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February 9th - As concerns about artificial intelligence disrupting business models continue to escalate, hedge funds have significantly increased their short positions in US stocks. Goldman Sachs prime brokerage team stated in a client report that last weeks nominal short selling of a single stock reached its highest level since the bank began collecting data in 2016. The team cited fund flows from January 30th to February 5th, noting that short selling volume was twice that of long buying. Market anxiety about how AI will reshape the economy triggered a turbulent week on Wall Street. The combined market capitalization of 164 stocks in the software, financial services, and asset management sectors evaporated by $611 billion last week. Overall, hedge funds have been net sellers of US stocks for the fourth consecutive week, with the selling pace at its fastest since the so-called "Liberation Day" in early April. The Goldman Sachs team pointed out that the information technology sector was the hardest hit, with net outflows reaching the second highest level in the past five years. Software stocks led the decline, accounting for approximately 75% of the sectors net selling. Hedge funds total net exposure to software stocks fell to 2.6%, and the long-short ratio dropped to 1.3—both record lows.Sources say that as of February 8, production at the Tengiz oil field in Kazakhstan, which is dominated by Chevron (CVX.N), has recovered to about 60% of its peak production (about 550,000 barrels per day).Futures Market Summary | Monday, February 9th, CCTV News Highlights: 1. Creating and sharing a better life paints a picture of happiness and peoples livelihood. 2. Li Qiang signed a State Council decree promulgating the revised "Regulations of the Peoples Republic of China on Nature Reserves". 3. With the Spring Festival approaching, the festive atmosphere is strong across the country. 4. Spring Festival travel rush continues to grow, with key areas increasing nighttime transportation capacity. 5. Liu Yanying: Taking a steady path to rural revitalization and increasing income. 6. Sales of old cars traded in for new ones will exceed 50 billion yuan by 2026. 7. Soaring in the blue sky of the motherland, protecting the lights of thousands of homes. 8. The goal of "achieving results in five years" for the revitalization of the seed industry has been successfully completed. 9. Foreign-invested enterprises increase investment in China at the beginning of the year. 10. Several young Chinese athletes make their Winter Olympics debut. 11. The turnover of the national futures trading market in January increased by 105.14% year-on-year. 12. The Office of the National Disaster Prevention, Reduction and Relief Commission deployed natural disaster risk prevention and control work in February. 13. Central state-owned enterprises Spring Festival consumption assistance campaign has exceeded 800 million yuan in procurement. 14. The number of first-instance criminal cases related to environmental resources continues to decline. 15. Several new regulations have been introduced to strengthen the safety supervision of road transportation of liquid food. 16. The 2026 Spring Festival film lineup was released in Beijing. 17. More than 1,500 suspects involved in telecom fraud in Myawaddy, Myanmar, have been extradited back to China. 18. The Iranian president stated that Iran will not tolerate threats of force; the Iranian military stated that it is fully prepared to retaliate against any act of aggression. 19. Russia claims to have controlled more settlements in Koh Samui and other areas; Ukraine claims to have attacked a Russian drone control center; Russia claims the suspect in the attack on a Russian general admitted to being directed by Ukraine; Ukraine denies involvement in the attack. 20. Palestine condemns Israels escalation of its annexation of the West Bank. 21. Protests continue in many parts of the US against federal immigration enforcement actions. 22. Severe weather continues, with floods spreading in Spain and Portugal. 23. Shootings have occurred in multiple locations in the US, resulting in casualties.Novo Nordisk (NVO.N) announced the launch of a share buyback program with a maximum repurchase amount of 15 billion Danish kroner.The U.S. Department of Defense stated that the vessel violated quarantine regulations in the Caribbean Sea.

Who is Alex Mashinsky, the man behind the alleged Celsius crypto fraud?

Skylar Shaw

Jan 06, 2023 14:11


Mashinsky, 57, fraudulently promoted Celsius as a safe alternative to banks, while concealing that it was losing hundreds of millions of dollars in risky investments, according to a lawsuit filed on Thursday by New York Attorney General Letitia James.


The civil lawsuit seeks to ban Mashinsky from doing business in New York and have him pay damages, restitution and disgorgement.


James’ lawsuit is the latest black eye for the crypto sector, which has been rocked by accusations against FTX crypto exchange founder Sam Bankman-Fried. The former mogul, who has been accused of cheating investors and causing billions of dollars in losses, on Tuesday pleaded not guilty.

Mashinsky, a native of Ukraine whose family emigrated to Israel, decided to move to New York after he took a trip to the city in 1988, he told a Forbes podcast.


“I looked around and I’m like, I’m never going back,” he said.


Since then, he has founded eight companies, including Arbinet, which went public in 2004, and Transit Wireless, which provides Wi-Fi to the New York City subway.


Mashinsky claims to have created Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), a precursor to ride-sharing app Uber, as well as an idea for a cryptocurrency that preceded bitcoin.


Mashinsky became involved in crypto in 2017, when his venture fund Governing Dynamics brought on blockchain company MicroMoney as a strategic partner. He founded Celsius the same year.


In his teens, Mashinsky bought confiscated goods like hairdryers and VCRs from customs auctions at Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport and resold them for a profit, according to a 1999 article in the defunct tech publication Industry Standard.


Mashinsky had aspirations at the time to start a business for whole-body transplants: “Give an old person a new body – keep the head, keep the spine, and re-create the rest,” he said.


The executive served in the Israeli army from 1984-1987, where he trained as a pilot and served in the Golani infantry units, according to his personal website.


Mashinsky has raised over $1.5 billion for various ventures that generated more than $3 billion when he and other investors cashed out of them, according to his website, which also says he holds more than 50 patents.


“The greatest risk is not taking one,” the home page reads.


In hundreds of interviews, blog posts and livestreams as the public face of Celsius, Mashinsky promised its customers that they would receive high returns if they deposited digital assets on his platform, with minimal risk, according to the New York AG’s lawsuit.


Neither Mashinsky nor his lawyer immediately responded to requests for comment on Thursday.


Celsius pledged investors would obtain returns of up to 17%, among the highest in the industry. “We take it from the rich,” the lawsuit quoted Mashinsky as saying.


By early 2022, it had amassed $20 billion in digital assets from investors. But the company struggled to generate enough revenue to pay the promised yields and moved into much riskier investments, according to the claim.


The company extended hundreds of millions of dollars in uncollateralized loans, and invested hundreds of millions more in unregulated decentralized finance platforms, the lawsuit said.


Mashinsky, who wore t-shirts with slogans such as “banks are not your friends,” continued to falsely represent to investors that Celsius was generating high yield through low-risk investments, according to the legal filing.


In an “Ask Mashinsky Anything” YouTube video on June 10, the entrepreneur said “Celsius has billions in liquidity.” Two days later, it paused investor withdrawals “in order to stabilize liquidity and operations.”


Celsius filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors last July 13, listing a $1.19 billion deficit on its balance sheet.