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Tag: FTX

  • Bill Ackman denies defending Sam Bankman-Fried, says FTX fiasco ‘egregious’ case of ‘gross negligence’ at a minimum

    Bill Ackman denies defending Sam Bankman-Fried, says FTX fiasco ‘egregious’ case of ‘gross negligence’ at a minimum

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    Bill Ackman said Saturday that his recent comments on Sam Bankman-Fried were misinterpreted. 

    Ackman, founder and chief executive officer of Pershing Square Capital Management LP, faced criticism after he tweeted on Nov. 30 that he believed SBF, as the founder of crypto exchange FTX is known, was telling the truth at the New York Times Dealbook Summit. Bankman-Fried denied trying to perpetrate a fraud, while acknowledging many errors at the helm of the company. 

    FTX imploded last month after the exchange revealed an $8 billion hole in its balance sheet, fueling questions about whether it mishandled customer funds. Since then Bankman-Fried has embarked on an apology tour, accepting that his company broke its own rules but denying fraud. 

    Ackman said Saturday that the collapse of FTX is “at a minimum, the most egregious, large-scale case of business gross negligence that I have observed in my career.” Still, the hedge fund manager said Bankman-Fried could have “civil rather than criminal liability” if he has told the truth.  

    Our new weekly Impact Report newsletter will examine how ESG news and trends are shaping the roles and responsibilities of today’s executives—and how they can best navigate those challenges. Subscribe here.

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    Susanne Barton, Bloomberg

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  • Bill Ackman says he sees why FTX victims want Sam Bankman-Fried to ‘suffer’ severe consequences ‘including jail time’

    Bill Ackman says he sees why FTX victims want Sam Bankman-Fried to ‘suffer’ severe consequences ‘including jail time’

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    Hedge-fund titan Bill Ackman appears to be walking back comments he made via Twitter last week about Sam Bankman-Fried that some interpreted as implicit support for the 30-something who presided over one of the most epic bankruptcies in financial markets in recent memory.

    Last week, Ackman tweeted that Bankman-Fried’s statements made during a widely watched interview, streamed to New York from the crypto founder’s location in the Bahamas, was “believable.”

    “Many have interpreted my tweet to mean that I am defending SBF or somehow supporting him. Nothing could be further from the truth,” Ackman wrote Saturday, referring to Bankman-Fried by his initials SBF.

    Ackman went on to describe the implosion of Bankman-Fried’s crypto exchange FTX, and some of its associated businesses, as “at a minimum, the most egregious, large-scale case of business gross negligence that I have observed in my career.”

    Check out: The Sam Bankman-Fried roadshow rolls on: 10 crazy things the FTX founder has just said

    Ackman, who is the chief executive of Pershing Square Capital, a prominent investor in traditional markets, and an advocate of crypto, last week, tweeted this message following the widely watched interview of Bankman-Fried at the New York Times Dealbook Summit:

    “Call me crazy, but I think SBF is telling the truth.”

    Ackman has been chastised by some for seemingly offering verbal succor to a person who some have accused of, at the least, an epic mismanagement of client assets.

    Speaking against the wishes of his lawyers, Bankman-Fried on Wednesday, during the Dealbook interview, admitted to making mistakes but said that he never intended to mingle client funds with those of the firm to make leveraged bets on crypto via hedge fund Alameda Research, which he founded before he started FTX.

    “I didn’t know exactly what was going on,” Bankman said at the time.

    At least one response to Ackman’s Saturday tweet, questioned whether the hedge funder might be responding to blowback from his own clients.

    It isn’t the first time that Ackman has cast Bankman-Fried’s actions in a positive light. As the implosion of FTX was unfolding, Ackman said, in a now-deleted tweet, that he’d never before seen a CEO take responsibility as the crypto exchange operator did and that he wanted to give him “credit” for his actions. “It reflects well on him and the possibility of a more favorable outcome” for FTX, he wrote.

    On Saturday, one Twitter user asked Ackman if had any ties to Bankman-Fried, which the investor bluntly said he doesn’t.

    Bankman-Fried had been viewed as a financial darling inside and outside the crypto industry until his empire collapsed on Nov. 11 and it was revealed that affiliated hedge fund Alameda lost billions in FTX client money in leveraged crypto bets.

    John Ray, the new chief executive of FTX, in a filing to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, described the state of the crypto platform “as a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information.” 

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  • Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong says it’s ‘baffling’ FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried isn’t ‘in custody already’

    Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong says it’s ‘baffling’ FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried isn’t ‘in custody already’

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    FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried should be in custody by now, as far as Brian Armstrong is concerned. The Coinbase CEO said this week it’s “baffling to me why he’s not in custody already.”

    “The DOJ or somebody should be able to make—just based on his public statements, I think there’s a very open and shut case for fraud,” Armstrong said at the a16z crypto Founder Summit on Tuesday. He added, “I’m not an expert on this, but the people I talk to seem to agree on that.”

    Armstrong also questioned why the media has refrained from calling Bankman-Fried a criminal. 

    “I think we were all pretty shocked to see the scope of the fraud that happened at FTX. And let’s call it a fraud. We have to call it what it actually is. It’s been pretty bizarre that mainstream media hasn’t really come out and said, ‘This guy’s a criminal.’ Maybe they want to wait until he’s actually indicted or something like that, and in custody. But it seems very clear at this point that that’s the case.”

    FTX imploded in spectacular fashion last month, surprising many inside and outside the crypto sector. The $32 billion exchange had established itself as a leader in the field, having enlisted star athletes like Tom Brady and other celebrities to bolster its image. Its collapse shook confidence in the crypto sector and spurred calls for tighter regulation.

    Bankman-Fried resigned as FTX CEO on Nov. 11, the same day that the company, along with affiliated trading arm Alameda Research, filed for bankruptcy. A key accusation leveled against Bankman-Fried is that he used customer funds from his crypto exchange to fund risky bets at Alameda Research. 

    Armstrong’s Coinbase, like FTX, is a cryptocurrency exchange. But whereas Bankman-Fried based FTX in the Bahamas—where he reportedly enjoyed an extravagant penthouse lifestyle—Coinbase is a public company in the U.S.

    “You can to read our financial statements,” Armstrong said. “They’re audited by a third party, you don’t have to trust us. All the customer funds are segregated. We don’t invest any customer funds without their explicit direction.” 

    ‘People will go to jail’

    Armstrong was not the only crypto luminary sharing harsh views of Bankman-Fried this week. Mike Novogratz, CEO of crypto firm Galaxy Digital Holdings, told Bloomberg TV on Thursday, “Sam and his cohorts perpetuated a fraud. They used customer money to make bets that he ‘poorly risk managed’ after he made them.”

    “The problem was, he took our money,” Novogratz added. “And so he needs to get prosecuted. People will go to jail, and should go to jail.”

    Shares in Coinbase and Canada-listed Galaxy Digital both plunged more than 25% last month, exacerbating an already brutal “crypto winter.” Coinbase shares have fallen roughly 80% this year, erasing about $44 billion in value. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said this week, “I actually believe most of the companies are not going to be around,” referring to the beleaguered crypto sector.  

    Last week Mark Cuban, billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks and a prominent crypto investor, told TMZ that Bankman-Fried should be worried about prison time.

    “I don’t know all the details, but if I were him, I’d be afraid of going to jail for a long time,” he said. “It sure sounds bad. I’ve actually talked to the guy, and I thought he was smart, but boy, I had no idea he was going to, you know, take other people’s money and put it to his personal use. Yeah, that sure…seems like what happened.”

    Armstrong lamented the fact that the crypto sector attracts an inordinate number of bad actors. 

    “We have to kind of come to terms as an industry with the fact that, I think our industry is attracting a disproportionate share of fraudsters and scammers. And that’s really unfortunate. That doesn’t mean it’s representative of the whole industry. ”

    Our new weekly Impact Report newsletter will examine how ESG news and trends are shaping the roles and responsibilities of today’s executives—and how they can best navigate those challenges. Subscribe here.

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    Steve Mollman

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  • The FTX Ponzi: Uncovering The Largest Fraud In Crypto History

    The FTX Ponzi: Uncovering The Largest Fraud In Crypto History

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    The below is an excerpt from the Bitcoin Magazine Pro report on the rise and fall of FTX. To read and download the entire 30-page report, follow this link.

    The Beginnings

    Where did it all start for Sam Bankman-Fried? As the story goes, Bankman-Fried, a former international ETF trader at Jane Street Capital, stumbled upon the nascent bitcoin/cryptocurrency markets in 2017 and was shocked at the amount of “risk-free” arbitrage opportunity that existed.

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    Dylan LeClair And Sam Rule

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  • US authorities asking FTX investors for information on firm, Sam Bankman-Fried

    US authorities asking FTX investors for information on firm, Sam Bankman-Fried

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    US authorities are asking crypto investors and trading firms who worked closely with FTX to hand over information on the company and its key figures including Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.

    The US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York recently sent out a series of requests, asking recipients to hand over information on a list of FTX employees and associates, the report said, citing people familiar with the case.

    Attorneys from the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division also sent similar requests for information to companies that invested in or traded on FTX, the report added.

    The regulator is trying to get a better sense of what FTX representatives told investors and whether any misrepresentations were made that would violate securities laws, according to the report.

    The US Department of Justice’s bankruptcy watchdog earlier on Thursday called for an independent investigation into the collapse of crypto exchange FTX.

    FTX’s downfall will be examined in several more congressional hearings this month, with the House Financial Services Committee set to hold the first in a series of meetings on Dec. 13.

    Last month, newly-appointed FTX CEO John Ray had said in a US court filing that there was flawed regulatory oversight and a lack of corporate control of the bankrupt crypto exchange founded by Sam Bankman-Fried.

    US Attorney’s Office for SDNY, SEC, FTX, and Caroline Ellison did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. Bankman-Fried could not be immediately reached.

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  • Sen. Sherrod Brown Urges Janet Yellen To Develop Legislation To Regulate Crypto Industry Following FTX Implosion

    Sen. Sherrod Brown Urges Janet Yellen To Develop Legislation To Regulate Crypto Industry Following FTX Implosion

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    Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) made a plea to the Treasury Department on Wednesday to draft legislation that would set up surveillance and regulatory measures over the crypto industry following the collapse of FTX.

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  • Sam Bankman-Fried Says FTX Had A ‘Bad Month,’ But He Didn’t Try To Defraud Anyone

    Sam Bankman-Fried Says FTX Had A ‘Bad Month,’ But He Didn’t Try To Defraud Anyone

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    Sam Bankman-Fried, the former head of the massive cryptocurrency exchange FTX, said he had a “bad month” but didn’t intend to defraud anyone before the company collapsed earlier this month.

    He spoke at The New York Times DealBook Summit on Wednesday, saying he was speaking out about his remarkable downfall against legal advice.

    “I did not try to commit fraud on anyone,” Bankman-Fried, appearing via video conference from the Bahamas, told the Times summit. “I was excited about FTX a month ago. … I substantially underestimated what the scale of the market crash could look like and the speed of it.”

    The crypto world was stunned in November when FTX, valued at its peak at about $32 billion, effectively imploded overnight, filing for bankruptcy and leaving more than a million creditors behind. Investigators are looking into allegations that FTX used billions of dollars in customer funds to bankroll a sister company, Alameda Research. Those claims began to concern investors in recent weeks, setting off a bank run that led to the collapse and massive questions about how a crypto darling could practically disappear in less than a week.

    Bankruptcy filings show FTX owes more than $3 billion to creditors.

    Bankman-Fried resigned from his role at FTX and said Wednesday that he had “close to nothing” left, a brisk fall from grace for the 30-year-old mogul who was once hailed by philanthropists, lawmakers and investors as a technologic wunderkind. He personally donated tens of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    He said Wednesday that he didn’t “knowingly” commingle funds between FTX and Alameda Research, saying that, despite running the company and founding the trading firm, “I didn’t know what was going on.”

    “A lot of the things were things I learned over the last month,” Bankman-Fried told the summit. “Look, I screwed up. I was the CEO of FTX. I say this again and again. That means I had a responsibility. We messed up big.”

    FTX’s downfall reflects wider concerns about the crypto industry, which surged during the pandemic during a Wild West investment boom with little to no regulation. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently said the fall of FTX was the industry’s “Lehman moment,” saying crypto needed oversight and was now big enough to cause “substantial harm” to investors.

    Bankman-Fried said, while he was “shocked” by FTX’s collapse, he was focused on restoring funds to customers.

    “I have a duty to explain what happened, and I have a duty to try to help,” he said during the DealBook summit. “What matters here is all the customers and stakeholders that got hurt and to help them out. What happens to me is not the important part.”

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  • FTX US Donated $1 Million To PAC Linked To Mitch McConnell Before Bankruptcy

    FTX US Donated $1 Million To PAC Linked To Mitch McConnell Before Bankruptcy

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    Cryptocurrency exchange FTX US donated $1 million to a super PAC linked to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) just weeks before the parent company declared bankruptcy early this month, shorting clients, creditors and investors out of billions of dollars, Bloomberg first reported Saturday.

    The political contribution can be seen in the Senate Leadership Fund political action committee’s latest filing with the Federal Election Commission. The super PAC, which is aligned with McConnell and supports GOP Senate candidates, was the biggest spender ($239 million) in the midterm elections, according to OpenSecrets.

    The payment was made Oct. 27 by West Realm Shires Services Inc., which does business as FTX US. Just weeks later, more than 100 FTX-related companies, including the U.S. operation — which had been one of the largest financial exchanges in the world — filed for bankruptcy.

    The Washington Post called the implosion of FTX, which had been valued earlier this year at $32 billion, “one of the fastest meltdowns of wealth in modern history.” The $23 billion personal fortune of American CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, who founded FTX, reportedly evaporated in a week.

    Lawyers have estimated that more than a million people or businesses have lost money. The top 50 creditors alone are facing more than $3 billion in losses.

    FTX lawyer James Bromley said at a bankruptcy hearing last Tuesday that Bankman-Fried, who resigned earlier this month, had treated the company as his “personal fiefdom” before it fell apart, according to the Post. “The emperor had no clothes,” he said.

    The FTX companies and executives reportedly had easy access to customer accounts. Only “a fraction” of clients’ money has been located and secured since the bankruptcy was declared, the Post noted.

    “Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information,” FTX’s new chief, John Ray III, said in a bankruptcy filing. Ray once oversaw the liquidation of Enron, one of America’s most notorious corporate frauds.

    Yet before the meltdown, Bankman-Fried, who founded FTX, donated close to $39 million to Democratic candidates in the midterm elections, according to FEC records. One of his top lieutenants, Ryan Salame, gave $23.6 million, mostly to Republicans, Bloomberg reported.

    FTX US also gave $750,000 to the Congressional Leadership Fund, $150,000 to the American Patriots, and $100,000 to the Alabama Conservatives Fund, all of which supported Republican congressional races, according to Bloomberg.

    It’s unclear whether any of the money could be clawed back as part of the bankruptcy court ruling.

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  • Understanding The Rise And Fall Of FTX, FTT And Alameda Research

    Understanding The Rise And Fall Of FTX, FTT And Alameda Research

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    The rise and fall of FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried revealed holes in the crypto space that industry peers, the media, and government officials either chose to overlook or refused to question further.

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  • How The FTX Collapse Could Leave Blockfolio Users Exposed

    How The FTX Collapse Could Leave Blockfolio Users Exposed

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    This is an opinion editorial by Morgan Rockwell, founder of Bitcoin Kinetics.

    I’m not concerned with Sam Bankman-Fried allegedly getting a loan from Alameda, which was actually FTX customer funds wired through Alameda to be credited on FTX. I’m not concerned with the moral compass of the celebrity investors who gave billions to a kid they didn’t really know or understand, yet endorsed with wealth and credibility. I’m not very concerned with the financial and market effects upon the many companies, exchanges and traders who for some reason depended on FTX in any form.

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    Morgan Rockwell

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  • FTX User Sues Golden State Warriors For Promoting Crypto Platform

    FTX User Sues Golden State Warriors For Promoting Crypto Platform

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    The Golden State Warriors were named in a lawsuit Monday alleging the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX used the reigning NBA champions to fraudulently promote its platform.

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  • New FTX CEO John Ray III Says Crypto Firm’s Failure Worse Than Enron

    New FTX CEO John Ray III Says Crypto Firm’s Failure Worse Than Enron

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    John Ray III presided over the Enron bankruptcy, so he knows what a toxically troubled company looks like. That’s why Ray’s declaration that the bankrupt crypto exchange FTX was the result of “a complete failure of corporate controls” carries heavy weight.


    L: James Nielsen | R: Bloomberg || Getty Images

    In a 30-page FTX Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing submitted to a Delaware court Thursday, Ray also stated that an autopsy of the exchange’s records revealed “a complete absence of trustworthy financial information” and “compromised systems integrity and faulty regulatory oversight.”

    He was just getting started. In this “unprecedented” situation, Ray wrote, there was a “concentration of control in the hands of a very small group of inexperienced, unsophisticated and potentially compromised individuals.” Later in the document, he described FTX’s sloppy security in searing terms:

    Unacceptable management practices included the use of an unsecured group email account as the root user to access confidential private keys and critically sensitive data for the FTX Group companies around the world, the absence of daily reconciliation of positions on the blockchain, the use of software to conceal the misuse of customer funds, the secret exemption of Alameda from certain aspects of FTX.com’s auto-liquidation protocol, and the absence of independent governance as between Alameda (owned 90% by Mr. Bankman-Fried and 10% by Mr. Wang) and the Dotcom Silo (in which third parties had invested).

    Near the end of the declaration, Ray’s words seemed to make it clear that FTX’s actions under founder and former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried weren’t merely incompetence, writing, “One of the most pervasive failures of the FTX.com business in particular is the absence of lasting records of decision-making.”

    “Mr. Bankman-Fried often communicated by using applications that were set to autodelete after a short period of time,” according to Ray, “and encouraged employees to do the same.”

    Debtors, Ray said, did write things down. And in his position as the new CEO, the attorney has begun an investigation led by himself and a team that includes “a former Director of Enforcement at the SEC, a former Director of Enforcement at the CFTC, and a former Chief of the Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.”

    This is all in addition to investigations reportedly underway by the Dept. of Justice and the Securities Exchange Commission.

    It may not be surprising to learn that in an interview with Vox, Sam Bankman-Fried reportedly revealed that he wished his company had been more careful with its accounting, he believes regulators “make everything worse,” and he regrets filing for Chapter 11.

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    Steve Huff

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  • Crypto Bros Down – And Larry David, Tom Brady, and Gisele Are Getting Sued

    Crypto Bros Down – And Larry David, Tom Brady, and Gisele Are Getting Sued

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    The tech industry is having a tough time. Only months ago, those who were bragging about their hot tech jobs and (seemingly) hyper-performing Crypto portfolios are probably screaming, crying, gnashing their teeth, and throwing up. And they may or may not be unemployed.


    First, the recession is obliterating the stock market as we speak. Then, the summer Crypto proved the “decentralized marketplace” isn’t as impervious as Crypto nerds claimed. And now, the entire tech industry is facing a serious reckoning. It’s meltdown season — and Mercury isn’t even in retrograde.

    First, Elon Musk bought Twitter. He subsequently fired a staggering number of employees. He then instituted Twitter Blue, a verification subscription which was a spectacular FAILURE. Most notably, causing the stock price of every significant insulin company to plummet by BILLIONS. It’s a long story, but the takeaway: the best $8 some random Twitter user ever spent.

    Meanwhile, major tech companies like Meta, Salesforce, Redfin — and more — have been laying off thousands of employees. Wave after wave of layoffs are tearing through the entire tech sector, leaving thousands bamboozled and bereft. And this — alllll this — is happening while Jeff Bezos is giving away his money to Dolly Parton. I love her, but she has a theme park. These people don’t have jobs!

    But this is nothing compared to the drama going on at former-Crypto giant FTX. And somehow, Tom Brady and Gisele are implicated!?! First, the divorce, now this.

    Here’s a simplified version of events — and you don’t even need to understand crypto to follow along.

    The Super Bowl: The true origins can be traced back to the Super Bowl, where much ad time was devoted to emergent crypto companies vying for the attention of potential investors. Among them: FTX.

    January 2022: FTX was valued at an estimated $32 billion. They even had an NBA stadium named after them in Miami. But most prominently, their now infamous Super Bowl ad starring Larry David, who had never appeared in a commercial before. Just imagine that shoot. You should’ve stuck to your guns, Larry.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BH5-rSxilxo
    Don’t Miss Out on Crypto: Larry David FTX Commercial

    www.youtube.com

    Nov 2: The real drama started — as it always does — with some shady trades. CoinDesk published a report that exposed that Alameda Research – owned by the same people as FTX – had bought a ton of FTT … FTX’s cryptocurrency.

    Nov 6: In a Tweet, the founder of Binance — one of FTX’s biggest competitors — said their company was going to dump their FTX tokens “due to recent revelations that have came to light.” Investors panicked and followed suit. And so began the FTT price plummet.

    But with all their investors cashing in their coins, FTX was on the hook for all that money — which it could not afford to pay out. This is when things started to look really hairy.

    Nov 8: With their tails between their legs, FTX went to Binance for an out. Binance agreed to acquire FTX.

    Nov 9: Just kidding! Whatever was in those docs must have scared off Binance because they pulled out of the deal just a day later. Does this feel like an episode of Succession to you, too?

    Nov. 11: FTX had no way to repay all this money. And any potential buys were not going anywhere near this dumpster fire. So FTX was forced to file for bankruptcy. 30-year-old CEO and founder Sam Bankman-Fried resigned.

    He tweeted that he was “really sorry,” though! SO maybe that counts for something. Cue the world’s tiniest violin playing in the background.


    But there’s more!

    Later that day, reports emerged that FTX transferred $10 BILLION to Alameda — the same sister company mentioned above. That’s right, the one that started this mess — sparking controversy about how much access top leaders had to the company’s finances.

    Nov 13: Where’s the money? New reports reveal that those BILLIONS of dollars had just … disappeared?

    Nov 14: Now the cops are involved. Where the hell is the money, man? Regulators are trying to get to the bottom of this, while looking into criminal liabilities.

    Nov 16: Here comes the class action. Defendants are suing FTX’s Bankman-Fried for misleading information. But the walls are now closing in on celebrities who appeared in FTX commercials, including Tom Brady, Gisele Bundchen, Stephen Curry, Larry David, and Shaquille O’Neal.

    “FTX’s fraudulent scheme was designed to take advantage of unsophisticated investors from across the country, who utilize mobile apps to make their investments,” the lawsuit alleges. “As a result, American consumers collectively sustained over $11 billion dollars in damages.”

    There you have it. But don’t hold your breath — there’s more to come, I’m sure. In fact, the documentary is already in the works

    And if you still don’t follow, here are some TikToks tracking the drama:

    @yourrichbff

    SBF bears a striking resemblance to Bernard Madoff. #money #crypto #ftx #finance #sbf #news #binance #alameda #bitcoin #ethereum #ftt #coin #cryptocurrency

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    LKC

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  • FTX Exchange Release Day One Bankruptcy Filing: “Complete Failure”

    FTX Exchange Release Day One Bankruptcy Filing: “Complete Failure”

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    FTX Exchange, following the collapse of its business, has filed its first day declaration in bankruptcy court citing a “complete failure of corporate controls,” per a court filing.

    John J. Ray III, the newly appointed CEO of FTX Exchange, addressed the many issues facing FTX Exchange and the lack of leadership exhibited by Sam Bankman-Fried and other executives previously in charge of the company.

    “Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here,” said Ray. “From compromised systems integrity and faulty regulatory oversight abroad, to the concentration of control in the hands of a very small group of inexperienced, unsophisticated and potentially compromised individuals, this situation is unprecedented.”

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    Shawn Amick

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  • The Crypto Contagion Intensifies With More Dominoes To Fall

    The Crypto Contagion Intensifies With More Dominoes To Fall

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    The below is an excerpt from a recent edition of Bitcoin Magazine Pro, Bitcoin Magazine’s premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, subscribe now.

    We’re currently in the middle of the industry contagion and market panic taking shape. Although FTX and Alameda have fallen, many more players across funds, market makers, exchanges, miners and other businesses will follow suit. This is a similar playbook to what we’ve seen before in the previous crash sparked by Luna, except that this one will be more impactful to the market. This is the proper cleansing and washout from the misallocation of capital, speculation and excessive leverage that come with the global economic liquidity tide going back out.

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    Dylan LeClair And Sam Rule

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  • FTX’s Collapse Reveals Deeper Questions About Bitcoin Adoption Versus Speculation

    FTX’s Collapse Reveals Deeper Questions About Bitcoin Adoption Versus Speculation

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    This is an opinion editorial by Brooks Lockett, a freelance writer and Bitcoiner who fell down the rabbit hole in 2018.

    I long for the day when savers outnumber speculators on this planet. And the FTX saga has shown us that we’re nowhere close to that dream.

    Still, the future remains bright. This article attempts to identify the psychological forces underpinning the recent FTX crash, and provide insight into how we can create information that hooks newcomers directly onto the bitcoin standard and helps them avoid getting entangled with the siren call of altcoins.

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    Brooks Lockett

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  • FTX And Bitcoin: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly

    FTX And Bitcoin: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly

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    This is an opinion editorial by Mickey Koss, a West Point graduate with a degree in economics. He spent four years in the infantry before transitioning to the Finance Corps.

    When one of the Bitcoin Magazine editors reached out to ask what I thought the FTX collapse meant for bitcoin, my first instinct was simply, “Tick-tock next block.” 

    But after some reflection I think it’s hard to cover this scenario in a one dimensional view.

    For whatever reason, my mind immediately went to an old Clint Eastwood movie, “The Good, The Bad And The Ugly,” which conveniently creates the perfect framing for my thoughts on this still-unraveling predicament.

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    Mickey Koss

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  • Genesis Global Capital Halts Bitcoin, Crypto Withdrawals

    Genesis Global Capital Halts Bitcoin, Crypto Withdrawals

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    Cryptocurrency lender Genesis Global Capital has paused withdrawals and loan applications following the collapse of FTX Exchange, per a tweet from Genesis Trading.

    Genesis Global Capital boasts an institutional clientele with over $2.8 billion in active loans.

    Genesis Trading operates as the broker arm of Genesis Capital and is independently operated and capitalized from the broader lending institution, interim CEO Derar Islim said. However, Islim did state that trading operations and custody services currently remain operational.

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    Shawn Amick

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  • The Red Flags On FTX We All Seemed To Miss

    The Red Flags On FTX We All Seemed To Miss

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    As the autopsy of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire begins, it’s worth saying that there were red flags all over the place. We missed them.

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  • Bitcoin Helps Users Avoid The Downfall Of FTX

    Bitcoin Helps Users Avoid The Downfall Of FTX

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    This is an opinion editorial by Heather Everdeen, a mother, Bitcoiner and lifelong learner.

    Dear Friends and Family,

    The thing I want you to understand about FTX is that these are fiat problems, not Bitcoin problems. Bitcoin is unaffected aside from its fiat currency exchange rate. The bitcoin price is impacted because of all the pressure on these exchanges and funds to sell their assets. Bitcoin is one of the most liquid assets there is; it’s easy to sell immediately when you have to. There is still a new block approximately every 10 minutes. Bitcoin keeps running, unaffected.

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    Heather Everdeen

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