FTX's collapse wiped out $200 billion in the total value of the cryptocurrency market, and it hit retail investors in emerging economies the hardest
- FTX's downfall wiped out $200 billion from crypto's market capitalization last year, a new report revealed.
- Retail investors in emerging economies like India and Thailand were hit the hardest, per the Bank for International Settlements.
Cryptocurrency markets lost $200 billion in value in the wake of FTX's downfall in November, a new report found, but losses weren't the same for investors across the board.
Retail investors in emerging markets were hit the hardest, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), with participants in India, Pakistan, Thailand, Brazil, and Turkey impacted even more. Over 80% of retail participants using a crypto-trading app would have lost money from the market turmoil.
In estimating losses, BIS assumed users invested in bitcoin on the same day they downloaded an app and that each user bought $100 of bitcoin in the first month and in each month after.
"The median investor would have lost $431 by December 2022, corresponding to almost half of their total $900 in funds invested since downloading the app," the report said. "Notably, this share is even higher in several emerging market economies like Brazil, India, Pakistan, Thailand and Turkey. If investors continued to invest at a monthly frequency, over four fifths of users would have lost money."
Although most global crypto investors probably lost money on their investments at some points, retail participants may have taken larger hits because larger investors "tended to sell their coins right before steep price declines, while smaller investors were still buying," the report said. "These patterns highlight the need for better investor protection in the crypto space."
This includes investor losses from the downfall of algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST) in May of 2022 as well. The token, which promised retail investors lofty yields in exchange for parking their assets, caused $450 billion of market value to vanish, per the BIS report.
"Our analysis also suggests that the steep decline in the size of the crypto sector has not had repercussions for the wider financial system so far," the BIS added. "However, if crypto were more intertwined with the real economy and the traditional financial system, the aggregate impact of a shock in the crypto world could have been much larger."