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  4. The crypto winter has investors gearing up for court dates to recoup their losses, while the layoffs continue

The crypto winter has investors gearing up for court dates to recoup their losses, while the layoffs continue

Aaron Weinman   

The crypto winter has investors gearing up for court dates to recoup their losses, while the layoffs continue

Hi. I'm Aaron Weinman. Winter is well and truly here for the crypto space. Fintechs like Coinbase and Block have got nervous earnings coming and Wall Street is $4.

Before we get into that, just a kind reminder that it's the last call for nominations for Insider's 2022 class of Wall Street rising stars. $4.

Also, there is breaking news from London this morning after the $4 for the first time since 1995.


If this was forwarded to you, sign up here>$4. Download Insider's app here>$4.


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1. August might be hot in New York City, but it's been a winter storm for crypto. The month is barely four days old, but already, the US Securities and Exchange Commission is clamping down on $4 and Wall Street has $4 like Coinbase and Block.

Coinbase, which reports second-quarter earnings on Aug. 9, has lost more than three quarters of its market cap (around $18 billion on Wednesday) this year, while Block has shed in excess of half its value (Approximately $50 billion on Wednesday). Block reports earnings today.

To rub salt in crypto wounds, the startup Nomad on Tuesday lost almost $200 million after hackers $4 in the blockchain-transfer platform's security defenses. The hackers were able to let users enter any value into the system and siphon off the funds, even if Nomad lacked the necessary assets in its deposit base.

At the heart of the matter, however, is that popular cryptocurrencies have spiraled this year. Bitcoin, for example, has nearly halved in value.

Companies — from $4 — flew $4 by hiring, and $4, thousands. Robinhood, the pandemic darling that got everyone from the Bodega attendant to seasoned Wall Streeters playing the stock market, $4 the crypto freefall for its $4.

Investors, burned by big losses, are now gearing up for court battles. Over 200 cases have been filed, some settled in the million-dollar range, some investors lost, and others are still going. Insider's Jack Newsham spoke to lawyers and investigators about what investors are doing $4.


In other news:

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2. Angelo Gordon investors just learned of a rape claim against a former executive. The chief executive of a California pension fund said the litigation "raises concerns" and that the fund is "$4."

3. Disgruntled lenders are fuming at the marketing process of a loan marketed by Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan, Bloomberg reported. The first-lien lenders to a loan for Avaya have hired law firm Akin Gump to examine legal options over what they viewed as inadequate disclosures $4.

4. Carlyle has amassed a portfolio of 130 Brooklyn apartments. Carlyle's investment is the latest example of how cashed-up investment firms are becoming corporate landlords and replacing traditional $4.

5. Staying on real estate, mortgage rates will fall back to Earth after an unprecedented climb. The dip in rates should make homes more affordable, $4.

6. Healthcare startup Calibrate's chief executive used a Zoom call to cull staff. Minutes later, the employees' company laptops were $4.

7. Adtech firm Criteo completed the acquisition of rival Iponweb at a revised price. The deal had been jeopardized because much of Iponweb's team is based in Russia. The revised deal valued the target at $250 million, plus a $4.

8. New York City's comptroller has chided BlackRock over its fossil fuel holdings, according to this report from Gothamist. Brad Lander and national climate activists are calling on the asset manager to stop investing in the $4.

9. Here are five little-known stocks that one of Germany's foremost portfolio managers is betting on now. Andreas Strobl is a senior PM at Berenberg Bank and his job is to unearth successful, little-known firms to invest in. He shared his insights, and stocks to avoid, $4.

10. Goldman Sachs and Thoma Bravo just helped an artificial-intelligence startup raise $90 million. Here's a look at the pitch deck that Aisera used $4. Thoma Bravo, meanwhile, just agreed to buy ID company Ping Identity $4.


Done deals:

  • Alternative asset manager Balbec Capital has raised over $1.5 billion for its fifth, and largest, flagship fund to date. The fundraise also includes a $100 million expandable co-investment vehicle.
  • Brightwood Capital has provided a term loan to the Yardbird Group, a Miami-based restaurant company. Proceeds will come from Brightwood's third fund and Yardbird will use the money to enhance its existing operations.

Curated by Aaron Weinman in New York. Tips? Email aweinman@insider.com or tweet @aaronw11>$4. Edited by Hallam Bullock (tweet @hallam_bullock>$4) in London.



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