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Topic: Another one bites the dust: lending platform Hodlnaut (Read 452 times)

legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18771
I think the gambling analogy is a good one. I thought for some time that these scams worked exclusively on newbies. That once you had lost all your money on one shiny new shitcoin or shiny new centralized platform, that you would learn your lesson and just stick to holding bitcoin in your own wallet in the future. But then with the collapse of platforms like Celsius and Voyager, I spent a bit of time on Twitter and Reddit reading about what had happened to these platforms. And over and over again I saw users wishing how they had just stuck to BlockFi or some other platform, somehow completely oblivious to the fact that every single one of these platforms has the exact same (lack of) business model, and every one is just as risky as the others. I saw people who had lost everything with the collapse of Luna talking about the next "bitcoin killer" or "ethereum killer" they were going to buy.

It is very much akin to gamblers chasing their losses. It is highly destructive behavior, and no amount of pointing out just how shady or outright scammy all these projects are seems to make any difference to these people.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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"Rinse and repeat" is many scammers' strategy. And it keeps working astonishingly well in crypto.
It's super easy as well. Call it an ICO, DeFi, staking, yield farming, liquidity mining, lending platform, etc. Just come up with a new name and promise risk free profits, and you are guaranteed to get investors. You don't even need to have a working product or income stream.

Indeed. I would have expected that people start to learn and stop jumping in so eagerly. But, as a recurring topic, it may be somewhat (or at a certain level) related to the gambling mentality so wide spread.

Much of the same mentality must apply to the victims of these HYIP scams.

Yep, at least it applies to those chipping in a few dollars "just in case". But I fail to understand how can some put there life changing amounts or at least money they don't afford to lose. Those I pity. Those should stop doing this/falling for this.
copper member
Activity: 2338
Merit: 4543
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Let's be fair and admit it, he's probably also paying for the adrenalin when the numbers are extracted/picked  Wink

Haha, yeah I readily admit that.  I only recently started gambling a little bit (and I do mean a little bit,) and now I know first hand the thrill is real, even if you only have about $2 on the line, lol.  I guess the emotions are piqued the more you "can afford to lose."

Much of the same mentality must apply to the victims of these HYIP scams.  I don't mean to minimize the culpability of the scammers, but lets continue to be fair; if it wasn't for the greedy these scams wouldn't work.

Everything will be over when the bubble pops.
The bubble doesn't even need to pop.

No, a bubble isn't needed.  If it's one thing about crypto I can be certain of; the scammers are always there.  The scams are only more successful during bull markets, and therefore we here about more of them.  They're still lingering in the shadows during a bear market.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18771
Everything will be over when the bubble pops.
The bubble doesn't even need to pop. The latest court documents from Celsius show that they somehow managed to lose enough money as to be insolvent during the massive bull run up to $60k. We can only guess what kind of wild gambles they were making in order to achieve that, considering they could have bought and held nearly anything and made big profits. These companies can collapse at any time, and take all user deposits with them.

"Rinse and repeat" is many scammers' strategy. And it keeps working astonishingly well in crypto.
It's super easy as well. Call it an ICO, DeFi, staking, yield farming, liquidity mining, lending platform, etc. Just come up with a new name and promise risk free profits, and you are guaranteed to get investors. You don't even need to have a working product or income stream.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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Some people are so emersed in their "get-rich-quick" dream that even if they come to conclusion on their own that the rug has been pulled out from under them, they'll still cling on.  This guy I'm talking about is no idiot, he readily admits he's spending the money for the dream.

Let's be fair and admit it, he's probably also paying for the adrenalin when the numbers are extracted/picked  Wink
But I totally get your point. Of all get rich quick schemes, I think that the lottery is the worse.

I've tried gently reminding him that Dreaming is Free.

Heh, timeless Smiley

What will be head shaking in the cryptospace is these type of services will return and it will again lose millions of users money.

"Rinse and repeat" is many scammers' strategy. And it keeps working astonishingly well in crypto.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
Another victim of Hodlnaut has been discovered. Algorand Foundation has lost $35 milllion in USDC after having exposure in the cryptolender before it suspended withdrawals.

Oh, yea, yet another piece of the great list of "strong" businesses, built on top of each other like castle of playing cards...
I guess that we have to be happy there's crypto winter now and then to get rid of these before they grow bigger (and make even more damage when they collapse).


Hehe if they want to become similar to banks but their source of profit is from the yields of very speculative Defi tokens, they will certainly never become big. Everything will be over when the bubble pops. What will be head shaking in the cryptospace is these type of services will return and it will again lose millions of users money.
copper member
Activity: 2338
Merit: 4543
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That's correct, but 50$ is an amount people may be playing at the lottery, so trying their luck with whatever HYIP / Ponzi is not that uncommon. Unadvised, yes, stupid, yes, still, not uncommon, not a surprise.

Some dude at work buys $50 worth of lottery tickets every paycheck, 26 times a year.  He and I started researching bitcoin around the same time, I stuck with it, he stuck with the lottery tickets.  Last year when BTC was hovering over $40k he came to me and told me he had calculated what the amount he spent on lottery tickets would have been worth if he had spent that money on BTC instead.  He was beside himself for being so shortsighted...  He's still buying buying lottery tickets instead of bitcoin.  Roll Eyes

Some people are so emersed in their "get-rich-quick" dream that even if they come to conclusion on their own that the rug has been pulled out from under them, they'll still cling on.  This guy I'm talking about is no idiot, he readily admits he's spending the money for the dream.  I've tried gently reminding him that Dreaming is Free.

I mean not just Bitcointalk, but also e.g. ads on news sites. Maybe I just tune them out subconsciously.

Yeah, scam adds have already saturated the internet, even on non-crypto related sites.  Wasn't it mycelium wallet that was advertising 1xBit not long ago?  I tend to ignore that stuff, but once in a while it's so outlandish.  Even quality service like blockchair are not immune.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
Looking for campaign manager? Contact icopress!
Another victim of Hodlnaut has been discovered. Algorand Foundation has lost $35 milllion in USDC after having exposure in the cryptolender before it suspended withdrawals.

Oh, yea, yet another piece of the great list of "strong" businesses, built on top of each other like castle of playing cards...
I guess that we have to be happy there's crypto winter now and then to get rid of these before they grow bigger (and make even more damage when they collapse).
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
Another victim of Hodlnaut has been discovered. Algorand Foundation has lost $35 milllion in USDC after having exposure in the cryptolender before it suspended withdrawals.

It appears very similar to Celsius where they might not really care about their trustworthiness and reputation to make many stupid investments with their depositors' coins. If they are wrong, they declare bankruptcy and go create their next scam.



The Algorand Foundation has revealed a $35 million USDC hole in its balance sheet as a result of exposure to embattled cryptocurrency lending firm Hodlnaut, which has paused withdraws since Aug. 8.

Source https://cointelegraph.com/news/algorand-foundation-outlines-35m-exposure-to-crypto-lender-hodlnaut
legendary
Activity: 3262
Merit: 1376
Slava Ukraini!
I never heard about this platform before. Anyway, not first and, unfortunately, not last such kind of platform turning into scam. Personally, I keep my money away from such lending platforms. Interest that you will get simply isn't worth to risk. Yeah, you can invest $50 or $100, something what you would afford to lose in bad case scenario. But few $ interest that you will get in the end is nothing. To get something significant you have to invest much more, but you must be an idiot to invest there thousands of dollars worth BTC.
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
https://bpip.org
I've put altcoin announcements and HYIP both on ignore quite some time ago and.. I don't know, this may be the reason in your case too?

I mean not just Bitcointalk, but also e.g. ads on news sites. Maybe I just tune them out subconsciously.
legendary
Activity: 2576
Merit: 1860
And while Hodlnaut in Singapore in Southeast Asia halted withdrawals, Nuri, formerly Bitwala, operating since 2015, in Germany in Europe filed for insolvency.[1]

It seems we could create quite a long "Another one bites the dust" series with all these centralized platforms falling one after another.

Signs of risks are everywhere in the wide crypto ecosystem. One crypto exchange falls here, a crypto lending platform falls there, a certain altcoin's wallets got hacked everywhere, a stablecoin company freezing funds, blockchain bridges falling, and so on and so forth.

Amidst all this, a Bitcoin in self-custody in a hardware wallet remains intact and safe.


[1] https://cointelegraph.com/news/german-crypto-bank-nuri-with-500k-users-files-for-insolvency
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
Hodlnaut's problems began when they offered yields if their customers converted to Luna's UST stablecoin to receive yield. What Hodlnaut did was deposit their users' UST to a protocol which was a ponzi called Anchor where the protocol offered up to 19%. Hodlnaut gives their customers 13% and they keep 6% hehehe.

... and now most have ended up not receiving the 13% and not receiving back even their own money.
And I would not be surprised if Hodlnaut has withdrawn their 6% long ago. Because the whole risk goes to the customers (I'm even surprised they've offered such a big part of the profit to the customers).

Anchor as I have already mentioned was a ponzi scheme to encourage stablecoin users to convert their USDT, USDC or DAI to UST and deposit them to the protocol for high yield. Printing more UST also increased the demand for Luna and pumped the price. I reckon the mistake of Do Kwon was not protecting UST's peg when it began falling to $0.98. He waited until UST depegged to $0.90 when everyone has already panicked and withdrew from Anchor.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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That's correct, I knew that. And it may make sense if you do this with 10$, or 50$, maybe a bit more.

Does it though? $50 each from a million idiots, and the scammers totally honest unsuccessful cryptobusinesspeople can enjoy retirement. Not giving any money to these ponzi-like structures is the only way they can be defeated but sadly that's not gonna happen.

That's correct, but 50$ is an amount people may be playing at the lottery, so trying their luck with whatever HYIP / Ponzi is not that uncommon. Unadvised, yes, stupid, yes, still, not uncommon, not a surprise.


Anyway, it kinda interesting that I've never heard of these collapsing "platforms" before, so they must have worked out their marketing to not waste money on old scrooges like me and focus on the malleable yoof.

I've put altcoin announcements and HYIP both on ignore quite some time ago and.. I don't know, this may be the reason in your case too?
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
https://bpip.org
That's correct, I knew that. And it may make sense if you do this with 10$, or 50$, maybe a bit more.

Does it though? $50 each from a million idiots, and the scammers totally honest unsuccessful cryptobusinesspeople can enjoy retirement. Not giving any money to these ponzi-like structures is the only way they can be defeated but sadly that's not gonna happen.

Anyway, it kinda interesting that I've never heard of these collapsing "platforms" before, so they must have worked out their marketing to not waste money on old scrooges like me and focus on the malleable yoof.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
Looking for campaign manager? Contact icopress!
So... is anybody still keeping their money on various centralized platforms hoping for pennies?
Reminding you that the majority of the crypto community is in for a quick buck. They don't care what's the risk as long as they get these interests. The fact is: They won't get these interests forever, because the lending platforms are just making high-risk investments for every dollar they receive.

That's correct, I knew that. And it may make sense if you do this with 10$, or 50$, maybe a bit more.

But when one already has thousands of USD invested into bitcoin, and when bitcoin is known to bring very big returns if one has the patience to wait for a couple of years... risking so much for so small benefits is pain stupid and I fail to understand it.

I know that people are greedy. I know that greed can make them not think straight... but so many, with so much money falling for this kind of schemes... is... preposterous.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 7340
Farewell, Leo
So... is anybody still keeping their money on various centralized platforms hoping for pennies?
Reminding you that the majority of the crypto community is in for a quick buck. They don't care what's the risk as long as they get these interests. The fact is: They won't get these interests forever, because the lending platforms are just making high-risk investments for every dollar they receive.

I will not trust anymore DeFi staking until regulators can give a real solution to protect investors on bullshit bankruptcy exit scheme.
Sounds like you think "investors" (which aren't really investors since you don't create capital when trading cryptocurrencies) don't know where they put their money in. They pretty much do, and if they don't, it's their responsibility to educate themselves and comprehend to whom they trust their money.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18771
"Recent market conditions". Just another way of saying "We made ridiculously risky investments/loans/gambles". My bitcoin is going through the exact same market conditions but I haven't lost a single satoshi because I didn't make stupid gambles.

Atlantic City. People are idiots and scammers will figure out a way to make them want to give them money.
Same nonsense we saw/see with altcoins, ICOs, IEOs, NFTs, DeFi, etc, etc, etc. Next shiny thing comes along promising obviously bullshit returns, bunch of newbies lose money. Rinse and repeat with some new buzzwords.

I will not trust anymore DeFi staking until regulators can give a real solution to protect investors on bullshit bankruptcy exit scheme.
Or perhaps instead of screwing up the entire cryptocurrency space with scam after scam and thereby enforcing governments to swoop in regulate everything they can get their grubby fingers on, we could just stop throwing money at these obvious scams?
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
According to The Block:

Crypto lending platform Hodlnaut halts withdrawals and is working on a recovery plan

It would have sounded better:
Hodlnaut's problems began when they offered yields if their customers converted to Luna's UST stablecoin to receive yield. What Hodlnaut did was deposit their users' UST to a protocol which was a ponzi called Anchor where the protocol offered up to 19%. Hodlnaut gives their customers 13% and they keep 6% hehehe.

Oh for god's sake, do we have a full list on who invested money in that crap?
What's next, the PBOC, NRZ (nationals rails of Zimbabwe), the Council of Endor, the Avengers Retirement Fund, Umbrella Corporation?

I see their animation is still going on, 4.08% APY on BTC? Yeah, makes sense.
hero member
Activity: 2758
Merit: 705
Dimon69
Perhaps the longevity of their stay is the reason, because why now? Not much has changed in two months, so if they hold up that long, there is no reason to close them now, and forcing users not to withdraw their money is another problem.

I don't know, but if conditions improve and users return to deposit normally, I believe that greed is what controls people, and then the platforms have the right to steal money.

I think they will follow the Celsius bankruptcy plan to as safety precaution for there company in case the price gets ugly on the following months or weeks. They timing there announcement after the short rally of crypto which I assume they are planning to salvage there customers balance while the price is still in profit compared to last two months. Forcing there customers assets is there best chance to trap money that will cover there bankruptcy funds once they file it.

This is the best indicator and warning that DeFi lending right now is in the deep shit area which is prone to this kind trap game scenario.
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