LONDON (Reuters) -Galois Capital hedge fund founder Kevin Zhou said on Monday his flagship fund would close after “losing almost half” of the fund’s money when cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapsed.
Zhou’s statement, released on Twitter, confirmed a report in the Financial Times that the hedge fund had decided to close its main fund and return its money to investors.
FTX, once among the world’s top crypto exchanges, shook the sector in November by filing for bankruptcy, leaving an estimated nine million customers and investors facing billions of dollars in losses.
In his tweet, Zhou also said Galois Capital had lost almost half of its assets “to the FTX disaster”.
Zhou told the fund’s investors, according to the Financial Times report, that the money stuck in FTX was worth around half of the hedge fund’s $200 million in assets.
The newspaper report cited an investor letter which said the hedge fund was no longer viable, had stopped trading and exited its positions.
After rapid gains during the pandemic, the cryptocurrency market plunged in 2022 as rising interest rates and a series of high-profile collapses at crypto firms prompted investors to ditch risky assets.
The value of all cryptocurrencies is around $1.2 trillion, down from a peak of $3 trillion in November 2021, according to market tracker CoinGecko.
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