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FTX could pay over $2,100 per hour for bankruptcy lawyers

By Dietrich Knauth and Andrew Goudsward

(Reuters) – Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX has asked a U.S. bankruptcy judge for permission to pay its top restructuring lawyers as much as $2,165 per hour, an unusually high rate for a company that cannot afford to repay all of its debts.

FTX declared bankruptcy on Nov. 11, collapsing amid a wave of customer withdrawals. Federal prosecutors have charged founder Sam Bankman-Fried with stealing billions of dollars in FTX customer assets to plug losses at his hedge fund, Alameda Research, and two of his former associates have already pleaded guilty. Bankman-Fried is scheduled to be arraigned in New York on Thursday.

New York-based law firm Sullivan & Cromwell is representing FTX in its Chapter 11 case and guiding its efforts to return assets to customers. FTX late Wednesday asked the Delaware federal judge overseeing the case for approval to pay the firm’s partners and special counsel between $1,575 and $2,165 per hour for their work.

The top lawyers’ rates far exceed the $1,300 per hour billed by FTX’s new CEO John Ray, who also filed an application with the court late Wednesday.

Court-approved billing rates for bankruptcy attorneys did not cross the $2,000-per-hour mark until earlier this year, when a U.S. bankruptcy judge approved a $2,035-per-hour fee in the bankruptcy of cosmetics giant Revlon.

Bankruptcy experts have said total legal fees in a case as complex as FTX can exceed $100 million.

Bankman-Fried criticized Sullivan & Cromwell in draft congressional testimony he planned to deliver before his Dec. 12 arrest, claiming he was pressured into filing for bankruptcy at least in part because the case would deliver large legal fees.

Sullivan & Cromwell did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Before FTX’s bankruptcy, Sullivan & Cromwell represented the company in U.S. regulatory inquiries and on potential acquisitions, including its proposed acquisition of bankrupt crypto lender Voyager Digital. The firm was paid $8.56 million for that pre-bankruptcy legal work.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth and Andrew Goudsward; Editing by David Bario and Nick Zieminski)

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U.S. SEC heightening scrutiny of auditors’ crypto work – WSJ

(Reuters) – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is heightening the scrutiny of the work audit firms do for cryptocurrency companies, a senior official of the regulator told the Wall Street Journal on Thursday.

“We’re warning investors to be very wary of some of the claims that are being made by crypto companies,” said Paul Munter, SEC’s acting chief accountant in an interview with the journal.

The SEC did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the report.

The development comes as the implosion of FTX has rippled across the industry, hobbling liquidity at firms with exposure to what was once one of the world’s biggest crypto exchanges, and has prompted investigations by regulators in several countries.

Last month, FTX filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection and its founder Sam Bankman-Fried resigned as chief executive, after rival exchange Binance walked away from a proposed acquisition.

Several crypto firms have since been bracing for a fallout from the FTX collapse, with many counting their exposure in millions to the beleaguered exchange.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

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Two Bankman-Fried associates plead guilty to fraud, as FTX founder heads to U.S

By Luc Cohen, Jared Higgs and Jack Queen

NEW YORK/NASSAU (Reuters) – FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried left the Bahamas on Wednesday on a U.S.-bound flight to face fraud charges as federal prosecutors announced that two of his former associates had pleaded guilty to charges and were now cooperating with the government.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a video posted on Twitter late Wednesday night that Caroline Ellison, former CEO of Alameda Research, and Gary Wang, co-founder of FTX, had pleaded guilty to defrauding investors in the crypto trading platform.

The revelation that two of Bankman-Fried’s closest former associates had decided to cooperate with the government significantly ramped up pressure on the former billionaire.

Williams said that Bankman-Fried is now in FBI custody and on his way to the U.S and urged others involved in the alleged fraud to come forward.

“If you participated in misconduct at FTX or Alameda, now is the time to get ahead of it,” William said. “We are moving quickly and our patience is not eternal.”

“I also said that last week’s announcement would not be our last, and let me be clear once again, neither is today’s,” he added.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in a separate statement on Wednesday evening said it had also charged Ellison and Wang for their roles in a multiyear scheme to defraud equity investors of FTX.

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission also said it had filed fraud charges against Ellison and Wang.

An attorney for Ellison did not respond immediately to request for comment.

“Gary has accepted responsibility for his actions and takes seriously his obligations as a cooperating witness,” Ilan Graff, a lawyer for Wang, said in a statement.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan last week charged Bankman-Fried with stealing billions of dollars in FTX customer assets to plug losses at his hedge fund, Alameda Research, in what U.S. Attorney Williams called “one of the biggest financial frauds in American history.”

The 30-year-old cryptocurrency mogul has acknowledged risk-management failures at FTX, but has said he does not believe he has criminal liability.

A spokesman for Bankman-Fried’s legal team declined to comment.

Bankman-Fried rode a crypto boom to become a billionaire several times over and an influential U.S. political donor, before FTX’s crash wiped out his wealth and tarnished his reputation. The collapse was driven by a wave of customer withdrawals amid concerns over commingling of funds with Alameda.

The announcement from Williams and the SEC came just hours after Bankman-Fried took off from The Bahamas after he consented at a courthouse to be extradited to the United States.

Bankman-Fried is likely to appear before a U.S. federal court in Manhattan on Thursday. At his court appearance, known as an arraignment, he is expected to be asked to enter a plea. The U.S. judge would determine whether to grant him bail, and if so, on what conditions.

He is expected to be arraigned on the eight counts he faces, including wire fraud, money laundering, and campaign finance violations.

Bankman-Fried was arrested on a U.S. extradition request last week in The Bahamas, where he lives and where FTX is based. He initially said he would contest extradition, but Reuters and other outlets reported over the weekend that he would reverse that decision.

He agreed to extradition in part out of a “desire to make the relevant customers whole,” according to an affidavit read in court on Wednesday and dated Dec. 20.

Dressed in a suit, Bankman-Fried stepped up to the witness box in court, where he spoke clearly and steadily as he was sworn in.

“Yes, I do wish to waive my right to such formal extradition proceedings,” he told Judge Shaka Serville.

Bankman-Fried’s defense lawyer, Jerone Roberts, said his client was “anxious to leave.”

The judge said he was satisfied that and that Bankman-Fried had not been “forced, coerced or threatened” into making the extradition decision.

The $32 billion exchange declared bankruptcy on Nov. 11, and Bankman-Fried stepped down as CEO the same day.

(This story has been refiled to fix the byline)

(Reporting by Jared Higgs, Jack Queen, Marco Bello and Maria Alejandra Cardona in Nassau, and by Jasper Ward in Washington; Additional reporting and writing by Luc Cohen in New York and Noeleen Walder; Editing by Amy Stevens, Noeleen Walder, Megan Davies, Nick Zieminski, Anna Driver, Matthew Lewis and Sam Holmes)

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Two top executives plead guilty in connection with FTX collapse -U.S. prosecutor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. authorities on Wednesday said they have charged Caroline Ellison, the former CEO of Alameda Research, and Gary Wang, the former chief technology officer of FTX Trading Ltd, for their roles in the alleged fraud that contributed to FTX’s collapse.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a video statement that both Wang and Ellison have pleaded guilty to the charges and have agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in a separate statement said it has also charged Ellison and Wang for their roles in a multi-year scheme to defraud equity investors of FTX.

(Reporting by Chris Prentice; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

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Cryptoverse: Bye-bye to the year that broke bitcoin

By Tom Wilson, Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) – Bitcoin staggered into 2022. It ends the year slumped in an alleyway, robbed of its cocktail of cheap money and leveraged bets, shunned by the establishment.

The preeminent cryptocurrency has lost 60% of its value, while the wider crypto market has shrunk by $1.4 trillion, squashed by rising interest rates, vanishing risk appetite and corporate collapses including Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX.

Crypto funds have seen net inflows of $498 million in 2022, versus $9.1 billion in 2021, according to data from digital asset manager CoinShares, reflecting how mainstream finance has steered clear of the market through its annus horribilis.

James Malcolm, head of FX strategy at UBS, said that in the first half of the year he had spent 70% of his time with clients talking crypto. By contrast, during 10 days in North America last month, from Montreal to Miami, “I spent less than 2% of my time discussing crypto”.

Even last year, before the decline began in November, cryptocurrencies were realistically seen as two or three years away from winning acceptance from mainstream institutional investors, Malcolm added.

“Now it’s completely in the far, distant future.”

GRAPHIC: How Fed’s decision affected crypto? (https://www.reuters.com/graphics/FINTECH-CRYPTO/WEEKLY/zgpobbjnovd/chart.png)

CRYPTO OPTIMIST FOR 2023?

It hasn’t been all bad for crypto, though: 2022 was also the year the Ethereum blockchain finally pulled off its “Merge” mega-upgrade, which moved it to a less energy-intensive “proof of stake” system in September.

“This event was a technological feat and one of the lone positive events in a year that otherwise has been rather dark for crypto,” said Anthony Georgiades, co-founder of the Pastel Network blockchain.

“These upgrades will make the Ethereum ecosystem far easier to use for people all around the world. Because of all this progress, it’s hard not to be a crypto optimist going into 2023.”

Ben McMillan, chief investment officer at IDX Digital Assets, said the rising popularity of blockchain-based tools including decentralized exchanges and decentralized finance had also been an important development this year.

“So that is very bullish for the ecosystem and something to keep an eye on long-term,” he added. “We could see bigger allocations to digital assets once risk appetite resumes in 2023.”

GRAPHIC: Crypto’s correction (https://www.reuters.com/graphics/FINTECH-CRYPTO/WEEKLY/movakkyqova/chart.png)

BITCOIN MEETS A RECESSION

Bitcoin hit a record high of $69,000 in November 2021, with the crypto market touching $3 trillion, buoyed by fiscal and monetary stimulus from countries around the world trying to ward off the economic damage from COVID lockdowns.

But as societies reopened, surging inflation forced central banks to tighten rates and led to investors fleeing higher-risk assets – tech stocks and cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin, long-heralded as a handy store of value in times of inflation because of its limited supply, flopped during the test, with investors turning to tried-and-tested havens such as the dollar as rates went up. It fell by about a third in January, outpacing an 8% fall for U.S. stocks.

“2022 was a new environment for digital assets. They’ve never been around in a recession or a rising-rates environment,” said Katie Talati, director of research at digital asset firm Arca.

YEAR THE BUBBLE POPPED

As investors pulled money from crypto, major projects came under strain. The first to crack was terraUSD, supposedly a “stablecoin”, and its sister luna. The coins sank in value in May, with investors globally losing an estimated $42 billion..

The shockwaves reverberated through the market: U.S. crypto lender Celsius froze customer assets in June and revealed a $1.2 billion hole as it declared bankruptcy. Singapore-based crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital went bust the same month.

Bitcoin and other tokens took a hammering, slumping by over half in just 49 days from the end of May. On a single day in June, bitcoin fell over 15%, its worst day since March 2020 when COVID chaos roiled financial markets.

But the biggest crypto shock was yet to come.

In November, major exchange FTX crashed into sudden bankruptcy. Bitcoin fell by a quarter in less than four days as Bankman-Fried scrambled for funds to bail his exchange out.

The cryptocurrency is now hovering around $16,000. All in all, 2022 has pretty much been a crypto calamity.

Or, as economist Noelle Acheson puts it, “the year in which the leverage-inflated bubble popped, revealing the structural weaknesses of an industry that had grown too big, too fast”.

* Roll on 2023? Cryptoverse will be back on Jan. 10

(Reporting by Tom Wilson in London and Medha Singh and Lisa Mattackal in Bangalore; Editing by Pravin Char)

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Cryptocurrencies at crossroads after annus horribilis

By Vidya Ranganathan

SINGAPORE (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.

The market value of the 22,000-odd tokens and coins is now at less than a third of the peak $3 trillion in November 2021, and many of them are comatose, if not outright dead.

That’s been a brutal reality check for an industry that kicked 2022 off with dreams of widespread mainstream institutional adoption, of bitcoin supplanting even gold as the world’s inflation hedge, as well as endorsements from the likes of Tesla Inc chief Elon Musk and the wild celebration of billion-dollar non-fungible tokens.

Not only did cryptocurrencies get slammed by the Fed’s uber hawkishness, their slide also triggered the crash of a stablecoin called TerraUSD, that then wrought a ‘Lehman moment’ as funds and brokers such as Celsius and Voyager went bankrupt.

What some saw as the final nail in the crypto coffin was the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX exchange last month.

WHY IT MATTERS

Unlike in 2017, when bitcoin crashed just as spectacularly, there are far fewer diehard crypto buffs predicting a bounce this time.

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.

The European Central Bank reckons bitcoin’s modest bounce this month is an “artificially induced last gasp before the road to irrelevance”.

Indeed, the one extenuating factor this year has been how mainstream finance has mostly escaped contagion. The excesses, the uncontrolled lending and fudging of billions of dollars have happened overwhelmingly within the crypto ecosystem.

At the same time, the idea that decentralised finance and private crypto coins can operate in the shadows of the traditional banking system, and thrive, now appears delusional.

As retail and institutional investors lose trust in crypto operators, a host of policymaker voices and even crypto barons are joining U.S. SEC Chair Gary Gensler in calling for regulation.

WHAT DOES 2023 HOLD?

UBS strategist James Malcolm points to the increasing correlation between cryptocurrencies and micro-cap U.S. stocks as testament to how bitcoin and other tokens could survive on the fringes, as a niche, diverse asset in investment portfolios.

“It’s wrong to say this thing is going to curl up and die completely because there are elements of it which can be useful in other areas, and there is probably a modest cryptocurrency market which will continue to thrive on the margin of financial markets,” he says.

Yet, the sort of regulation that investors need to feel safe dealing with crypto brokers and exchanges, be it transparency or capital adequacy, could take months, if not years to implement.

“Some asset managers are looking at this as a 10-15 year journey to digital assets becoming fully mainstream,” Morgan Stanley said in a note summarising the bank’s discussions with the crypto industry.

Next year could meanwhile see traditional financial world use the crypto malaise to up its game: snap up platforms and assets in the blockchain world, issue tokenised bonds and stocks or maybe even roll out more central bank digital currencies.

As UBS’s Malcolm says, it might just go to show that crypto was meant to be more “an evolutionary than a revolutionary development in financial markets.”

Explore the Reuters round-up of news stories that dominated the year, and the outlook for 2023.

(Editing by Lincoln Feast)

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FTX’s Bankman-Fried signs extradition papers as Wednesday hearing looms

By Maria Alejandra Cardona and Jared Higgs

NASSAU (Reuters) – FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has signed legal papers paving the way for his extradition from The Bahamas to the United States, where he faces fraud charges over the cryptocurrency exchange’s collapse, a Bahamas official said on Tuesday.

Doan Cleare, The Bahamas’ acting commissioner of Corrections, told Reuters the documents were signed around noon on Tuesday. A hearing in Bankman-Fried’s case will take place on Wednesday at 11 a.m. EST (1600 GMT), a court official told Reuters.

Wednesday’s proceeding could set the stage for the 30-year-old cryptocurrency mogul to depart the Caribbean nation, after several days of confusion about the status of Bankman-Fried’s extradition.

A U.S.-based lawyer for Bankman-Fried did not respond to requests for comment. A person familiar with the matter said Bankman-Fried intends to consent to extradition. Bankman-Fried has acknowledged risk-management failures at FTX, but has said he does not believe he has criminal liability.

A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan declined to comment.

Bankman-Fried was arrested last week in The Bahamas, where he lives and where FTX was based, after a grand jury sitting in Manhattan federal court indicted him for allegedly stealing customer funds to plug losses at Alameda Research, his crypto hedge fund.

He initially told a Bahamas court he would contest extradition, but Reuters and other outlets reported over the weekend that he would reverse his decision.

During a court hearing on Monday at which Bankman-Fried appeared, his local defense lawyer Jerone Roberts said he had not been informed of the purpose of the proceeding. He later said that while his client had seen an affidavit laying out the charges against him, he wanted to access the complete indictment before agreeing to extradition.

Earlier on Tuesday, Roberts declined to comment as he departed Magistrate Court in capital Nassau. U.S. embassy officials earlier entered the courthouse, a Reuters witness said, but Bankman-Fried was not seen on Tuesday.

FALL FROM GRACE

The arrest capped a stunning fall from grace for Bankman-Fried, who rode a boom in the values of bitcoin and other digital assets to become a billionaire several times over.

He has been under increasing scrutiny since early November, when customers raced to withdraw funds from FTX amid concerns over commingling of their assets with Alameda.

Damian Williams, the top federal prosecutor in New York City, said last week that Bankman-Fried’s actions amounted to “one of the biggest financial frauds in American history.”

The $32 billion exchange declared bankruptcy on Nov. 11, and Bankman-Fried stepped down as CEO the same day.

He has since been detained at The Bahamas Department of Corrections in Nassau, formerly known as Fox Hill prison. The U.S. State Department in a 2021 report described conditions at the facility as “harsh,” citing overcrowding, rodent infestation and prisoners relying on buckets as toilets.

Local authorities say conditions have since improved.

(Reporting by Maria Alejandra Cardona, Marco Bello and Jared Higgs in Nassau; Additional reporting and writing by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Nick Zieminski, Lisa Shumaker and Matthew Lewis)

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FTX’S Bankman-Fried’s lawyer departs courthouse in Bahamas – Reuters witness

(Reuters) – A lawyer for Sam Bankman-Fried departed a court in the Bahamas on Tuesday and the founder of the failed FTX crypto exchange was not seen at the court, according to a Reuters witness, after a source said Bankman-Fried was prepared to return to the United States to face fraud charges. (This story has been refiled to fix the spelling of ‘lawyer’ in the first paragraph)

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware)

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ProPublica to return $1.6 million received from Sam Bankman-Fried’s foundation

(Reuters) – Non-profit investigative news outlet ProPublica will return $1.6 million it received from the family foundation of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, according to a staff memo seen by Reuters on Tuesday.

The funds will be moved to a separate account until a bankruptcy judge or other legal authority decides where the money should be returned, the memo showed.

“It does not seem appropriate to keep these funds,” said executives at ProPublica in the memo, the content of which were first reported by Axios.

ProPublica also said it had terminated its relationship with the foundation, called ‘Building a Stronger Future’.

Last month, FTX filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection and Bankman-Fried resigned as chief executive, after rival cryptocurrency exchange Binance walked away from a proposed acquisition.

Bankman-Fried faces fraud charges over the company’s collapse in the United States. While he has acknowledged risk-management failures at FTX, he believes he has no criminal liability.

Meanwhile, several crypto firms are bracing for a hit from the FTX collapse as they have exposure in millions to the beleaguered exchange.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)

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Yen jumps 2.8% to 4-month peak after hawkish BOJ policy tweak

By Kevin Buckland

TOKYO (Reuters) – The yen surged against the dollar on Tuesday after the Bank of Japan said it would review its yield curve control policy and widened the trading band for the 10-year government bond yield in an unexpected hawkish tweak.

Japan’s central bank said the policy board decided unanimously to review the operation of its yield curve control, which pins short-term yields at -0.1% and the long-term yield around zero, amid a decline in market function.

While it kept broad policy settings unchanged, it widened the allowable band for the 10-year JGB yield to 50 basis points either side of zero, from 25 basis points.

The dollar tumbled as much as 2.78% to 133.11 yen, a level last seen on Aug. 16.

The dollar had been slightly stronger versus the yen ahead of the policy announcement.

Eyes will now be trained on BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s media briefing later in the day for additional hints about a pivot away from ultra-easy policy.

Most BOJ watchers had expected no change in policy until his 10-year term ends at the end of March.

========================================================

Currency bid prices at 0316 GMT

Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid

Previous Change

Session

Euro/Dollar

$1.0642 $1.0608 +0.32% -6.39% +1.0653 +1.0598

Dollar/Yen

133.1600 136.9600 -2.71% +15.85% +137.4600 +133.2500

Euro/Yen

141.74 145.20 -2.38% +8.76% +145.8200 +141.7300

Dollar/Swiss

0.9256 0.9286 -0.30% +1.49% +0.9308 +0.9257

Sterling/Dollar

1.2206 1.2146 +0.53% -9.72% +1.2222 +1.2142

Dollar/Canadian

1.3627 1.3654 -0.16% +7.82% +1.3657 +1.3616

Aussie/Dollar

0.6724 0.6699 +0.38% -7.50% +0.6743 +0.6687

NZ

Dollar/Dollar 0.6384 0.6364 +0.30% -6.74% +0.6395 +0.6333

All spots

Tokyo spots

Europe spots

Volatilities

Tokyo Forex market info from BOJ

(Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Sam Holmes and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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Australian stock exchange’s blockchain failure burns market trust

By Byron Kaye

SYDNEY (Reuters) – In a Sydney hotel conference room in May, Tim Hogben, the head of securities and payments for ASX Ltd, which runs the Australian stock exchange, told traders, share registry operators and clearing house representatives what they were hoping to hear.

A rebuild of the exchange’s aging software using blockchain-based technology was largely ready after seven years of development, putting ASX on the verge of a world-first transformation that would enable it to boost trading volumes and compete more aggressively with global rivals.

“Ninety-six percent of the software is currently in an operating-and-test environment. That 96% of that software is working,” Hogben told a Stockbrokers and Investment Advisers Association conference, in footage seen by Reuters. “If it wasn’t working, you’d be hearing about it, let me tell you.”

In November, ASX abandoned the project, citing dysfunctional management, concerns about the product’s complexity and scalability, and difficulty finding experts to support it. The axing came after new CEO Helen Lofthouse commissioned an Accenture review that found the rebuild was just 63% delivered and almost half the code needed to be rewritten.

More than a dozen brokers, other market participants and people directly involved in the blockchain project told Reuters the failure had shaken trust in the Australian exchange operator. Some expressed dismay over the time and costs they contributed to the doomed endeavour and ASX’s repeat assurances that all was well with the upgrade, which had faced five delays since an initially scheduled 2020 launch.

The experience also raised questions of a mismatch between the promises and reality of the technology that underpins cryptocurrencies. Use of a distributed ledger in Australia’s critical financial infrastructure would have been one of the most significant applications of blockchain-based systems in a mainstream corporate setting.

“The ASX could have chosen a steady and stable clearing and settlement system (but) chose a cutting edge, bleeding edge technology that was unproven, untried,” said Michael Somes, general counsel of Cboe Australia, a securities and derivatives exchange involved in the project.

“ASX’s choices have resulted in one of the biggest critical service stuff-ups seen in financial markets globally.” On top of the A$245-A$255 million ($164-171 million) charge ASX plans to take for the debacle, market players estimate that together they spent about that again preparing for the rollout, including on software upgrades, airfares and employee hours spent attending webinars and consultations. At a parliamentary hearing this month, ASX apologised for the failure but denied misleading the market or regulators. Chairman Damian Roche, when asked by lawmakers about a statement in the company’s 2021 annual report that the project had “moved from the design and build phase to testing and delivery”, said the claim referred to “functional” parts of the software, not “non-functional” parts like security and scalability.

An ASX spokesperson told Reuters in an email that the company gave project updates based on the latest available information and some challenges “only became apparent as we reached the latter stages”.

SCOPE CREEP

ASX’s quest to replace its platform that facilitates trades — known as CHESS, for Clearing House Electronic Subregister System — began under then-CEO Elmer Funke Kupper in 2015, when there was global fascination with cryptocurrency and blockchain.

After New York startup Digital Asset Holdings showed ASX executives a test transaction on its blockchain software, ASX in early 2016 signed the little-known company to begin exploratory work on an overhaul. ASX bought a 5% stake in Digital Asset.

Two months later Funke Kupper quit over bribery allegations relating to a previous role; he was cleared. ASX pressed on with the rebuild, and raised its holding in Digital Asset to 8.5%. Under Funke Kupper’s successor, Dominic Stevens, the exchange operator went from no market consultation to extensive consultation, a person involved in the project told Reuters on the condition of anonymity because of concerns about professional repercussions.

The scope also widened. From an initial plan to run about 12 of CHESS’s 400 data transfers per transaction on blockchain, ASX decided the new system would include all 400 transfers, the person said.

People working on the project raised concerns that Digital Asset lacked after-market support and that the ASX had enlisted the company without testing its product for scalability, the person said, adding that the worries went unaddressed. Ultimately, ASX had 300 people working on the CHESS replacement project, about one-third of its headcount.

“To try and put something that’s not been tried and tested into Australia I think was pretty unwise,” said William Slack, managing director of Morrison Securities, which had two staff partly allocated to the ASX project and three or four staff at every ASX consultation for several years.

Funke Kupper did not respond to requests for comment. Efforts to reach Stevens were not successful. When he announced his retirement in February, he told the Australian Financial Review that his successor would find the blockchain project delivered and working, and that “the next stage is swap over”.

When CHESS went live in 1994, it was seen as innovative because it combined trading, clearing and settlement on one platform. But over time it became outdated and harder to maintain. When a surge in trading in March 2020 led regulators to cap trades because of processing delays, the Reserve Bank of Australia said replacing CHESS “with more modern technology is critical”.

Yet by seeking to replicate all CHESS functions on a single system, ASX risked undermining an advantage of blockchain, which was to reduce contact points that slow processing, people involved in the project said.

“It would have been easier, I guess, to just build a new version of CHESS in some other modern language, rather than blockchain,” said Ramy Aziz, a former ASX chief financial officer who oversaw budgets, governance and timetables related to the project in its initial stages.

“Maybe blockchain needs to develop a bit more before it’s capable of doing what they want it to do for CHESS. Maybe it’ll never be able to do it.”

Digital Asset declined to comment beyond a statement on its website agreeing with a part of Accenture’s report that highlighted “the need for consistent business requirements (and) simplification in the solution design”.

“Clear requirements, alignment on the objectives and manageable milestones with defined success criteria are paramount,” it said.

The ASX spokesperson told Reuters that distributed ledger technology could be transformational and the company chose Digital Asset after a “robust global” search.

Soon after ASX shelved the project, A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S and IBM ended a blockchain-enabled shipping platform, citing a lack of global cooperation.

FALLOUT Recriminations were swift. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission, which regulates the exchange, called the belated disclosure of problems “unsatisfactory” and demanded ASX commission a special report explaining its plans for CHESS, while the Reserve Bank of Australia called the failure “very disappointing”. Lawmakers want to expand ASIC’s powers over the ASX.

Morgan Stanley analysts cut their valuation of ASX shares by 10%, citing strategic uncertainties.

ASX users, meanwhile, want compensation for time and money lost to a project they say they couldn’t opt out of.

“The public announcements by the ASX over that journey certainly have come to be shown not to be accurate, some might say misleading,” said Daniel Spokes, director of client support services for Morgans, a Brisbane brokerage. Vendors that invested in the technology should “have some sort of right to compensation”, he said.

The CEO of a small broker which runs its own trading software, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid harming relations with the exchange, told Reuters he employed four software developers full-time for three years, at a cost of more than A$1 million, to keep up with ASX’s frequent update requirements.

The RBA and ASIC have said they expect ASX to cover industry write-downs associated with the failure. The ASX spokesperson said the company was “very aware of the investment customers and other stakeholders have made already (and) we will bear this in mind as we consider what work can be leveraged into a new solution”.

The exchange had “offered rebates to customers in the past”, the spokesperson added, without elaborating.

For some firms, the cost was hard to measure. One of the biggest third-party trading providers, FinClear Pty Ltd, postponed integrating its software system with that of a company it bought in 2021 based on one abortive ASX changeover date.

“It’s what it’s meant in terms of our decision-making process around other technology projects that are all interconnected,” said FinClear CEO David Ferrall.

“ASX have probably, whether inadvertently or deliberately, misled the market. I’d like to think inadvertently.”

Chris Burrell, managing director of Burrell Stockbroking, said he had employees who delayed retirement after learning of the project’s launch schedule, “and then the dates came and got pushed out”.

In the aftermath, ASX must still determine how to update its core platform. Its spokesperson told Reuters there was “no off-the-shelf solution available to meet the needs of the Australian market”.

Aziz predicted the exchange would tread more carefully on its next try.

“They’ll probably go and build just a new version of CHESS on a normal programming language, not within blockchain,” he said. “That’s all they can do really.”

(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by David Crawshaw)

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Special Report-Binance’s books are a black box, filings show, as crypto giant tries to rally confidence

By Tom Wilson, Angus Berwick and Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON (Reuters) – The world’s biggest crypto exchange, Binance, is battling to shore up confidence after a surge in customer withdrawals and a steep drop in the value of its digital token.

The exchange said it dealt with net outflows of around $6 billion over 72 hours last week “without breaking stride” because its finances are solid and “we take our responsibility as a custodian seriously.” After the collapse of rival exchange FTX last month, Binance’s founder Changpeng Zhao promised his company would “lead by example” in embracing transparency.

Yet a Reuters analysis of Binance’s corporate filings shows that the core of the business – the giant Binance.com exchange that has processed trades worth over $22 trillion this year – remains mostly hidden from public view.

Binance declines to say where Binance.com is based. It doesn’t disclose basic financial information such as revenue, profit and cash reserves. The company has its own crypto coin, but doesn’t reveal what role it plays on its balance sheet. It lends customers money against their crypto assets and lets them trade on margin, with borrowed funds. But it doesn’t detail how big those bets are, how exposed Binance is to that risk, or the full extent of its reserves to finance withdrawals.

Binance is not required to publish detailed financial statements because it is not a public company, unlike U.S. rival Coinbase, which is listed on the Nasdaq. Nor has Binance raised outside capital since 2018, industry data show, which means it hasn’t had to share financial information with external investors since then.

And as Reuters reported in October, Binance has actively avoided oversight. Zhao approved a plan by lieutenants to “insulate” Binance’s main operation from U.S. regulatory scrutiny by setting up a new American exchange, according to company messages and interviews with former employees, advisers and business associates. Zhao denied signing off on the plan and said the unit was set up with advice from top law firms.

Binance’s huge role in the crypto market – it accounts for over half of all trading volume – has made its operations a keen topic of interest for U.S. regulators. The company is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department for possible money-laundering and sanctions violations, and Reuters reported this month that some prosecutors believe they have gathered sufficient evidence to charge Binance and some top executives.

In an effort to look inside Binance’s books, Reuters reviewed filings by Binance units in 14 jurisdictions where the exchange on its website says it has “regulatory licenses, registrations, authorisations and approvals.” These locations include several European Union states, Dubai and Canada. Zhao has described the authorisations as milestones in Binance’s “journey to being fully licensed and regulated around the world.”

The filings show that these units appear to have submitted scant information about Binance’s business to authorities. The public filings do not show, for example, how much money flows between the units and the main Binance.com exchange. The Reuters analysis also found that several of the units appear to have little activity.

Former regulators and ex-Binance executives say these local businesses serve as window dressing for the main unregulated exchange.

“They are co-opting the nomenclature of regulation to create a veneer of legitimacy,” said John Reed Stark, a former chief of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s Office of Internet Enforcement. Stark said Binance’s operations were more opaque even than those of FTX. “There is absolutely no transparency, no sunlight, no confirmation of any kind about its financial position.”

Binance Chief Strategy Officer Patrick Hillmann said the Reuters analysis of the units’ filings in the 14 jurisdictions was “categorically false.” “The amount of corporate and financial information that has to be disclosed to regulators in those markets is immense, often requiring a six-month-long disclosure process,” he said. “We are a private company and are not required to publicize our corporate finances,” he continued, comparing the exchange to privately-held firms such as U.S. candy maker Mars. In a statement, Mars said it was “absurd” to compare its corporate governance and financial reporting requirements with Binance’s, adding that its goods and services are “highly regulated.”

Hillmann also noted that FTX’s founder stands accused by U.S. authorities of fraud. If those allegations are true, he said, “it would have been fraud regardless of what regulations were in place.”

PIECES OF A JIGSAW

Binance’s surge in outflows last week was attributed by analysts to concern over how crypto exchanges hold user funds and the Reuters report on the DOJ investigation. The exchange also halted withdrawals of some crypto tokens. On Friday, Binance’s attempts to reassure investors were set back when an accounting firm it hired to verify its reserves suspended all work for crypto firms.

There are glimpses of Binance’s finances in public comments by Zhao, past company statements, blockchain data and venture capital deals.

Binance has said it has over 120 million users. Its trading volumes totalled $34 trillion in 2021, Zhao said in June. He told an interviewer last month that “90-something percent” of Binance’s revenues depend on crypto trading. The company is profitable and has “fairly large cash reserves,” he added. Binance has made over 150 venture investments totalling $1.9 billion since 2018, according to PitchBook data. Zhao also created a $1 billion fund to invest in struggling crypto companies after the fall of FTX.

Reliable estimates of Binance’s trading-dependent revenues are scarce, however, despite the public availability of trading volume data.

Binance charges fees of up to 0.1% on spot trades, with a more complex fee structure for derivatives. On spot trading volume of $4.6 trillion in the year to October, Binance may have earned revenue of up to $4.6 billion, Reuters calculated, based on data from researcher CryptoCompare. Charging fees of up to 0.04% on its derivatives volumes of $16 trillion, Binance may have earned revenues of up to $6.4 billion.

John Todaro, a senior analyst covering crypto and blockchain firms at U.S. investment bank and asset manager Needham & Company, and Joseph Edwards, an independent investment consultant, said the Reuters calculations appeared to be in the right range. Binance’s promotions such as zero-fee trading and other discounts may mean the revenues were lower, Edwards said. A third crypto analyst who declined to be named also agreed with the figures.

Binance’s Hillmann did not comment on the Reuters estimates. “The vast majority of our revenue is made on transaction fees,” he said, adding that the exchange has been able to “accumulate large corporate reserves” by keeping expenses down. Binance’s “capital structure is debt free” and the company keeps its money made from fees separate from the assets it buys and holds for users, Hillmann said.

Binance allows users to deposit collateral in the form of crypto and borrow funds to leverage the value of their derivatives trades by as much as 125 times. For the user, this can lead to huge gains or huge losses. Hillmann said Binance backs all user deposits for derivatives and spot trading with its own reserves at a ratio of one to one – meaning deposits should be secure and easy to withdraw. Binance, he said, has strict liquidation protocols that sell off users’ positions if their losses exceed their collateral’s value. If users’ positions become negative “due to extreme market volatility,” Binance has “very-well capitalized” insurance funds to cover the deficit, he said. Hillmann did not provide specifics and Reuters could not independently verify all of his statements.

Asked about the scale of any losses at the exchange this year, Hillmann said: “Binance’s risk department manages what is one of the industry’s most risk-averse programs. This protects our users and our platform.”

The guarding of Binance’s financial information by Zhao, a Canadian citizen who was born and raised in China, echoes the strict culture of secrecy he has enforced throughout his company’s rise, the Reuters report in October showed. The article was one of a series of reports this year by the news agency on Binance’s financial compliance and relationship with regulators across the world.

Even Binance’s former chief financial officer, Wei Zhou, did not have access to the company’s full accounts during his three-year tenure, according to two people who worked with him. Zhou, who left last year, did not respond to requests for comment.

“FULL TRANSPARENCY”

Zhao and other executives have consistently declined to publicly identify which entity controls the main exchange. But in a private court submission filed in 2020 in an arbitration case in the Cayman Islands, Chief Compliance Officer Samuel Lim said it is owned and operated by a Cayman Islands company, Binance Holdings Limited.

This year, Binance has won licenses or approvals from authorities in locations including France, Spain, Italy and Dubai. Zhao lauded these advances, saying in May that Binance’s registration as a crypto service provider in Italy would allow it to operate “in full transparency.” Yet none of the units registered with local regulators provide a clear window into the main Binance exchange, the Reuters analysis showed.

Reuters asked authorities in all 14 jurisdictions about their oversight of Binance’s local units. Of the eight that responded, six – in Spain, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, France and Lithuania – told Reuters their role did not involve supervising the main exchange, and said the units were only required to meet local requirements on reporting suspicious transactions.

Reuters also asked representatives of the local Binance units and affiliates about their relationship with the main Binance exchange. Only one responded, a South African firm called FiveWest. Its managing director, Pierre van Helden, said Cape Town-based FiveWest receives a “minimal yearly license fee” from Binance to facilitate crypto derivatives trading for Binance’s South African users.

“How Binance operates globally is unclear to us,” van Helden said. He added that Zhao’s company was “cooperative” on compliance and said FiveWest has regular meetings to ensure requirements are met.

In Italy, Binance’s public corporate filings detail just the unit’s capital base and its ownership by a separate Binance company in Ireland. The Italian company, Binance Italy S.R.L., has its listed address in a block of shops and apartments in the southern city of Lecce. It did not respond to a request for comment, nor did the Organismo Agenti e Mediatori authority with which it is registered.

Just two of the Binance units analysed by Reuters offer more substantial details in their filings.

One, a Lithuanian firm called Bifinity UAB, offers the most detailed picture. Bifinity described itself in one regulatory filing as the “official fiat-to-crypto payments provider for Binance.” Fiat means dollars, euros and other traditional currencies.

Bifinity also disclosed that Binance and its companies are its “main strategic business partners.” In a 2021 annual report, Bifinity reported 137 million euros ($145 million) in net profit and assets of 816 million euros. Bifinity said it had made payments of 421 million euros to a single related party, with some 185 million euros in “related expenses,” but did not specify whether this party is Binance.

Bifinity, whose annual report said it has 147 employees, does not have a website or publicly provide any contact details. The company’s chief executive, Saulius Galatiltis, did not respond to requests for comment. At its registered address at a business centre in Lithuania’s capital Vilnius, Bifinity is not listed on the tenants’ board.

The other Binance unit that offers more than barebones financial details is in Spain. It registered in July with the Spanish central bank and reported meagre revenue of some 1.5 million euros last year and a profit of just 9,000 euros. Reuters could not reach anyone from the unit, Binance Spain SL, for comment. A reporter visited its registered address, at a co-working space in Madrid. The receptionist said a small Binance Spain team had relocated a month ago, without leaving contact details.

In the Gulf, Binance has won a license or permission this year in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and Dubai. Zhao told Bloomberg in March that he will be based for the “foreseeable future” in Dubai. Filings by Binance’s Dubai entities give no details of its financial activity or its ties to the main Binance platform.

Even for some employees inside the company, such details were unclear.

Binance didn’t disclose global profit figures during its application for a license in Dubai, according to a person with direct knowledge of the application. Nearly all clients in the United Arab Emirates registered with Binance’s main exchange, and until at least late summer the licensed Dubai firm was not experiencing significant trading revenues, the person said.

Reuters was not able to contact the unit, Binance FZE, registered to a WeWork office by the Dubai World Trade Centre. Binance’s Middle East and North Africa head did not respond to a request for comment. Nor did Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority.

“PROOF OF RESERVES”

Many crypto exchanges, including Binance competitors Huobi and OKX, operate from offshore locations such as the Seychelles – as did Bahamas-based FTX. Standards on corporate transparency and financial reporting are typically looser in such jurisdictions than in the United States.

Coinbase, the biggest U.S. exchange, listed on Wall Street in 2021. Like other public companies, it must file audited quarterly earnings statements and annual financial reports. In its latest earnings statement, Coinbase reported data including revenue, profit, cash holdings and trading volumes.

“It’s really night and day,” said Mark Palmer, head of digital assets research at U.S. financial services firm BTIG, of the difference between disclosures by a listed company and other offshore exchanges.

“Coinbase is a publicly traded company and is required to share that information with investors, whereas we are a private company and do not have public investors to whom we are beholden,” Binance’s Hillmann said. “The main reason to go public is to raise money, but as Binance doesn’t need to raise money, there is no need to go public at this time.”

A Coinbase spokesman, Elliott Suthers, said the company’s financials were reviewed quarterly by Deloitte, one of the “Big Four” accounting firms, “so customers don’t have to rely on our word.” “We believe exchanges have a responsibility to share their financials with their customers,” Suthers said. “We encourage other exchanges to take this same approach.”

Some privately held exchanges reveal financial data during fundraising, as did FTX prior to its collapse. Binance, however, has not raised money from outside investors since 2018, according to data from business information provider Crunchbase. “We do not have VC investments, so we don’t owe anybody any money,” Zhao told CNBC on Dec. 15.

U.S. prosecutors last week charged FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried with defrauding equity investors and customers of billions of dollars. It has emerged that money was secretly moving from FTX to Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund, Alameda Research, which functioned as a market maker, a dealer that deepens liquidity by buying and selling the same assets.

Reuters could not determine if Binance or Zhao also own any market-making firms that operate on its platform. In December 2020, the SEC issued a subpoena to Binance.US, the separate American exchange, requesting it provide information about all its market makers, their owners, and their trading activity.

As part of a “commitment to transparency,” Binance last month published on its website a “snapshot” of its holdings of six major tokens and promised to share a complete set of data at an unspecified future date.

Data firm Nansen said the holdings, worth around $70 billion at the time of the Nov. 10 snapshot, had fallen to $54.7 billion by Dec. 17 after withdrawals and price fluctuations. Two “stablecoins” that are pegged to the dollar – Binance’s BUSD and market leader Tether – accounted for almost half of its holdings. Around 9% of the assets were in BNB, its in-house token which Binance itself has issued, the Nansen data showed.

BNB is the fifth-largest crypto coin in circulation with a market value of around $40 billion, industry data show. Holders of the token receive discounts on Binance’s trading fees. Zhao has said that Binance does not use BNB as collateral. Alameda used FTX’s in-house FTT token as collateral when borrowing from FTX and other lenders.

After FTX’s collapse, Zhao said audits of crypto exchanges were not guaranteed to prevent bankruptcies. “More audits are really good, but I’m not sure if they would prevent this particular case,” he told a TechCrunch interviewer.

Zhao told a conference in April that Binance is “fully audited.” Asked by the Financial Times who was auditing Binance’s financial results and balance sheet, Zhao said the company had “multiple auditors in multiple places … I don’t have all of the list in my head.”

He now advocates so-called “proof-of-reserves” checks on the crypto holdings of exchanges. The system is supposed to allow users to confirm that their holdings are included in checks of blockchain data and that the exchange’s reserves match clients’ assets.

Binance hired accounting firm Mazars to check Binance’s bitcoin holdings. The firm examined the holdings as they existed at the end of one day in November. In a Dec. 7 report, Mazars found that Binance’s bitcoin assets exceeded its customer bitcoin liabilities. It said the check, known as an “agreed-upon procedures engagement,” was “not an assurance engagement” in which auditors personally sign off on their attestations of accounts. Nevertheless, Zhao tweeted, “Audited proof of reserves. Transparency.”

Mazars later deleted the webpage containing the report. Its communications director, Josh Voulters, said on Friday it had “paused” its proof-of-reserves checks for crypto firms “due to concerns regarding the way these reports are understood by the public.” Voulters didn’t respond to requests for more detail.

While this checking system offers a degree of insight into an exchange’s reserves, it’s no substitute for a full audit, seven analysts, lawyers and accountancy experts told Reuters.

In offering only a limited snapshot of an exchange’s crypto, the system lacks safeguards, two lawyers said. Others said it could not yield the same level of detail on corporate finances as a traditional audit.

“In terms of the balance sheet from Binance, there really is no colour,” said Todaro, the analyst at Needham & Company.

((reporting by Tom Wilson, Angus Berwick and Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Additional reporting by Mathieu Rosemain in Paris, Andrius Sytas in Vilnius, David Latona in Madrid, and Olzhas Auyezov in Almaty; editing by Janet McBride))

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Insurers shun FTX-linked crypto firms as contagion risk mounts

By Noor Zainab Hussain and Carolyn Cohn

(Reuters) – Insurers are denying or limiting coverage to clients with exposure to bankrupt crypto exchange FTX, leaving digital currency traders and exchanges uninsured for any losses from hacks, theft or lawsuits, several market participants said.

Insurers were already reluctant to underwrite asset and directors and officers (D&O) protection policies for crypto companies because of scant market regulation and the volatile prices of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

Now, the collapse of FTX last month has amplified concerns.

Specialists in the Lloyd’s of London and Bermuda insurance markets are requiring more transparency from crypto companies about their exposure to FTX. The insurers are also proposing broad policy exclusions for any claims arising from the company’s collapse.

Kyle Nichols, president of broker Hugh Wood Canada Ltd, said insurers were requiring clients to fill out a questionnaire asking whether they invested in FTX, or had assets on the exchange.

Lloyd’s of London broker Superscript is giving clients that dealt with FTX a mandatory questionnaire to outline the percentage of their exposure, said Ben Davis, lead for digital assets at Superscript.

“Let’s say the client has 40% of their total assets at FTX that they can’t access, that is either going to be a decline or we’re going to put on an exclusion that limits cover for any claims arising out of their funds held on FTX,” he said.

The exclusions denying payout for any claims arising out of the FTX bankruptcy are found in insurance policies that cover the protection of digital assets and for personal liabilities of directors and officers of companies that deal in crypto, five insurance sources told Reuters. A couple of insurers have been pushing for a broad exclusion to policies for anything related to FTX, a broker said.

Exclusions may act as a failsafe for insurers, and will make it even more difficult for companies that are seeking coverage, insurers and brokers said.

Bermuda-based crypto insurer Relm, which previously has provided coverage to entities linked to FTX, takes an even stricter approach.

“If we have to include a crypto exclusion or a regulatory exclusion, we’re just not going to offer the coverage,” said Relm co-founder Joe Ziolkowski.

D&O QUESTION

Now, one of the most pressing questions is whether insurers will cover D&O policies at other companies that had dealings with FTX, given the problems facing exchange’s leadership, Ziolkowski said.

U.S. prosecutors say former FTX Chief Executive Officer Sam Bankman-Fried engaged in a scheme to defraud FTX’s customers by misappropriating their deposits to pay for expenses and debts and to make investments on behalf of his crypto hedge fund, Alameda Research LLC.

A lawyer for Bankman-Fried said on Tuesday his client is considering all of his legal options.

D&O policies, which are used to pay legal costs, do not always pay out in cases of fraud.

Insurance sources would not name their clients or potential clients that could be affected by policy changes, citing confidentiality. Crypto firms with financial exposure to FTX include Binance, a crypto exchange, and Genesis, a crypto lender, neither of which responded to e-mails seeking comment.

While the least risky parts of the crypto market, such as companies that own cold wallets storing assets on platforms not connected to the internet, may get cover for up to $1 billion, a D&O insurance policyholder’s cover may now be limited to tens of millions of dollars for the rest of the market, Ziolkowski said.

The FTX collapse will also likely lead to a rise in insurance rates, especially in the U.S. D&O market, insurers said. The rates are already high because of the perceived risks and lack of historical data on cryptocurrency insurance losses.

A typical crime bond — used to protect against losses resulting from a criminal act — would cost $30,000 to $40,000 per $1 million of coverage for a digital assets trader. That compares with a cost of about $5,000 per $1 million for a traditional securities trader, Hugh Wood Canada’s Nichols said.

(Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru and Carolyn Cohn in London; Editing by Lananh Nguyen and Anna Driver)

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FTX’s Bankman-Fried wants to see indictment before agreeing to U.S. extradition -lawyer

By Jared Higgs, Luc Cohen and Jasper Ward

NASSAU, Bahamas/NEW YORK (Reuters) – A defense lawyer for Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of now-bankrupt crypto exchange FTX, told a magistrate judge in the Bahamas on Monday that the former billionaire wanted to see the indictment against him before agreeing to be extradited to the United States.

The statement came at a hearing in Nassau before Magistrate Shaka Serville, two hours after Bankman-Fried arrived in court dressed in a dark blue suit and carrying a manila folder containing papers.

Bankman-Fried initially had said he would fight extradition after his arrest a week ago in the Bahamas, where he lives and FTX is based. He was denied bail and remanded to the Caribbean nation’s Fox Hill prison.

A source had told Reuters on Saturday that Bankman-Fried would return to court to reverse his decision.

Federal prosecutors in New York said Bankman-Fried stole billions of dollars in FTX customer deposits to plug losses at his crypto hedge fund, Alameda Research. They accuse Bankman-Fried of misleading lenders and investors, conspiring to launder money and violating U.S. campaign finance laws.

Bankman-Fried’s defense lawyer initially told Serville that he did not know why Bankman-Fried was brought to court on Monday morning. Following a recess, the lawyer said that Bankman-Fried wanted to see the indictment before consenting to extradition.

Mark Cohen, a U.S. lawyer who represents Bankman-Fried, did not immediately reply to a request for comment. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and a spokesperson for Bankman-Fried also did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

The 30-year-old crypto mogul rode a boom in the value of bitcoin and other digital assets to become a billionaire several times over and an influential political donor in the United States, until FTX collapsed in early November after a wave of withdrawals. The exchange declared bankruptcy on Nov. 11.

Bankman-Fried has acknowledged risk management failures at FTX but said he does not believe he has criminal liability.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York and Jasper Ward in Washington; Additional reporting by Jack Queen in New York and Jared Higgs in Nassau; Editing by Amy Stevens, Megan Davies, Noeleen Walder, Nick Zieminski and Matthew Lewis)

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Bankman-Fried wants to see indictment before agreeing to extradition – lawyer

(Reuters) – Sam Bankman-Fried wants to see the U.S. indictment against him for his role in the collapse of the FTX crypto exchange he founded before he agrees to be extradited from the Bahamas, his lawyer told a court in the Bahamas on Monday.

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware)

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Exclusive-Sam Bankman-Fried to reverse decision on contesting extradition

By Jasper Ward

(Reuters) – Former FTX Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried is expected to appear in court in the Bahamas on Monday to reverse his decision to contest extradition to the United States, where he faces fraud charges, a person familiar with the matter said on Saturday.

The 30-year-old cryptocurrency mogul was indicted in federal court in Manhattan on Tuesday and accused of engaging in a scheme to defraud FTX customers by using billions of dollars in stolen deposits to pay for expenses and debts and to make investments for his crypto hedge fund, Alameda Research LLC.

His decision to consent to extradition would pave the way for him to appear in U.S. court to face wire fraud, money laundering and campaign finance charges.

Upon arrival in the United States, Bankman-Fried would likely be held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, though some federal defendants are being held at jails just outside New York City due to overcrowding at the facility, said defense lawyer Zachary Margulis-Ohnuma.

At his initial court hearing in Manhattan, Bankman-Fried would be asked to enter a plea and a judge would make a determination on bail, Margulis-Ohnuma said. The attorney added that such a hearing must take place within 48 hours of Bankman-Fried’s arrival in the United States, though it would likely be sooner.

Prosecutors will likely argue that Bankman-Fried is a flight risk and should remain in custody because of the large sums of money involved in the case and the unclear location of those funds.

“The missing money gives prosecutors strong arguments that he is a flight risk,” said former federal prosecutor and white-collar defense attorney Michael Weinstein. “I expect that if a judge grants pretrial release, they would impose very restrictive and onerous conditions.”

Any trial is likely more than a year away, legal experts told Reuters.

A spokesman for Bankman-Fried declined to comment. Bankman-Fried has acknowledged risk management failings at FTX but has said he does not believe he has criminal liability.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan declined to comment.

‘BIGGEST FINANCIAL FRAUDS IN AMERICAN HISTORY’

It was not immediately clear what prompted Bankman-Fried to change his mind and decide not to contest extradition.

He was remanded on Tuesday to the Bahamas’ Fox Hill prison after Chief Magistrate JoyAnn Ferguson-Pratt rejected his request to remain at home while awaiting a hearing on his extradition.

The U.S. State Department in a 2021 report said conditions at Fox Hill were “harsh,” citing overcrowding, rodent infestation and prisoners relying on buckets as toilets. Authorities there say conditions have since improved.

Bankman-Fried amassed a fortune valued at over $20 billion as he rode a cryptocurrency boom to build FTX into one of the world’s largest exchanges. His arrest last Monday in the Bahamas, where he lives and where FTX is based, came just a month after the exchange collapsed amid a flurry of customer withdrawals.

Damian Williams, the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, described the collapse of FTX as one of the “biggest financial frauds in American history.” He has described the office’s investigation as ongoing, and urged people with knowledge of wrongdoing at FTX or Alameda to cooperate.

One top executive at FTX, Ryan Salame, told securities regulators in the Bahamas on Nov. 9 that assets belonging to the exchange’s customers were transferred to Alameda to cover the hedge fund’s losses, according to a document made public as part of FTX’s bankruptcy proceedings in Delaware.

FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, the same day Bankman-Fried stepped down as CEO.

A lawyer for Salame did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward; Additional reporting by Luc Cohen and Jack Queen; Writing by Luc Cohen; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Chris Reese, Amy Stevens and Jonathan Oatis)

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Crypto exchange Bitvavo says 280 million euros ‘locked’ at DCG

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Bitvavo, a Dutch cryptocurrency exchange, said on Friday it has 280 million euros ($296.30 million) locked at Digital Currency Group (DCG), a U.S.-based company.

“DCG is currently experiencing liquidity problems … As a result, DCG has suspended repayments until this liquidity issue has been resolved,” the Dutch firm said on its blog.

DCG operates several subsidiaries, including major cryptocurrency lender Genesis Global Capital, which froze withdrawals in November following the collapse of FTX.

Bitvavo said it expects to be reimbursed over time and that it has enough funds to “prefund any locked assets at DCG”. It said its customers are not exposed and can withdraw all their funds at any time.

It said it had given the money to DCG to offer Bitvavo customers a product where they could earn interest on their cryptocurrency token deposits.

Bitvavo is registered with the Dutch central bank (DNB) as a digital assets services provider to prevent money laundering on its platform, but it is not subject to prudential supervision by either the DNB or the Netherlands’ Financial Markets Authority (AFM).

($1 = 0.9450 euros)

(Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Josie Kao)

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U.S. dollar gains as risk tolerance drops with hawkish central banks

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar rose on Friday in choppy trading, extending sharp gains in the previous session as risk appetite soured and investors grappled with the prospect that borrowing costs still have a long way to climb.

The greenback briefly fell after data showed U.S. business activity shrank further in December as new orders slumped to their lowest in more than 2-1/2 years, while softening demand helped to significantly cool inflation.

S&P Global said on Friday its flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index, which tracks the manufacturing and services sectors, fell to 44.6 this month from a final reading of 46.4 in November. It was the sixth straight month that the index remained below the 50 mark, which indicates contraction in the private sector.

“The weaker-than-expected flash PMIs would not stop the Fed from hiking. We’ve had a hawkish week with the Federal Reserve and the ECB (European Central Bank) and there’s a lot of red on the screens; that’s why I think you’re seeing the dollar get bid here to the close,” said Erik Bregar, director, FX & precious metals risk management, at Silver Gold Bull in Toronto.

“The jury is still out on whether the dollar has peaked. I think if risk-off sentiment continues over the holidays, we can see a dollar bounce. This dollar momentum here has some legs for at least another week or two,” he added.

In afternoon trading, the greenback fell 0.8% against the yen to 136.67, after hitting a two-week high in the previous session.

Net short positioning on the yen continued to decrease in the week ended Dec. 13. Net shorts on the yen hit 53,188 contracts, the smallest since Aug. 30.

Sterling slipped 0.2% against the dollar to $1.2157, with the euro falling 0.3% to $1.0595.

On Thursday, the euro fell as well after the ECB raised interest rates and signaled it was far from finished, stirring fears about the potential damage to the global economy and sending investors toward the safe-haven greenback.

A day earlier, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said policymakers expected U.S. rates to rise further and stay elevated for longer.

New York Fed President John Williams upped the hawkish rhetoric on Friday, saying it remains possible the U.S. central bank raises interest rates more than it currently expects next year. The Fed has projected the peak fed funds rate at 5.1%.

That said, financial markets do not seem to be buying the hawkish Fed stance. The fed funds futures markets have priced in rate cuts by the end of 2023.

“Few expect the Federal Reserve to deliver on Wednesday’s hawkishness,” said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay in Toronto.

The dollar index, which gauges the currency against six major peers, rose 0.2% to 104.74, after rallying more than 0.9% on Thursday.

The index has surged around 9% this year as the Fed has hiked interest rates hard, sucking money back toward dollar-denominated bonds. Yet it has dropped roughly 8% since hitting a 20-year high in September, as a slowdown in U.S. inflation has raised hopes the Fed’s rate-hiking cycle might soon end.

In Asia, the Bank of Japan decides policy on Tuesday, and while no change is expected at that meeting, some market participants have begun betting on some tweaks to stimulus as Governor Haruhiko Kuroda prepares to depart in April.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar was 0.2% lower at US$0.6687. The Aussie plunged more than 2% in the previous session – its biggest drop since March 2020. The New Zealand dollar, however, rose 0.7% to US$0.6383.

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Currency bid prices at 4:08PM (2108 GMT)

Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid

Previous Change

Session

Dollar index 104.7400 104.5100 +0.23% 9.489% +104.7800 +104.2000

Euro/Dollar $1.0595 $1.0631 -0.34% -6.80% +$1.0664 +$1.0592

Dollar/Yen 136.6900 137.7550 -0.78% +18.73% +137.7850 +136.2950

Euro/Yen 144.83 146.41 -1.08% +11.13% +146.5900 +144.6400

Dollar/Swiss 0.9337 0.9286 +0.58% +2.38% +0.9338 +0.9260

Sterling/Dollar $1.2155 $1.2181 -0.21% -10.12% +$1.2222 +$1.2122

Dollar/Canadian 1.3694 1.3660 +0.27% +8.34% +1.3705 +1.3618

Aussie/Dollar $0.6687 $0.6700 -0.16% -7.98% +$0.6736 +$0.6676

Euro/Swiss 0.9892 0.9865 +0.27% -4.60% +0.9906 +0.9856

Euro/Sterling 0.8713 0.8725 -0.14% +3.73% +0.8772 +0.8705

NZ $0.6383 $0.6341 +0.68% -6.73% +$0.6395 +$0.6337

Dollar/Dollar

Dollar/Norway 9.8845 9.8715 +0.17% +12.25% +9.9125 +9.8365

Euro/Norway 10.4746 10.4790 -0.04% +4.61% +10.5238 +10.4601

Dollar/Sweden 10.3879 10.3442 +0.25% +15.19% +10.4032 +10.2935

Euro/Sweden 11.0070 10.9794 +0.25% +7.55% +11.0369 +10.9730

(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Additional reporting by Harry Robertson in London and Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by Sam Mark Potter, Louise Heavens, Mark Heinrich and Jonathan Oatis)

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News

FTX bankruptcy judge allows media companies to argue for revealing customer names

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) – A U.S. judge overseeing the bankruptcy of FTX said on Friday that he will allow media companies to make their case that the collapsed crypto exchange must publicly disclose the names of its customers.U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Dorsey in Delaware said the New York Times, Dow Jones, Bloomberg and the Financial Times could present their arguments on requiring FTX to disclose customer names at a hearing on Jan. 11.

The media companies argued in a court filing that keeping the names of as many as 1 million customers secret could turn bankruptcy proceedings into a “farce” if creditors start fighting anonymously over how much money they should receive.

FTX has argued the U.S. bankruptcy practice of disclosing details about creditors, which includes customers, could expose them to scams, violate privacy laws and allow rivals to poach them, undermining the FTX’s value as it hunts for buyers.

FTX said on Friday it planned to sell its LedgerX, Embed, FTX Japan and FTX Europe businesses during its bankruptcy case. The four companies are relatively independent from the broader FTX group, and each has its own segregated customer accounts and separate management teams, according to an FTX court filing.

FTX is not committed to selling any of the companies, but it already received dozens of unsolicited offers. FTX expects to generate additional bids by scheduling auctions in February and March.

Other bankrupt crypto companies, like crypto lenders Voyager Digital and Celsius Network, have struggled to auction their assets. Voyager had planned to sell its assets to FTX before FTX’s implosion, and Celsius said in a Thursday court filing it had postponed an auction of its business to try to improve the bids it had received.

FTX attorneys also said at Friday’s hearing they have made “significant progress” on recovering assets and are working to resolve a dispute with Bahamian securities regulators and attorneys overseeing the liquidation of the Bahamas-based FTX Digital Markets.

An attorney for the Bahamas-based liquidators, Jason Zakia, said FTX has prevented the Bahamas bankruptcy from moving forward by cutting off access to data and casting “aspersions” on the actions of the Bahamas government. Dorsey will address the data access dispute on Jan. 6 if the two sides do not reach a deal.

Friday’s bankruptcy hearing comes at the end of a dramatic week for the crypto exchange. Founder Sam Bankman-Fried was arrested on fraud charges on Monday, FTX CEO John Ray testified before the U.S. Congress on Tuesday, and FTX opposed Bahamas-based liquidators’ demand for access to its systems and records on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New York; Additional reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Del.; Editing by Amy Stevens, Alexia Garamfalvi and Matthew Lewis)

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News

‘Cryptoqueen’ associate pleads guilty in U.S. over OneCoin fraud

By Luc Cohen

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A dual citizen of Sweden and the United Kingdom pleaded guilty to U.S. fraud and money laundering charges on Friday for selling a fake cryptocurrency alongside one of the United States’ most-wanted fugitives, a woman referred to as the ‘Cryptoqueen.’

Karl Greenwood, 45, was arrested in Thailand and extradited to the United States in 2018 for his role in selling the purported cryptocurrency OneCoin, which federal prosecutors in Manhattan call a pyramid scheme that defrauded investors out of $4 billion. He has been detained since his arrest.

The plea comes as prosecutors in the Southern District of New York (SDNY) ramp up enforcement of financial crimes related to digital assets. On Tuesday, prosecutors unsealed an indictment of Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of the FTX crypto exchange, on charges of stealing billions in customer deposits.

“This guilty plea by the co-founder of OneCoin caps a week at SDNY that sends a clear message that we are coming after all those who seek to exploit the cryptocurrency ecosystem through fraud,” Damian Williams, the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, said in a statement.

Prosecutors said Greenwood founded OneCoin in Sofia, Bulgaria in 2014 alongside Ruja Ignatova, a German citizen who prosecutors say is also known as the ‘Cryptoqueen.’ The FBI named her to its top ten most-wanted list in June, and prosecutors said on Friday she remains at large.

A lawyer for Greenwood declined to comment. He is scheduled to be sentenced on April 5 for the three counts to which he pleaded guilty.

Bankman-Fried has acknowledged risk management failures at FTX but said he does not believe he has any criminal liability. He is currently detained in The Bahamas, where FTX is based, and is contesting a U.S. request for his extradition.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Josie Kao)