ways they are ponzi like...if your on top (got in early) of the pyramid your riding high even when its getting smashed. So if a new crypto comes out and some celebrity or economic wizard starts touting it....my guess is theyve got in low bigtime and are waiting for their followers to jump in so they can skim the cream , alternatively rumours about larger financial institutions are floated with the expectation of driving the price up , when its really about skimming the cream... Sound familiar?

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Seems to me the time to jump on any Crypto is when it's launching ... 

If you see a bandwagon, it's too late.

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Dp

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We were here with Mt. Gox, we’ll be here again. The free market works and I’d rather be part of that than the alternative.

The whole idea behind Bitcoin is self custody and had it been my exchange I’d have lost $200 in my spot account but the $1000’s in my hardware wallet would be just fine. When I take responsibility for my own finances I don’t need the nanny state to save me when things turn ugly. 

I worry about the perception this creates in the general population and I’m sorry for the people who have been burnt but there is a reason for the crypto adage ‘not your keys, not your crypto’.

I will will be taking advantage of the fire sale when I feel the bottom is in. 
 

 

 

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Bitcoin will prevail.

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Bitcoin is dead! Run for the hills! Shitcoin casinos are blowing up left and right!  

I'll be back in a few years time to remind yall that you should be buying this very cheap Bitcoin. 

Less than 2m available on exchanges....https://www.coinglass.com/Balance

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