Rohit Sipahimalani, chief funding officer of Temasek Holdings Pte, speaks throughout a information convention in Singapore, on Tuesday, July 11, 2023.
Ore Huiying | Bloomberg | Getty Photographs
Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund Temasek just isn’t at present seeking to put money into crypto firms amid regulatory uncertainty within the sector, its Chief Funding Officer Rohit Sipahimalani mentioned.
“There’s loads of regulatory uncertainty on this setting. And I do assume that be very tough for us to make one other funding and change in the midst of all this regulatory uncertainty,” Sipahimalani informed CNBC in a Tuesday interview.
The U.S. Securities and Alternate Fee charged prime U.S. crypto change Ripple for breaching native securities legal guidelines by promoting its native token XRP with out first registering it with the regulator.
The SEC individually charged one other U.S. crypto change Coinbase for working as an unregistered securities change, a dealer or a clearing agency. It additionally accused Coinbase of failing to register the provide and sale of its staking program — which permits prospects to earn rewards for holding sure cryptocurrencies.
“If in case you have the suitable regulatory framework, and we’re comfy with it, and you’ve got the suitable funding alternative, there is not any purpose for us to not to have a look at it,” Sipahimalani mentioned.
“However as I mentioned, at this time limit, we might not be comfy investing in exchanges given the best way issues are proper now.”
He added that Temasek by no means meant to put money into cryptocurrency.
“We have by no means been seeking to put money into cryptocurrencies. Even the funding in FTX, we’ll be speaking about investing in an change, which allowed us to get fee-based income with out considering [of] steadiness sheet danger or any buying and selling dangers,” mentioned Sipahimalani.
On Tuesday, Temasek posted its worst returns since 2016, weighed by macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges.
FTX loss
“Firstly, you bought to keep in mind that the FTX funding was part of our early-stage funding technique, the place we put money into new disruptive applied sciences to see what’s across the nook, in order that we will carry that to our portfolio firms and profit inside our ecosystem,” mentioned Sipahimalani.
“Secondly, we’re trying, clearly, for returns to those early-stage firms, however in all probability most significantly, we’re seeking to discover the subsequent winners that we will double down on, as they get away. And plenty of of them change into finally a core a part of our portfolio.”
He referred to firms like Alibaba and Meituan as such firms.
“We acknowledge investments at that stage is binary and dangerous, and subsequently we depend on diversification. We cap early-stage investments at 6% of our portfolio,” he added.
Temasek did the mandatory due diligence for an early-stage funding when contemplating FTX, Sipahimalani mentioned, and finally went forward as a result of FTX “had good expertise was gaining market share, and confirmed a willingness to interact with regulators and be licensed.”
However finally, it’s “very tough to all the time uncover that due diligence,” mentioned Sipahimalani.
“After we do early stage investing, that there will probably be some losses, some write-offs, however, importantly for us, the entire portfolio of early stage investments ought to do properly.”
Correction: This story has been up to date to precisely mirror that Rohit Sipahimalani is Temasek’s Chief Funding Officer.