- Crypto rating agencies can help investors avoid risky projects through transparent risk assessments, though they likely could not have predicted FTX’s collapse.
- Regulators have failed to protect crypto users, so transparent, crowdsourced rating mechanisms may benefit the industry more than regulation. AI advances may also enable customized risk assessments.
- While limited, ratings can indicate risk levels to help investors evaluate if expected returns justify the risks. More rigorous analysis could prevent some failures and legitimize crypto assets.
The collapse of major crypto companies like FTX, Terra, and Celsius in 2022 has brought renewed attention to the need for better risk assessment in the industry. Crypto rating agencies may play an important role in helping investors avoid risky projects.
The Limitations of Regulation
Some argue regulators have failed to protect crypto users. SingularityNET CEO Ben Goertzel says he has not seen any regulatory efforts that increase his faith they can protect consumers and crypto businesses. He believes transparent, crowdsourced rating mechanisms could benefit the crypto landscape. Advances in AI may also now make it easier to produce customized risk assessments of crypto entities.
What Rating Agencies Can and Cannot Do
Rating agencies likely could not have prevented FTX’s collapse. However, they may have raised red flags about the many observable risks. ARIA co-founder Anastasia Ulianova says ratings can indicate the level of risk but cannot predict collapses. She believes beyond assessing legitimacy. Ratings allow investors to evaluate whether expected returns justify the risks. Her company aims to help legitimize crypto assets within traditional portfolios.
Conclusion
While limited, crypto rating agencies can play a role in avoiding risky projects through transparent assessments. Their ratings may have helped investors make more informed decisions regarding FTX’s risks. More rigorous risk analysis could help prevent some crypto failures and further legitimize the asset class. However, predicting collapses will remain difficult even with ratings.