I did. The "crypto" I hold is USDC which is a stablecoin. The Stablecoin is backed and fully collagenized by US Dollars so the coin always equals a dollar. And that peg has remained. My asset value is still the same.Realist wrote: ↑20 Jul 2022 17:40As an older guy I have never understood the crypto thing. Never heard of Celsius. Keep it simple gentleman.go pak go wrote: ↑19 Jul 2022 20:11lol. rewards.
All the "rewards" I have been paid are in Celsius. It was a joke when they continued "paying rewards" to us when our accounts were locked.
Celsius communicated that all their loans were fully collateralized. They flat out lied. And they fooled a lot people. Not just retail dummies but sophisticated money managers, pension funds, etc.
I had my house remodel fund in there. I guess no more bathroom and kitchen now.
The Celsius platform is a lending site where depositors would give Celsius the funds and they then would lend out those funds to pay the depositor interest. Celsius always stated all of their loans were fully collateralized and the company always had enough liquid assets to pay for any "bank run". They stated they had far more collateral than a traditional bank implying they were "safer" than a bank.
So the idea was Celsius would take my funds, pay me 6% and then lend out the crypto for short term loans to customers at 8% to 12% and Celsius keeps the margin. Somewhat a similar model to social lending platforms.
What we are finding out now is Celsius lied. This isn't the first time this has happened in the financial world. Enron did it. Lehman Brothers did it. Now these Crypto institutions are doing it.
The media is portraying that customers who deposited here were earning 17% and therefore implying that the customers are stupid and deserve to be hosed which is incredibly far from the truth. Customers were making nominal returns just trying to keep up with inflation and a diversification from placing assets into an equity fund because bonds have sucked for the last 15 years.
What really sucks about all of this is my asset's value is in tact. My asset value is the same. It's just that the institution I hold the asset in has filed for bankruptcy because of horrible mismanagement, perhaps even fraud. At one point they had 12 billion in assets comprised of individuals and large sophisticated investors.
I absolutely will take this as a learning lesson, but I also get frustrated when people point and laugh at victims like this saying they should have known better. The last time this "happened" on a large scale the victims got bailed out by the government. This type of thing could happen to anyone.