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Three Arrows Capital Collapse Sends Shockwaves Through Global Markets as Regulators Scramble to Contain Crypto Contagion

The Ruling

On June 29, 2022, the cryptocurrency world was grappling with the accelerating fallout from the collapse of Three Arrows Capital (3AC), the Singapore-based hedge fund that had been one of the most prominent players in the digital asset space. Just two days earlier, a court in the British Virgin Islands had ordered the liquidation of 3AC, sending tremors through markets already battered by the Terra ecosystem collapse and a brutal bear market that had seen Bitcoin lose more than 70% of its value from its November 2021 all-time high.

By June 29, the full scope of the damage was becoming alarmingly clear. Three Arrows Capital, which had managed an estimated $10 billion in assets at its peak, had failed to meet margin calls from multiple lenders. The fund’s leveraged positions — built during a period of euphoric expansion — had been liquidated at devastating losses, creating a cascading effect that threatened the solvency of numerous counterparties across both centralized and decentralized finance platforms.

Bitcoin was trading around $20,100 on this day, having shed roughly 5% following the SEC’s rejection of Grayscale’s spot Bitcoin ETF application — a one-two punch of regulatory and systemic risk that left markets reeling. Ethereum faired even worse, dropping below $1,100 as selling pressure intensified across the board. The total cryptocurrency market cap had contracted by over $2 trillion from its peak, erasing months of gains and leaving millions of retail investors underwater.

International Precedents

The 3AC collapse was not an isolated event — it was the latest in a series of high-profile failures that had come to define the 2022 crypto winter. The Terra ecosystem’s implosion in May had wiped out approximately $60 billion in value, triggering a contagion that would eventually claim Celsius Network, Voyager Digital, and dozens of smaller firms. But Three Arrows Capital was different in scale and reach: its tentacles extended across virtually every corner of the crypto ecosystem, from DeFi lending protocols to centralized exchanges to venture capital investments.

Internationally, regulators were watching with growing alarm. In Europe, the 3AC collapse added urgency to ongoing negotiations over the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation. European lawmakers, who were finalizing the framework that would establish the world’s first comprehensive regulatory regime for digital assets, pointed to the Three Arrows situation as evidence that the industry could not be trusted to self-regulate. The MiCA discussions, which would reach a breakthrough agreement the following day, June 30, included provisions specifically designed to address the kind of systemic risk that 3AC’s collapse had exposed.

In Singapore, the Monetary Authority of Malta (MAS) had already been investigating Three Arrows Capital for alleged misrepresentation of its financial position. The fund had reportedly provided conflicting information about the size and composition of its portfolio to different counterparties — a practice that, if proven, would constitute serious violations of Singapore’s financial regulations.

In the British Virgin Islands, where 3AC was incorporated, the court-appointed liquidators faced the daunting task of unraveling a complex web of cross-border obligations spanning multiple jurisdictions and asset classes. The process would take months, if not years, to fully resolve — leaving creditors in limbo and raising fundamental questions about the adequacy of existing legal frameworks for dealing with cryptocurrency-related insolvencies.

Enforcement Reality

The Three Arrows Capital debacle exposed a critical gap in the global regulatory architecture: the absence of a coordinated framework for overseeing cross-border cryptocurrency operations. While 3AC was incorporated in the British Virgin Islands and operated primarily out of Singapore, its activities touched virtually every major financial jurisdiction. It borrowed from lenders in the United States, traded on exchanges registered in dozens of countries, and held assets across multiple blockchain networks that recognized no national boundaries.

In the United States, the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) were both reportedly investigating 3AC’s activities. The fund’s founders, Su Zhu and Kyle Davies, had become increasingly difficult to reach, with reports suggesting they had relocated or were otherwise unresponsive to inquiries from creditors and regulators alike. This opacity underscored one of the central challenges of cryptocurrency regulation: the ease with which operators can move across jurisdictions and evade accountability.

The enforcement challenges were equally acute in the DeFi space. Protocols like Aave and Compound, which had extended significant loans to 3AC and related entities, found themselves holding undercollateralized positions as the value of the collateral pledged by the fund plummeted. The decentralized nature of these protocols meant there was no central authority to coordinate a response — liquidations happened algorithmically, often at fire-sale prices that further depressed market values.

The stETH depegging crisis illustrated the contagion risk vividly. Lido’s Staked Ether, which was supposed to trade at parity with ETH, had fallen to a significant discount as 3AC and other distressed funds dumped their holdings to raise liquidity. This depegging created panic among retail holders of stETH, many of whom had purchased the token expecting a stable 1:1 relationship with Ether.

Market Shockwaves

The market impact of the 3AC collapse was both immediate and far-reaching. Beyond the direct price declines in Bitcoin and Ethereum, the contagion spread to virtually every corner of the digital asset ecosystem. DeFi protocols experienced a dramatic contraction in total value locked, as investors fled to the safety of stablecoins and fiat. Lending platforms tightened their collateral requirements dramatically, triggering a cascade of additional liquidations that further amplified selling pressure.

The centralized lending sector was hit particularly hard. BlockFi, which had significant exposure to 3AC, was forced to accept a rescue package from FTX — a lifeline that would prove tragically ironic when FTX itself collapsed just months later. Voyager Digital, another major lender with 3AC exposure, would file for bankruptcy within weeks. Genesis Trading, a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group (which also owns Grayscale), reported hundreds of millions in losses related to 3AC, setting off a chain of events that would eventually push Genesis into bankruptcy as well.

For retail investors, the 3AC collapse was a harsh reminder of the risks inherent in a market that operates largely outside the protections afforded by traditional financial regulation. While stock market investors benefit from FDIC insurance, SIPC protection, and robust disclosure requirements, crypto investors who had entrusted their assets to platforms with exposure to 3AC found themselves standing in line alongside other unsecured creditors, hoping to recover a fraction of their holdings through lengthy bankruptcy proceedings.

Closing Thoughts

The events of June 29, 2022, represented a watershed moment in the history of cryptocurrency regulation. The 3AC collapse, combined with the SEC’s rejection of Grayscale’s spot Bitcoin ETF, crystallized the two fundamental challenges facing the digital asset industry: systemic risk and regulatory uncertainty. These were not abstract problems — they were causing real financial harm to millions of people around the world.

The regulatory response to 3AC would shape the trajectory of cryptocurrency regulation for years to come. In Europe, MiCA would provide a template for comprehensive digital asset oversight. In the United States, the enforcement-first approach would continue, generating increasing friction between regulators and the industry they ostensibly served. And globally, the recognition that cryptocurrency contagion could not be contained within national borders would drive efforts toward international coordination — though meaningful progress on that front remained elusive.

The crypto winter of 2022 would eventually thaw. Bitcoin would recover, new all-time highs would be reached, and the industry would emerge chastened but not broken. But the lessons of Three Arrows Capital — the dangers of excessive leverage, the inadequacy of existing regulatory frameworks, and the systemic risks embedded in interconnected financial systems — would linger long after the market recovered.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the potential loss of principal. Always conduct your own research and consult qualified financial advisors before making investment decisions.

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7 thoughts on “Three Arrows Capital Collapse Sends Shockwaves Through Global Markets as Regulators Scramble to Contain Crypto Contagion”

  1. supplychain_bear

    $10B AUM to zero in weeks. Su Zhu was tweeting about supercycle while his fund was getting margin called

    1. supercycle_l_

      the supercycle thesis aged like milk. leverage + concentrated bets in a nascent asset class is always gonna end this way

    2. liquidation_bot

      Su Zhu went from supercycle tweets to radio silence in like 72 hours. the margin calls were happening in real time on chain and everyone could see

    3. the supercycle tweets while getting margin called is peak crypto hubris. his on-chain borrow positions were public the whole time, people just chose not to look

  2. contagion_watch

    contagion from 3AC exposed how interconnected DeFi lending was. one default and BlockFi, Voyager, Celsius all wobbled

    1. contagion was the right word. BlockFi and Voyager werent directly exposed to 3AC positions but the collateral they held was worthless. cascading failure is different from direct exposure

  3. BlockFi holding worthless collateral from 3AC and then going down themselves showed how thin the separation was between lending desks. due diligence was basically zero across the board

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