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Moonvember kicks off with sweeping staff layoffs across crypto

There are still pockets of hope, however, with some companies looking to expand despite the market conditions.

The crypto and tech industry has seen a slew of staff cuts this week against a backdrop of difficult market conditions, though on a positive note, some are bucking the trend.

Crypto companies, including crypto exchanges, venture capital firms and blockchain developers, have been forced to reduce headcount in order to stay nimble amid the bear market. Some, however, have done the opposite, opening up offices in new locations and markets. 

It comes a few weeks after multiple high-level executives, such as OpenSea’s former chief financial officer, Kraken’s co-founder Jesse Powell and Ripple Labs’ engineering director, have all made headlines for either exiting or stepping down from their roles in the space.

Stripe cuts around 1,000 staff

Patrick Collison, CEO of payments processor Stripe, said in a Nov. 3 memo that 14% of the firm’s staff — around 1,000 employees — would be laid off, citing “inflation, energy costs, higher interest rates, reduced investment budgets, and sparser startup funding” as reasons for the cuts.

Collison added it “overhired for the world we’re in,” saying Stripe was “too optimistic” about short-term e-commerce growth, underestimating the impact of a wider market downturn and that its operating costs grew too quickly.

The memo says the headcount changes will be uneven across Stripe, and it’s unclear what departments will be affected or how it will affect the crypto side of its business. The payments startup released a crypto payouts product in April for Twitter creators.

Dapper Labs cuts 22% of headcount

Flow blockchain developer Dapper Labs made the decision on Nov. 2 to cut 22% of its headcount, impacting roughly 130 employees in a memo by founder and CEO Roham Gharegozlou.

Gharegozlou said the “macroeconomic environment” and the company’s growth from 100 to over 600 employees in less than two years prevented the firm from being “as aligned, nimble, and community-driven as we need to be.”

He said Dapper Labs “streamlined and focused” its product strategy around a “more sustainable cost structure” and looked at the skills it needed for the future when deciding who to lay off.

Digital Currency Group lays off 10% of staff: Report

Web3 conglomerate and venture capital firm Digital Currency Group (DCG) let go of around 10% of its workforce, according to a Nov. 1 Bloomberg report that saw 10 employees exit the company bringing its headcount to a total of 66.

The cuts were reportedly part of a restructuring with Mark Murphy, DCG’s chief operating officer, also promoted to president, a spokesperson said DCG “made a series of internal changes” to position the company “for its next phase of growth” that included “streamlining” of departments.

Cointelegraph contacted DCG to confirm the report but did not receive a response.

Galaxy Digital reportedly eyeing 20% workforce drawdown

Galaxy Digital, the crypto firm founded by Michael Novogratz, is also looking at a potential staff cut of around 20% — as much as 75 positions — as per a Nov. 1 Bloomberg report that cited sources familiar with the matter.

The company neither confirmed nor denied the rumors, with a spokesperson only saying the firm is “considering optimal team structure and strategy.” Yahoo Finance data shows shares of Galaxy Digital are down around 76% year to date, alongside a similar drawdown in crypto prices.

Galaxy Digital was contacted by Cointelegraph to verify the report but did not receive a response.

BitMEX makes staff cuts amid strategy pivot

Crypto exchange BitMEX is also making drawdowns across its employees in conjunction with a strategy to pivot away from spot trading and custody services and instead refocus on crypto derivatives.

A BitMEX spokesperson told Cointelegraph on Nov. 1 that an earlier report citing 30% of staff would be cut was “inaccurate and too high,” but with its focus back on derivates trading, an “undesirable consequence” was that “we had to make changes to our workforce.”

Coinbase CPO quits to take a breather

The now former chief product officer for crypto exchange Coinbase, Surojit Chatterjee, in a Nov. 3 LinkedIn post revealed he had left his position at the company saying “it’s time to get off the ride and catch my breath.”

Chatterjee’s stint at Coinbase lasted three years but said he’d continue to help the company by serving as an adviser to its CEO Brian Armstrong. He said the personal break comes to spend more family time after his father was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and his mother unexpectedly passed away.

An Oct. 28 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing by Coinbase says with Chatterjee’s departure its product, engineering and design teams “are being reorganized within a product group structure under which the leaders of such groups will assume responsibility for Coinbase’s product offerings.”

OKX opens in the Bahamas — plans to hire 100 locals

Meanwhile, crypto exchange OKX appears to be looking to scoop up staff and said on Nov. 3 it plans to fill 100 job openings.

Related: Fidelity to beef up crypto unit by another 25% with 100 new hires

The open positions will only be available to Bahamian local talent as OKX registered as a digital asset business in The Bahamas, forming a new subsidiary to serve as the company’s regional hub and opening an office in the archipelagic nation’s capital city Nassau.

Paxos adding 130 heads in Singapore

At least 130 new hires based in Singapore will be added over the next three years at blockchain infrastructure firm Paxos, according to a Nov. 2 Bloomberg report, after its local unit received a license to offer digital token payment services.

Paxos Co-founder Rich Teo said up to 180 might be brought in over the three years which would boost its headcount to around 200, a nine-times increase from its current team of 20 in the city-state.

In October, $4.5 trillion asset management firm Fidelity Investments told Cointelegraph it is set to hire another 100 people to bolster the firm’s growing digital assets division.

Fidelity, in a statement to Cointelegraph, said that the firm was in a “unique position” to offer exposure to the “emerging” digital asset sector — as its reasons for pushing for more talent to bolster its Digital Assets arm. 

Crypto whales dominate holdings of Trump family tokens: Chainalysis

Worst quarter in 11 years as Bitcoin price and activity plunges

Quarterly returns on Bitcoin haven’t been this bad since it was trading under $20 in the early days of Mt. Gox, but the stock market isn’t faring so hot either.

Bitcoin (BTC) has seen its worst quarterly loss in 11 years with price and activity on the blockchain both plunging over the last three months.

The second quarter ending June 30 saw Bitcoin’s price fall from around $45,000 at the start of the quarter to trade at $19,884 before midnight ET on June 30 according to CoinGecko, representing a 56.2% loss according to crypto analytics platform Coinglass.

It’s the steepest price fall since the third quarter of 2011, when BTC fell from $15.40 to $5.03, a loss of over 67% and worse than the bear markets of 2014 and 2018, when Bitcoin’s price slumped 39.7% and 49.7% in their worst quarters respectively.

The past quarter saw eight weekly red candles in a row for Bitcoin and the month of June saw a draw down of over 37%, the heaviest monthly losses since September 2011 which saw the price fall more thaner 38.5% in the month.

There are also signs that investors are keeping their powder dry — or they've run out of funds — during the bear. Activity on the blockchain is taking a dive with Bitcoin’s spot volume — the total amount of coins transacting on the blockchain — dropped over 58.5% in just nine days according to a June 29 analysis from Arcane Research.

But its not just crypto markets in turmoil. Thanks to sky high inflation and rising interest rates the traditional stock market has also taken a pounding, with some calling it the “worst quarter ever” for stocks.

Charlie Bilello, CEO of Financial advisory firm Compound Capital Advisors shared a chart on Twitter showing the S&P 500 index was down 20.6% in the first half of 2022, the worst start to the year for the index since 1962, when price return was -26.5%.

The difficult economic conditions have seen a swath of staff layoffs from crypto companies including Gemini, Crypto.com and BlockFi. Most recently the crypto and stock trading platform Bitpanda cut its employee count by approximately 277 full-time and part-time employees.

Related: 80,000 Bitcoin millionaires wiped out in the great crypto crash of 2022

Crypto is closely tied to the wider tech sector and the tech heavy NASDAQ composite index has fell by almost 22.5% over the second quarter.

A “Tech Layoff Tracker” from technology jobs board TrueUp reveals over 26,000 tech employees across 200 company wide cutbacks just in June alone.

Tech Layoff Tracker. Source: TrueUp

Over the quarter, 307 layoffs impacted over 52,000 staff with one of the largest coming from Elon Musk’s Tesla, with 3,500 impacted. Crypto exchange Coinbase features twice, firstly for its June 2 hiring freeze and job offer rescission of nearly 350 people and second for its June 14 staff layoff, affecting 1,100 individuals.

Crypto whales dominate holdings of Trump family tokens: Chainalysis