SINGAPORE, Dec 20 (Reuters) - To borrow from Britain's Queen Elizabeth, 2022 is not a year on which the cryptocurrency world shall look back with undiluted pleasure.
Crashes, contagion, collapses came in such quick succession that investors were, towards the end of the year, asking serious existential questions.
After all, the largest cryptocurrency, bitcoin , has not kept its head above water for more than a week at a time, and is down about three-quarters from last November's $69,000 peak.
What some saw as the final nail in the crypto coffin was the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried's FTX exchange last month.
Rather, 2022 has become the "I-told-you-so" case for regulators, who've largely maintained an arm's length from the crypto world or even banned trading in cryptocurrencies.