Technology

Crypto exchange Huobi to lay off 20% of staff as industry reels from FTX collapse

The Huobi crypto exchange logo displayed on a smartphone.
Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto via Getty Images

Digital currency exchange Huobi on Friday said it plans to reduce its global headcount by about 20%, in the latest round of layoffs to hit the beleaguered cryptocurrency industry.

The Seychelles-based company is one of the largest crypto exchanges globally, handling about $370 million of trading volumes on a single day, according to data from CoinGecko.

“The planned layoff ratio is about 20%,” Justin Sun, a Huobi advisory board member, told CNBC, adding the cuts have not yet been implemented.

“With the current state of the bear market, a very lean team will be maintained going forward. The personnel optimization aims to implement the brand strategy, optimize the structure, improve efficiency and return to the top three.”

Huobi had about 1,600 employees worldwide as of October, according to a Financial Times report.

Huobi’s native HT token at one point sank as low as $4.3355 Friday, down more than 7% from the 24 hours prior, according to CoinMarketCap data.

After the collapse of FTX, crypto traders are scanning for clues as to what will be the next company to fall prey to the downturn in digital assets.

Floods of investors have piled out of centralized exchanges, with nearly 300,000 bitcoins being moved out from Nov. 6 to Dec. 7, according to the most recently available data from CryptoQuant.

Last month, Binance briefly paused withdrawals of the USDC stablecoin, prompting concerns over its own ability to cover client redemptions. It has since resumed USDC withdrawals.

As much as $6 billion in digital tokens were pulled from the exchange between Dec. 12 and Dec. 14.

In a so-called “proof of reserves” statement on Nov. 25, the world’s largest crypto exchange revealed it had a reserve ratio of 101%, indicating it had more assets than liabilities.

Doubts have been raised about the effectiveness of proof of reserves reports, which offer only a snapshot of the assets an exchange holds at a single point in time.

Consultancy Mazars, which had compiled a separate proof of reserves report for Binance, stopped producing such documents altogether for crypto firms on Dec. 16, citing “concerns regarding the way these reports are understood by the public.”

Lately, crypto investors have raised doubts over Huobi’s financial health.

Sun dismissed concerns over the company’s solvency as “pure FUD,” meaning “fear, uncertainty, doubt,” a phrase crypto investors use to describe what they perceive as negative or false information.

“Users’ assets are safe,” he said. “As a virtual asset trading platform that has been in operation for 10 years, Huobi’s business philosophy is to protect the safety of its users’ assets.”

Huobi has completed a proof of reserves review that shows its total assets now stand at $2.9 billion and match the number of funds deposited by users, Sun said.

Huobi was acquired by About Capital Management, a Hong Kong-based asset management firm, on Oct. 7. Sun, who founded the Tron blockchain project, serves an advisor to Huobi.

Huobi was originally founded in China, but it was driven out of the country after an intense crackdown from Beijing on the crypto industry.

Today, Huobi only does consulting and research out of China, while its trading operations are run outside of mainland China. The company has offices in Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan and the U.S.

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