Indeed, the Director of Financial Markets at OKX, the world’s second-largest crypto exchange by spot trading volume, Lennix Lai, said that the crypto industry could be in for a “domino effect” much like the one the financial market went through in 2008, Evening Standard reported on August 19.

Similarities to the 2008 crash

According to the report, at least ten crypto firms have collapsed or suspended user withdrawals since the year’s turn, with declining Bitcoin price claiming victims across the landscape, including the Terra (LUNA) ecosystem, lending firm Celsius (CEL), and others. Similarly, back in 2008, Wall Street companies started dropping one after the other after the housing market collapsed and borrowers could no longer afford to pay off their mortgages, overwhelming banks with loan losses on their balance sheets. As Lai explained:

Crypto bears come out to play

Lai’s warnings arrive as $70 billion is wiped from the crypto market cap in a day, eroding the gains achieved in the previous weeks, and leading cryptocurrency trading expert Michaël van de Poppe to opine that the current market cap is facing rejection at a critical resistance level. As for Bitcoin, the industry’s largest cryptocurrency, it has lost $30 billion from its market cap in 24 hours, failing to sustain the bullish momentum of the moderate two-month-old price uptrend that Finbold reported on August 15. Meanwhile, Bitcoin was at press time trading at $21,452, representing a loss of 8.8% on the day, and 9.59% across the previous seven days, according to CoinMarketCap data retrieved on August 19. Disclaimer: The content on this site should not be considered investment advice. Investing is speculative. When investing, your capital is at risk.