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by RC_ITR
1304 days ago
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> The tokens didn't suddenly drop in value. May I point you to a chart showing the price of Solana (SBF's preferred token)? Down 80% in four months is a pretty sudden drop in value. To be clear, I think the fraud started then, but that was after the damage had been done. >He has experience as a market maker and remaining delta-neutral Yeah, but market makers in unexpectedly lopsided markets lose all the time. It's the risk that enables them to 'earn' a take rate. |
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FTT $5.9B
SRM $5.4B
SOL $2.2B
MAPS $865M
Found here:
https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/596a07c029687f...
>May I point you to a chart showing the price of Solana (SBF's preferred token)? Down 80% in four months is a pretty sudden drop in value.
FTT, SRM, and MAPS are the garbage tokens they claimed were worth more than they actually were. They each had major drawdowns more than 4 months ago. SOL even had a 60% drawdown by March. None of this was sudden. My point is they knew they were in trouble long before any of the solvency/liquidity issues.
It's thought that their trouble started in May during the Luna/Terra collapse. Alameda's loans were pulled when 3AC blew up. That's when they minted more FTT. SRM also had similar supply increases out of nowhere. They weren't investments as you said. They were tokens they could mint at any time to collateralize new loans.
Maybe they thought the same could be done with SOL? It is known to be highly centralized. There are also known issues with the Solana ecosystem where TVL for layer 2 tokens were double counted, making it seem more valuable.