| 1) I love the energy of taking a risk disclosure at more than face value (they are clearly speculating and write that because it is free to do so and it covers their asses, not because the SEC “forced” them). Show me the precedent where bankruptcy courts considered depositors as general creditors, since you are so sure that’s what will happen. 2) Will you please please please read the balance sheet. As a favor to me? In it you will see that of Coinbase’s $105bn in liabilities, $101bn of it is owed to depositors. That is offset by $101bn of depositor assets. So even in your worst case scenario, depositors get what, a <4% haircut? I’d love to see the number of FTX depositors who’d take that deal rn… EDIT: Maybe this will help. What’s special about Coinbase isn’t the fact that deposits are a line item on their balance sheet (FTX did the same), it’s that Coinbase actually keeps the assets. So whereas FTX not only lost solvency in its core business, it also lost solvency in deposits, Coinbase can only lose solvency on its core business, which is minuscule relative to the scale of deposits. |
1. The numbers you refer to are from the unaudited quarterly report
2. The last audited numbers are from their annual report, end date Dec 2021, during the tail end of bull market
3. $95 billion of the assets on the balance sheet are crypto assets. This is an unaudited figure, but there is no obligation to hold crypto 1:1 from what was deposited
4. Concentration of credit risk was a significant risk listed. This would apply to non insured funds at banks in excess of $250,000 and they also face risk of Tether or USDC imploding. We do not know the composition of their crypto assets. About 1/3rd of their audited crypto assets are classed as “other”
There’s plenty of room there for saying “I am shocked, shocked that our assets were not redeemable at market value en masse in the flash crash”
We’re talking about a company which has been repeatedly and publicly slapped by the SEC, in an industry full of accounting fraud, in a bear market, and which the markets rate as highly distressed.
Perhaps they risk criminal prosecution for missteps, but there are plenty of examples of that not being sufficient deterrent, of companies trying to dig themselves out of a hole.
You were referring to their unaudited 2022 balance sheet correct? I am not an expert so please tell me if I have missed something