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He taught at MIT, worked at Morgan Stanley, and convinced Bill Ackman and Galaxy to back his $200 million crypto fund by his early 30s. His future is now in jeopardy

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When Yida Gao returned to MIT in 2022, the former varsity pole vaulter and Phi Beta Kappa honoree had big shoes to fill. The prestigious university had asked him to teach a graduate course at the business school on crypto and finance, a position recently vacated by Securities and Exchange Commission chair Gary Gensler. 

Just a decade removed from his time as an MIT undergrad, Gao was undaunted. The Chinese immigrant was riding high in the crypto world after landing on the Forbes 30 under 30 list, and he had his own blockchain-focused venture firm, Shima Capital. In a short time, Gao raised $200 million from finance heavyweights like Bill Ackman and prominent crypto firms including Dragonfly and Galaxy, soon becoming one of the most active investors in crypto by participating in more than 300 deals. 

Gao’s ascent was meteoric. But he also cut crucial corners. A Fortune investigation has discovered that unbeknownst to Ackman and his other investors, Gao created a secret offshore entity and funneled assets belonging to his venture fund into the corporation set up under his own name. “It’s directly contrary to what you’re permitted to do under the [Investment] Advisers Act,” said Eric Hess, a lawyer focused on digital assets and venture capital.  

Gao has not yet been charged with any crime, and a representative for Shima Capital told Fortune that the firm does not comment on “regulatory matters such as this.” But his poor performance and behavior, which appears to violate SEC investor protection rules, left the one-time rising star of the crypto scene struggling to raise further capital, according to one source. And despite a booming market, a Shima representative told Fortune that the firm is not currently fundraising.  

Gao’s firm has also experienced an exodus of top employees in recent months, including chief technology officer Carl Hua and head of research Alexander Lin, who left to start their own venture firm early this year, as well as chief of staff and head of platform Hazel Chen. The departed executives did not respond to a request for comment. 

Meanwhile, Shima appears to be floundering despite the current crypto bull market. Its most recent SEC filing lists assets under management of around $158 million—a figure less than the $200 million Shima raised in 2022, although the metric does not directly track a fund’s performance.

While corporate malfeasance may be as common in crypto as impounded Lamborghinis, Gao still managed to convince an elite lineup of investors to back him—and continues to be active in the space. His missteps are likely to provide fodder for the industry’s critics who have long decried its penchant for slippery behavior.

“In crypto, there’s a lot of softness around the edges, sometimes a lot of ‘Trust me, bro,’” said Hess. “We need to start paying attention to these standards and not pretending unless we’re just the derelict children of the financial system.”

The shell game

The latest in a series of crypto wunderkinds to burst on the scene, Gao cut a more traditional path—clean-shaven, toned, and touting an impressive resume of blue-chip institutions. He began his financial career at Morgan Stanley doing mergers and acquisitions. In his spare time, he invested in startups, often collaborating with a well-connected fellow entrepreneur named Adam Struck. Gao worked at the venture giant New Enterprise Associates and briefly enrolled at Stanford’s business school before dropping out to join Struck’s venture firm in Santa Monica full-time.

While the partnership between Gao and Struck seemed to be thriving in public, the relationship turned acrimonious behind closed doors by 2019. Struck filed a lawsuit, alleging Gao had secretly stolen proprietary information and set up a rival venture firm, Shima Capital, incorporated in Puerto Rico. Gao denied the claims, arguing Struck had “belittled” his contributions and refused to acknowledge their 50/50 partnership, leading him to strike out on his own. 

Struck did not respond to a request for comment about the legal dispute, which was settled in October 2023.

While the settlement remains under seal, Struck’s lawyers accuse Gao in the court filings of setting up a “shell game” of companies, including a British Virgin Islands entity called ShimaB, wholly owned by Gao.

Even as he sparred with Struck, Gao drew on his sparkling resumé and confident demeanor to persuade the top names in crypto and finance, including Bill Ackman and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang, to write him checks. According to a schedule of investments viewed by Fortune, Shima began to participate in deals in May 2021, with about $100 million invested in around 200 projects by September 2022. Not everyone, however, was impressed by Gao’s boyish charm.

Several investors, prospective backers, and would-be portfolio companies described Gao and his team to Fortune as young and inexperienced who didn’t really know what they were doing but rode the crypto wave nonetheless. One, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that Gao fit into a category of blockchain investors who have a more fast-and-loose approach, which can be an attractive bet for backers. “You’re buying the risk that you’re trying to capture,” they said.  

The downside of betting on Gao soon emerged. Most notably, investors became concerned with how his firm valued its investments, with people familiar telling Fortune that Gao would mark up Shima’s holdings based on his own estimations—an unorthodox practice called out in a 2023 article from the Financial Times. Gao responded by pledging Shima would soon have professional fund administrators oversee the accounting. 

In another example of questionable accounting, Shima valued its investment in the crypto exchange Chatex at $250,000 in a document viewed by Fortune dated September 2022, despite the fact that the U.S. Treasury Department had sanctioned the company almost a year earlier for facilitating illicit activity such as ransomware and darknet marketplaces. A Shima representative told Fortune that the firm eventually wrote off the investment by the fourth quarter of 2022, though the funds remain on hold pending the company’s sanction resolution, “to be conservative.” 

And despite Gao’s promise to find an auditor, Shima struggled to hire one, with two prominent accounting firms turning it away because Shima fell outside their risk parameters, The Block reported in July 2023. 

An SEC filing from April 2024 lists a Cayman-based firm called MHA Cayman as Shima’s auditor, and a representative from Shima confirmed that MHA completed Shima’s 2023 audit in May 2024. MHA did not respond to multiple requests for comment from Fortune.

‘It doesn’t make any sense’

On paper, Gao had sold investors a standard offering. He’d take their money and back early-stage blockchain companies, providing exposure and eye-watering upside to the buzzy sector. 

But Shima’s struggle to find an auditor was unusual for a U.S. venture capital firm. So was the existence of the ShimaB overseas company owned solely by Gao. While many American crypto venture firms have set up offshore entities in response to an uncertain regulatory environment at home, those entities are owned by the firm—not the individual running it.

Gao did share a “fund structure” document with prospective investors that outlined a web of limited liability corporations owned by Shima that would hold investor capital and make investments, with several registered in the Cayman Islands.

But other internal documents viewed by Fortune tell a different story. The entity called ShimaB, which Gao had set up in his name while still working with Struck, did not appear at all in Gao’s fund structure document, nor in a prospectus shared with investors.

Meanwhile, other internal documents outlining Shima’s holdings reveal that more than 100 investments dated from mid-2021 to late 2022—after Shima had announced its $200 million fundraise—were owned by the Gao-owned ShimaB.

While there is no evidence that Gao set up the arrangement to misappropriate assets, experts say the structure appears to be a serious breach of conflict of interest rules set out in the Investment Advisers Act, a law that spells out the ethical obligations of VC firms towards their investors. In the case of ShimaB, the law appears to prohibit Gao from using investor capital to make investments into an entity he legally owns without proper disclosure. 

The reason, aside from basic transparency, is that if something were to happen to Gao, such as a sudden death or bankruptcy, the ownership of the investments could be disputed. “It doesn’t make any sense,” said Hess, the venture and blockchain lawyer. “I don’t think that’s a defensible strategy.” 

Red flags

In late 2022, Shima’s investors began to discover the existence of the ownership structure, as well as the valuation disparities, leading them to raise alarm bells with Shima’s management. Galaxy was able to redeem its investment. Others who had made a small investment, including Bill Ackman’s family office and Dragonfly, largely stayed out of the dispute. Those familiar with the situation suggested this was because their investments were relatively small. (Representatives for Galaxy, Ackman, and Dragonfly declined to comment.)

In March 2023, Gao sought to allay concerns by meeting with Shima’s small advisory committee, and disclosing that the firm had made “warehoused” investments using ShimaB, a term that described parking deals made before a full investment round is completed.

According to the meeting’s minutes, Shima claimed it had made the investments using investor capital, but always intended to transfer them to the firm. In response to a list of questions from Fortune, a Shima representative repeated that the firm had warehoused investments through “affiliated” entities, including ShimaB, and had transferred the investments to Shima’s new funds. 

The minutes and representative’s responses, however, do not include any indication that the firm ever disclosed the ShimaB arrangement to its investors, nor do they reflect that Gao was moving their funds around in his own name rather than through Shima. What’s more, due to assignment restrictions for many of the investments, it is unclear whether Shima would even be able to transfer all of the investments back to the firm.

Beyond disgruntled investors, Shima’s compliance issues could also have legal ramifications for Gao and his company. According to the lawyer Hess, the apparent conflict of interest violations could create a host of problems with the SEC if Shima did not disclose the questionable arrangements during examinations. He added that enforcement penalties could range from fines to Shima losing its investor adviser status, although he didn’t think it would rise to the level of fraud. 

Despite the ignominious track record, Shima continues to actively participate in deals. Investors are flooding back into crypto, with memecoins like the popular Dogwifhat rallying alongside regulatory wins in the U.S. In April, Shima was listed as an investor in a token round for the new blockchain of another dog-themed coin, Shiba Inu. 

Gao may not be an anomaly in crypto. Still, for an industry trying to shed its unruly reputation, he serves as a cautionary tale for investors seeking to avoid the stumbles of the last bull cycle.  



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Macron’s ‘irresponsible’ snap election casts shadow over Olympics

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Emmanuel Macron’s move to call snap elections has cast a shadow over the Paris Olympic Games, raising the possibility of political unrest and a far-right government in charge of the world’s biggest sporting event.

The far-right Rassemblement National (RN) is projected to become the biggest parliamentary party after the run-off vote on Sunday. While a hung parliament appears the most likely outcome, if the RN were to win a majority, its 28-year-old party chief Jordan Bardella could be prime minister when the Games open on July 26, with his team greeting top athletes and dignitaries from across the world.

The timing of Macron’s decision to dissolve parliament was “catastrophic for the Games”, said Pascal Boniface, head of Paris-based think-tank Iris and an expert on the politics of sport. “We are in the thickest of fog over the future.”

Pierre Rabadan, a senior official responsible for Olympics planning in the Paris mayoralty of Socialist Anne Hidalgo, told the Financial Times he was “stupefied” by Macron’s “irresponsible” decision.

While he said the main strategic decisions had already been made, the move had raised “pragmatic and operational questions”, including deploying mayoral staff and city police for both the elections and the Games.

“We had thought about all the possible scenarios, except for the dissolution of the Assembly,” added Rabadan, a former professional rugby player with Stade Français.

Security experts had already warned of big policing challenges for the opening ceremony, in which thousands of athletes will sail down the River Seine watched by around 300,000 spectators along the quays. Pressure on security services would further be aggravated if anti-RN protesters were to take to the streets, they said.

People gather at Republique to protest against the far-right which came out strongly ahead in first round legislative elections
Demonstrators in Paris protest against the far right after Rassemblement National came out ahead in a first-round vote © Louise Delmotte/AP

Rabadan said his main concern now was the image of France that a far-right government, with an anti-immigration and nativist policy platform, would present.

“The Games are about welcoming the entire world and showing that we are an open country,” Rabadan said. “That clearly goes completely against what the Rassemblement National wants.”

Hidalgo told France 2 on Tuesday that “the party would not be spoiled” by an RN government.

But dozens of athletes have voiced concerns about the elections. Prior to the first round, French football star and captain of the national team Kylian Mbappé called on the electorate to vote “against the extremists”, while almost 300 sportspeople, including Rabadan, signed a column in French sports publication L’Equipe opposing the RN.

“In my memory, I have never seen athletes engage to this extent in the political field,” said Boniface.

Macron’s sports minister Amélie Oudéa-Castera told journalists ahead of the first round that despite the extensive preparations for the Olympics, an RN majority would mean far-right politicians with no experience in national government would still have to make important decisions “in a geopolitical context that is difficult, delicate and tense”.

Bardella has said he would not change the officials running the Games.

Guy Drut, a former 110m hurdles Olympic champion and sports minister under President Jacques Chirac, and one of the few athletes to publicly back the RN campaign, told Le Monde: “There is no reason the Games would go badly under an RN government.”

Scattered protests were held against the RN after the first-round vote. Paris police commissioner Laurent Nuñez told France Inter that the authorities were ready for further unrest but that this would not interrupt the Games.

“We’re preparing for this type of protest and we will have an extremely large [presence] in the Greater Paris region of 45,000 officers to manage [disorder],” he said.

In a further potential risk to smooth running, four unions representing airport management staff have threatened to strike in pursuit of “a uniform and fair bonus” for working during the event. Police, air traffic controllers, rubbish collectors and train and bus staff have already been promised bonuses.

Despite his confidence that policing and organisation were well in hand, Rabadan lamented the impact of the elections on the build-up. “There is very, very strong enthusiasm and popular support,” he said. “But the president’s decision . . . has put a stop to that rise in excitement we were hoping for, so that’s really quite disappointing.”



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Hong Kong’s IPO market is set to improve over the next five years

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Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing celebrates the 24th anniversary of its listing on June 21, 2024.

China News Service | China News Service | Getty Images

BEIJING — The market for initial public offerings in Hong Kong is set to improve significantly over the next five years, starting in the second half of this year, George Chan, global IPO leader at EY, told CNBC in an interview Wednesday.

“I think it will take a couple years to go back to the peak [in 2021] but the trend is there,” Chan said. “I can see the light at the end of the tunnel.”

High U.S. interest rates, regulatory scrutiny, slower economic growth and U.S.-China tensions have constrained Greater China IPOs in the last three years.

EY said in a report that while the volume of IPOs and proceeds in the U.S. increased significantly in the first half of 2024 compared to the same period a year ago, mainland China and Hong Kong saw a sharp decline in listings.

Many of the macro trends are now starting to turn around, which can support more IPOs in Hong Kong, said Chan, who is based in Shanghai.

“We are seeing a reversing trend,” he told CNBC. “We are seeing more of these [U.S. dollar] funds, they are moving back to Hong Kong. The main reason is that Hong Kong has already factored in these uncertainties.”

The Hang Seng Index is up more than 5% year-to-date after four straight years of decline — which was the worst such losing streak in the history of the index, according to Wind Information.

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“Our HK cap markets team is very busy and has a strong pipeline for H2.  We expect to see many HKSE listings,” Marcia Ellis, global co-chair of private equity practice at Morrison Foerster in Hong Kong, said in an email Wednesday.

Many companies that were waiting for a listing in mainland China’s A share market have decided to switch to one in Hong Kong, she said. “Previously [China Securities Regulatory Commission] approval was slowing things down but recently our team has gotten CSRC approvals pretty quickly.” 

In June, China issued new measures to promote venture capital, and authorities spoke publicly about supporting IPOs, especially in Hong Kong. Investors and analysts said they are now looking at the speed of IPO approvals for signs of a significant change.

Chan said another supportive factor for Hong Kong IPOs is that many of the companies listed in the market are based in mainland China, where economic growth is “quite satisfactory.”

He expects consumer companies could be among the near-term IPO beneficiaries.

“As the economy slowly recovers, a lot of people in China are willing to spend,” he said, noting that was especially the case in less developed parts of the country.

Official national-level data have showed that retail sales are growing more slowly in China — up by just 3.7% in May from a year ago versus growth of nearly 10% or more in prior years.

Also significant for global asset allocation, the U.S. Federal Reserve and other major central banks are pulling back from aggressive interest rate hikes. High rates have made Treasury bonds a more attractive investment for many institutions instead of IPOs.

“I would say if the interest rate can be further cut down, 1% maybe, that would have a significant effect on the IPO market,” Chan said.

Hong Kong IPOs raised $1.5 billion during the first half of the year, a 34% drop from a year ago, EY said in a report released late last month. Back in 2021 and 2020, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange saw nearly 100 or more IPOs a year raising tens of billions of dollars, according to the report.

In comparison, mainland China IPOs raised $4.6 billion in the first six months of 2024 — a drop of 85% from the year-ago period, according to EY.

HKEX CEO aims for more large-scale IPOs this year

Bonnie Chan, CEO of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited, said during a conference last week that so far this year, the Hong Kong exchange has received 73 new listing applications — a 50% increase compared to the second half of last year. She is not related to EY’s George Chan.

“The pipeline is building up nicely,” she said, noting about 110 IPOs in total are in line for a Hong Kong listing. “All we need is a set of good market conditions so these things get to launch and price nicely,” she added.

Improving post-IPO performance

“What we need is a strong pipeline,” EY’s Chan said. “We need an interested investor with the money to invest, and we need a good aftermarket performance.”

Hong Kong IPO returns are improving. The average first-day return of new listings on the Hong Kong stock exchange in the first half of 2024 was 24%, far more than the average of 1% in the same period last year, according to EY.

“The aftermarket performance of Hong Kong IPOs has been doing quite good compared to the past five years,” Chan said. “These things added together are projecting an upward trend for the Hong Kong market [in the] next 5 years.”

Chan said he expects the number of deals to pick up in the second half of 2024.

Goldman Sachs says it remains positive on Hong Kong capital markets activity

He said those will likely be medium-sized — between 2 billion Hong Kong dollars to 5 billion Hong Kong dollars ($260 million to $640 million) — but added he expects better market momentum in 2025.

Slowing economic growth and geopolitical uncertainty have also weighed on early-stage investment into Chinese startups.

Total venture funding from foreign investors into Greater China deals plunged to $19 billion in 2023, down from $67 billion in 2021, according to Preqin, an alternative assets research firm.

U.S. investors have not participated in the largest deals in recent years, while investors from Greater China have remained involved, the firm said in a report last month.

U.S. IPO outlook

As for IPOs of China-based companies in the U.S., EY’s Chan said he expects current scrutiny on the listings to be “temporary,” although data security rules would remain a hurdle.

In early 2023, the China Securities Regulatory Commission formalized new rules that require domestic companies to comply with national security measures and the personal data protection law before going public overseas. A China-based company with more than 1 million users must pass Beijing’s cybersecurity review to list overseas.

“As time goes on, when people are more familiar with the Chinese [securities regulator] approval process and they are more become comfortable with geopolitical tensions, more of the large companies … would consider [the] U.S. market as their final destination,” Chan said.

“When the time comes I think the institutional investors would be interested in these sizeable Chinese companies, as they pretty much want to make money.”

He declined to comment on specific IPOs, and said certain high-profile listing plans are “isolated incidents.”

Chinese ride-hailing company Didi, which delisted from New York in 2021, has denied reports it plans to list in Hong Kong next year. Fast-fashion company Shein, which does most of its manufacturing in China, is trying to list in London following criticism in the U.S., according to a CNBC report.



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Microsoft hack affected Veterans Affairs and State Departments, government says

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The US Department of Veterans Affairs and an arm of the US State Department are among a growing list of Microsoft Corp. customers that have acknowledged they were impacted by a breach of the technology giant that was blamed on Russian state-sponsored hackers.

The US Agency for Global Media, part of the State Department that provides news and information in countries where the press is restricted, was notified “a couple months ago” by Microsoft that some of its data may have been stolen, a spokesperson said in an emailed statement. No security or personally identifiable sensitive data was compromised, the spokesperson said.

The agency is working closely with the Department of Homeland Security on the incident, the spokesperson said, declining to answer additional questions. A State Department spokesperson said, “We are aware that Microsoft is reaching out to agencies, both affected and unaffected, in the spirit of transparency.”

Microsoft disclosed in January that a Russian hacking group it calls Midnight Blizzard had accessed corporate email accounts and later warned that they were attempting to use secrets shared between the technology giant and its customers. The company has declined to identify the customers who were impacted.

“As our investigation continues, we have been reaching out to customers to notify them if they had corresponded with a Microsoft corporate email account that was accessed,” a Microsoft spokesperson said on Wednesday. “We will continue to coordinate, support and assist our customers in taking mitigating measures.”

In addition, the Department of Veterans Affairs was notified in March that it was impacted the Microsoft breach, officials for the agency said.

A one-second intrusion

The hackers used a single set of stolen credentials — found in the emails they accessed — to break into a test environment in the VA’s Microsoft Cloud account around January, the officials said, adding that the intrusion lasted for one second. Midnight Blizzard likely intended to check if the credentials were valid, presumably with the larger intention of breaching the VA’s network, the officials said. 

The agency changed the exposed credentials, along with log-in details across their Microsoft environments, once they were notified of the intrusion, they said. After reviewing the emails that the hackers accessed, the VA determined that no additional credentials or sensitive email was taken, the officials said.

Terrence Hayes, the VA’s press secretary, said an investigation is continuing to determine any additional impact.

The Peace Corps was also contacted by Microsoft and notified about the Midnight Blizzard breach, according to a statement from its press office. “Based on this notification, Peace Corps technical staff were able to mitigate the vulnerability,” according to the agency. The Peace Corps declined further comment.

Bloomberg News asked other federal agencies for comment, and none of the others disclosed that they were impacted by Midnight Blizzard’s attack on Microsoft. Bloomberg previously reported that more than a dozen Texas state agencies and public universities were exposed by the Russian hack.

Midnight Blizzard, also known in cybersecurity circles as “Cozy Bear” and “APT29,” is part of Russia’s foreign intelligence service, according to US and UK authorities. 

In April, US federal agencies were ordered to analyze emails, reset compromise passwords and work to secure Microsoft cloud accounts amid fears that Midnight Blizzard may have accessed correspondence. Microsoft has been notifying some customers in the months since then that their emails with the tech giant were accessed by the Russian hackers.

The Midnight Blizzard breach was one in a series of high-profile and damaging security failures at the Redmond, Washington-based technology company, which has drawn strong condemnation by the US government. Microsoft President Brad Smith appeared before Congress last month where he acknowledged security failures and vowed to improve the company’s operations. 



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