Last night, billionaire investor Mark Cuban said he was “hit” by the sudden collapse of a cryptocurrency called TITAN; the token shed nearly 100% of its value over the course of a few hours.
Now, after losing what he’s characterized as a “small” percentage of his portfolio, he’s calling for increased regulation around stablecoinsstablecoins—a subgroup of cryptocurrencies meant to hold a “stable” value tied to a particular fiat currency.
Titan was part of Iron Finance, a kind of investment project under the heading of DeFiDeFi, or “decentralized finance.” These are programs that manage your crypto entirely through code, without the need for mediators like banks or investment managers.
But one of the nice things about banks is that they’re subject to consumer protection laws, which disincentivize bad actors—no such regulations exist for DeFi.
Initially, the collapse of TITAN was thought to be the result of a potential "rug pull," a type of exit scam common in DeFi in which anonymous developers run off with users' funds. "Live and learn," Cuban told Decrypt at the time.
Iron Finance has since published a post mortem of last night's events that claims a "bank run" on its protocol was to blame: "We never thought it would happen, but it just did. We just experienced the world’s first large-scale crypto bank run," the post reads.
Whatever the cause, it resulted in money being drained from an investment program around Iron Finance’s stablecoin, IRON, and the price of TITAN plummeting from $65 to $0.00000003.
The bottom has fallen out of TITAN, part of a "multi-chain partial-collateralized algorithmic stablecoin ecosystem" from Iron Finance. And billionaire DeFi investor Mark Cuban's wallet balance may have fallen with it.
The price of $TITAN fell to zero, prompting Iron Finance to call for all holders to withdraw liquidity from the pools after being hit by what it called a "bank run." Decrypt has reached out to Iron Finance for comment.
Cuban was one of those liquidity providers on QuickSwap, a dec...
“In any new industry, there are risks I take on with the goal of not just trying to make money but also to learn,” Cuban wrote in an email to Bloomberg.
“There should be regulation to define what a stable coin is and what collateralization is acceptable. Should we require $1 in us currency for every dollar or define acceptable collateralization options, like us treasuries or? [sic]”
Last week, Cuban wrote a nearly 3,000-word blog post about his involvement with TITAN and Iron Finance titled "The Brilliance of Yield Farming, Liquidity Providing and Valuing Crypto Projects."
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