Arthur Hayes published an article saying that his next step is to raise money to buy BTC and get into shitcoins.
1.🧵
Let's take a look at what coins Arthur Hayes currently holds.
Here are the tokens stored at two Arthur Hayes addresses starting with "0xA86e" and "0x534A":
- 200,580 #GMX($14.12M)
- 6,936 #ETH($11.62M)
- 17M #LOOKS($5.12M)
- 239,628 #ENS($3.79M)
- 785K #LDO($1.96M)
- 105,814 #FXS($1.31M)
- 1.96M #WILD($1.07M)
- 330,956 #SUSHI($500K)
Arthur Hayes is currently the largest private owner of #GMX and #LOOKS
Arthur Hayes has received a total of 239,628 #ENS from Binance and FTX, with an average acquisition price of $18.13.
Arthur Hayes has received a total of 785,000 #LDOs from Binance and FTX, with an average acquisition price of $2.26.
Arthur Hayes bought 55,814 #FXS at 376 #ETH ($1.43M at the time) from the DEX, with an average purchase price of $25.68.
And received 50,000 #FXS ($548,000 at the time) from Binance on May 13, 2022 when the price was $10.96.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/🧵 How to assess the risks of using stablecoin pools on @CurveFinance? What should you be aware of to avoid depeg and which stablecoins are considered reliable? @ZunamiProtocol has compiled this guide to risk assessment for liquidity providers:
@CurveFinance@ZunamiProtocol 2/ Risks to watch out for when using stablecoin pools:
- Custody risk
- Default risk
- Collateral risk
- Smart contract risk
@CurveFinance@ZunamiProtocol 3/ Custody risk:
Can a single entity rug its users or access your funds in any way? In DeFi, you don't have to trust a third party like you do in tradFI. But if you don't understand how someone manages smart contracts, your money could be at risk.