Can crypto markets really get any worse? Industry experts say yes – and break down 3 worst-case scenarios for 2023

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Last year was brutal for crypto markets, with the fallout of FTX, Celsius, and Three Arrows Capital. “Centralized lending and earn products are going the way of the dodo,” one exec said.  Experts shared their 2023 outlooks and explained how things may get worse before they get better. Loading Something is loading.

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Cryptocurrency markets took a major beating in 2022, with the downfall of industry giants like digital asset exchange FTX, algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD, and now-defunct fund hedge fund Three Arrows Capital.

The industry’s market cap is off more than 65% from record highs in November of 2021, according to data from Messari, with bitcoin and ethereum down over 60% year-to-date. 

Many are asking themselves: Can it get any worse?

For context, the sector saw an 18-month long bear market, dubbed “crypto winter,” from 2018 through 2019. 

“Contagion takes a long time to fully play out and we expect that there are still some dominoes to fall in 2023. With that said, we are already seeing a renewed commitment to building better, more trustworthy solutions in the space and expect that trend to be a core theme of 2023,” Phil Wirtjes, Head of Strategy at digital asset trading platform Enclave Markets, told Insider.

What’s the next shoe to drop this year?All eyes are on Digital Currency Group, the conglomerate that oversees heavyweights like asset manager Grayscale and crypto brokerage Genesis.

Genesis is under fire after its lending arm halted withdrawals in November. The firm had exposure to Sam Bankman-Fried’s collapsed exchange, with $175 million stuck on an FTX trading platform. Genesis says customers rushed to withdraw funds after FTX filed bankruptcy, which led to a severe liquidity crunch.

“The impending downfall of Genesis has been a topic of concern for some time, as the majority of its assets are owned by US hedge funds and the market has already adjusted for this news,” Andrei Grachev, the Managing Partner at digital asset market maker DWF Labs, told Insider.

He added: “While the collapse may not have a major impact on the industry as a whole, it marks the end of an era as DCG, long feared to be the final domino to fall, will finally succumb.”

Genesis slashed 30% of its staff on Thursday, a company spokesperson told Insider, with the sales and business- development teams being most impacted by the cuts. Gemini, the cryptocurrency exchange that lent Genesis funds for its interest-bearing product, is trying to recoup $900 million of customer money from the embattled firm. 

There could be majors losses and liquidations throughout the industry if a large firm like Genesis or its parent company DCG were to file for bankruptcy.

“Lawsuits and bankruptcies will continue for many years. Even today, the coins from the bankruptcy of Mt.Gox from 2014 are awaiting distribution,” Tegan Kline, CBO and co-founder of software developer Edge & Node, told Insider. “The biggest unresolved situation right now is the situation with DCG, Genesis, and Grayscale and we are waiting to see what happens there.”

FTX contagion could lead to more bankruptcies and lawsuits this year as well.

Fedor Muegge, partner at blockchain venture firm 369 Capital, told Insider that the industry hasn’t seen the FTX or Terra and Luna implosions fully play out yet.

“We haven’t even started to really unravel FTX and its network of companies. Further work on this and investigations in other recent events such as the Terra-Case, could lead to more lawsuits,” Muegge said.

He added: “In addition to that, a lot of smaller players will run out of liquidity during this prolonged bear market which will eventually lead to more bankruptcies. ”

“It’s possible with major market shock(s), crypto can go even lower than Luna/UST/3AC and FTX times, to $12-13K Bitcoin and $8-900 Ether,” Youwei Yang, Chief Economist at crypto mining company BTCM, told Insider, citing a potential harsh macro condition, restrictive regulatory environment, or DCG bankruptcy.

Expect a pullback on double-digit interest yield offerings from centralized firms, because if there’s anything that we’ve learned from crypto in 2022, it’s that if it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is.

Centralized lender Celsius offered customers nearly 20% annual percentage yields for deposits. The firm later filed for bankruptcy after a liquidity crisis in July. 

“Centralized lending and earn products are going the way of the dodo,” Tegan Kline, CBO and cofounder of software developer Edge & Node, told Insider. “You can still earn attractive yields using web3 protocols and dapps, specifically in DeFi.”

As a result, investors may turn towards decentralized finance, or DeFi protocols like Aave and Compound, or decentralized exchanges like Uniswap.

“There are many protocols that offer yield from staking to securing the network as with ethereum or DeFi protocols that have come out of the crisis in crypto lending with flying colors,” Kline added.


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