[Update: Bankruptcy Filed] BlockFi Pausing Withdrawals

Update 11/28/22: BlockFi has now announced Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Original post: BlockFi has announced that it is suspending operations (including withdrawals) due to the situation surrounding FTX & Alameda. Some readers will have BlockFi accounts due to the various promotions previously offered. Hopefully readers have withdrawn funds once the bonus had posted.

View Comments (156)

  • Anyone know if USD on Coinbase is 100% safe?

    I got rid of all my crypto.. but I still keep a few hundred USD on Coinbase in case I need to buy some crypto quickly to send.

  • Buy a Trezor or Ledger or Cold Card. Crypto is not meant to be held by centralized exchanges. You are supposed to take control of your own money. Be your own bank.

    • Okay but how does one "take control of your own money" when that money can be up 100% one year and down 80% the next year. That isn't even the realm of "control".

      It's like being locked into a mortgage that is $200 a month in January but $20,000 a month in December. Then thinking your in control because your name is signed on the mortgage agreement.

      • He's talking about literally controlling it, like the equivalent of stuffing money under your mattress or burying it in your yard. Just don't hide it in a coffee can and then throw it out with the trash like that one guy did with his hard drive.

    • If you don’t have a lot of crypto holdings, a phone app crypto wallet is safe enough. At least it is for me. For iOS, the Edge wallet is well liked.

    • You can use software on a regular computer as a cold wallet, if it's a separate computer that you never connect to the internet. But that's inconvenient for transactions. The advantage of hardware wallets like Trezor is that transactions are easier while still giving good protection.

      (Or, even using software on an internet-connected computer (a hot wallet) would be safer in some ways than leaving your money on an exchange, but then you have the risk of being hacked/malware.)

  • OK serious question. It seems like each of these "established" crypto exchanges are falling. Everyone is questioning the health of PUBLICLY TRADED Coinbase. Lets just assume for a moment that they will have a problem. For those of us with some money in Coinbase, but wish to hold on to the crypto in an exchange (as opposed to cold storage) where should we move the crypto? One of the many healthy Fintech banks offering crypto trades (CashApp, Sofi, RobinHood, WeBull)?

    • The pure exchange ones might be safer than the lenders.

      If you hold mainstream ones you can also consider using CFTC regulated futures to track them.
      There will be additional costs, tax consequences and you may need to keep rolling them to maintain exposure.
      But this should be much safer than any fintech or crypto exchanges due to CFTC. More so because the margin you put up is just a small % of the notional value and it is difficult to lose more than that. (if you think losing 40% sounds terrible, ask the BlockFI bag holders would they like 60% back?)

    • After seeing exchange after exchange fail (Voyager, Celsius, FTX and now BlockFi) I would expect no exchange is safe. The small amount of crypto I still hold is in a cold wallet other than a tiny amount I got for free from Alto that's in an IRA on their platform. I wouldn't be surprised to see Gemini or even Coinbase fail at this point. Either get it moved to a wallet or cash it to a more traditional investment like an ETF in a brokerage account. No exchange is safe.

      • Voyager/Celsius/BlockFi were a separate category; they explicitly said they were lending out your crypto and you might not get it back. FTX was different since they claimed to not lend out your money; the issue there is fraud or negligence. But FTX always seemed shady, and wasn't subject to much regulation.

        Coinbase and Gemini I would at least trust more than those other companies. Maybe Gemini is safest since they're a "trust company", a "fiduciary", and "Qualified Custodian", that are supposedly subject to a bunch of regulations. (Gemini had the "Earn" feature that lent out your crypto, but only for people who opted in to that; theoretically the failure of Earn shouldn't affect other Gemini customers, though there's still a risk that the company was lying to regulators.)

        • This is true, Gemini and Coinbase are the only two that can operate in NY AFAIK. They are still exchanges though which means they are centralized, going against the whole idea of crypto. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out and who is left standing.

    • Those entities primarily hold crypto through clearing agents. Tmk none have the capibility to custody crypto that wasnt directly purchased on their respective platforms.

      • Cash App can send/receive bitcoin. I think Robinhood now can too. (But still, I wouldn't want to leave large amounts there.)

    • I would not suggest keeping any crypto in any centralized exchange for longer than is needed for a transaction. Treat CEX's like public restrooms: go in, do business, get out.

      Google "hot wallets" if you don't want to use a Ledger or Trezor for cold storage. There are a lot of options available but off the top of my head look at Metamask, Brave, Trust, Coinbase Wallet, Exodus, etc

  • Welp.. there guys the 4k I had in Blockfi... Last year around the same time worth 13k.. should've got out.
    Serious question though, any chance I will see that?