Two Bitfinex shareholders said they were unconcerned by the New York Attorney Generalâs allegations that the cryptocurrency exchange lost $850 million of client and corporate funds.
Zhao Dong, a Bitfinex shareholder who has tried to reassure the crypto community that the exchange is solvent and operational numerous times in the past, told CoinDesk Friday that he remains âsupportiveâ of both Bitfinex and Tether, the stablecoin issuer with overlapping management and ownership.
Giancarlo Devasini, Bitfinexâs chief financial officer, personally assured Zhao that this is a temporary situation, Zhao said. Indeed, Devasini told him that the exchange âneed[s] a few weeks and the funds will be unfrozen.â
âThe funds were in several banks in Poland, [the] U.S. and Portugal, so Iâm not sure but thatâs what I heard,â Zhao said.
While the New York Attorney Generalâs office says the missing funds belong to both Bitfinexâs corporate accounts as well as its customers, Zhao said the funds belonged entirely to customers, saying:
âWhat the information I have right now is there are no losses, but the funds belong to clients. If the U.S. government seized the funds, they should know, the funds doesnât belong to Bitfinex or Tether, itâs the clientsâ money.â
Zhao spoke a day after the New York Attorney General revealed a court order asking the exchange to preserve and turn over all documentation about the matter, as well as documents outlining how Bitfinex borrowed funds from its sister firm Tether (both are operated by iFinex).
According to the NYAGâs investigative findings, Bitfinex could not access $850 million held by Panama-based Crypto Capital, and had borrowed $700 million from Tetherâs reserves to cover up the shortfall. The news sparked a sell-off in the broader crypto market and a significant shift to alternative stablecoins over the next several hours, indicating trader concern about the two long-controversial companies.
However, when asked if he was concerned about allegations that Bitfinex hid the loss of $850 million, Zhao said he was not.
He cited events from his six years trading on the exchange as the reason for his confidence. âThey did very well [after previous calamities] so I trust them,â Zhao said, referring to a hack in 2016 and the freezing of its funds by Wells Fargo in 2017.
Zhao also argued that Tetherâs model is safer than fractional reserve banking.
âTell me, which bank is 100 percent reserved? Not even Tether is ⦠fully reserved, [but] itâs much, much better than other banks,â he said. âMost banks only have 2-3 percent of reserves, for Tether even the $800 million [that] is lost, even that is [not all of their funds], they have 70 percent reserved.â
Pressed on the amount Tether has in reserves, Zhao added that he believes the company is 100 percent backed, âbut even if theyâre not, theyâre much better than the banks.â
(It should be noted that banks in the U.S. have Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance, covering customersâ funds up to $250,000 each in the event of a bank failure. More than 140 other countries have similar arrangements, according to the International Association of Deposit Insurers.)
Nor is Zhao alone. Tian Jia, another shareholder, told CoinDesk Friday that he maintains his support for Bitfinex, and that heâs heard from all of its executives since the news broke late Thursday.
âTheyâre still there, theyâre trying to solve problems,â he said. (CoinDesk has not received responses to multiple requests for comment from Bitfinex and Tether on the situation.)
That being said, Tian said he did not have any information that Bitfinex has not already made public, such as Bitfinexâs claim in a statement Thursday night that it plans to recover the funds. Unlike Zhao, Tian did not have a timeline for this recovery process.
Tian concluded:
âBecause it is customersâ money, itâs not stolen cryptocurrency, itâs fiat. It canât be stolen. Itâs only frozen by the [regulators], and [Bitfinex is] trying to get it back by approaching Panama and the [U.S. Attorney General]. They have been communicating all along.â
Bitfinex image via Shutterstock