Billion-Dollar Fund Sold Bitcoin and These Altcoins in Its Basket! - Coinleaks
Current Date:September 21, 2024

Billion-Dollar Fund Sold Bitcoin and These Altcoins in Its Basket!

Tiger Global, a large hedge fund company, came to the fore when it was affected by the decline in the stock market. However, it turned out that the company covered its 44 percent loss in the first four months of 2022 by selling its Bitcoin and altcoin investments. Here are the details…

Tiger Global sold Bitcoin, ETH and FIL

As we have previously reported as Cryptokoin.com , its assets are stocks and risk Divided roughly 50-50 among its capital games, Tiger has started actively trading cryptocurrencies in recent months. However, according to anonymous sources at Blockworks, positions created in Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) as well as the DeFi protocol Filecoin (FIL) were broken.

These cryptocurrency games are designed to complement the New York firm’s longstanding and generally successful private blockchain ventures. It seems the firm quickly made profits from liquid trades, then cashed it out – just before the markets plunged to several-year lows, incidentally. “Probably if they made any profits, they took it and avoided risk as markets became more exposed to uncertainty.”

Tiger Global lost $17 billion

According to another claim, Tiger didn’t sell all the crypto assets it held – and possibly vanilla cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum to the upside. he’s holding on to a bet – but mostly outside the market. While cryptos make up an obscure but relatively small portion of the firm’s ledger, the move to risk hedging likely saved Tiger from the sudden performance drops it suffered, according to sources.

However, the withdrawal does not prevent the shop from starting to trade liquid tokens again. Indeed, Tiger is relying on blockchain venture analysts to research promising liquid investments and is testing the waters in potential new hires that will focus on pure investment investments in digital assets. According to calculations by the Edmond de Rothschild Group fund fund, Tiger, which had around $90 billion in hand in February, has since lost $17 billion.

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