The craziest bubble ever has created billion-dollar fortunes. Meet the freaks, geeks and messianic visionaries who have scored cryptocurrency riches
Changpeng Zhao
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In the world of cryptocurrency, where billion-dollar fortunes can be made overnight, speed is everything—and CZ is the fastest of them all. From closet-size offices in Tokyo—“I would touch four people if I turned around in a circle”—the 41-year-old Chinese-Canadian coder runs Binance, a cryptocurrency exchange that has gone from a standing start to the largest on the planet in just under 180 days. CZ (born Changpeng Zhao) cut his teeth making high-frequency trading systems for Wall Street’s flash boys, and he built Binance to be a Ferrari. His exchange can process a blazing 1.4 million transactions a second and on a peak trading day in January, processed 3.5 billion new orders, cancels and trades. Speculators (some 25 percent of them from the US) use Binance to trade 120 different coins, generating $200 million in profits for CZ’s exchange last quarter. BNB, the virtual coin CZ created in August that gives holders a 50 percent discount on trading fees, has a market cap of $1.3 billion. His stake in Binance and his coins give CZ a personal fortune worth as much as $2 billion.
He is hardly alone in becoming insanely and instantly rich from crypto. Chris Larsen, a long-time tech exec known for co-founding a string of fintech apps, saw his net worth flirt with $20 billion at the height of cryptomania in early January, based on his ownership of 5.2 billion XRP, the tokens of Ripple, the company he founded. XRP has since crashed 65 percent, but Larsen still tops Forbes’s first crypto rich list, our (necessarily inexact) accounting of the 20 wealthiest people in crypto.
There are now nearly 1,500 crypto-assets in existence, valued at an aggregate of $550 billion, up by 31 times since the beginning of 2017. While the prices of individual cryptocoins continue to swing wildly—bitcoin is down by almost 50 percent from its peak—it’s clear that blockchain-based currency is here to stay and that these virtual assets have real, albeit volatile and speculative, value. Black-market transactions, tax avoidance by individuals and sanctions-dodging by countries like North Korea fuel part of the demand, but so does a widespread excitement over the technology and an ideological desire for money to be free from the whimsies of nation-states.
The winners of this digital lottery differ from those in previous manias. The shadowy beginnings, at once anarchistic, utopian and libertarian, drew an odd lot of pioneers who ranged from anti-establishment cypherpunks and electricity-guzzling “miners” to prescient Silicon Valley financiers and a larger-than-usual assortment of the just plain lucky “hodlers” (the typo-inspired crypto jargon for “buy and hold” investors). As in any gold rush, selling the pans and pickaxes—in this case running exchanges—is proving a more reliable path to riches than speculation. And, of course, easy money—especially if it’s viewed as a bearer asset—attracts scam artists and thieves.
(This story appears in the 16 March, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)