Categories
News

Western Balkan mafia networks now key actors in regional, EU drug trade-study

By Dina Kartit

(Reuters) – Criminal networks in the Western Balkans have become key actors in both regional and European Union drug markets, a report by the bloc’s drugs agency (EMCDDA) said on Monday.

The report showed that the strategic geographical position of countries such as Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo, combined with high demand for drugs, particularly in the European Union and Turkey, have accelerated criminal groups’ operations.

“Some EU countries are located on trafficking routes that pass through the Western Balkans before re-entering the EU. This means that trafficking flows can be complex,” the agency said in the report which is part of a bigger regional study conducted between 2019 and 2022.

Sizeable diasporas from the region in the EU also provide a pool of individuals who can be exploited or recruited into these networks, the report said.

The EMCDDA reported Western Balkan groups’ operational presence in Belgium and the Netherlands, where the ports of Antwerp and Rotterdam are important for drug distribution and importation into the EU.

Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom are also important locations for those groups in the cocaine, heroin and cannabis markets in Europe, said the EMCDDA.

These mafia-like networks have also adopted the latest available technology to improve the efficiency of drug production, trafficking and money laundering, the report said.

That includes complex equipment for indoor cultivation, drones or the use of cryptocurrencies and encrypted communications.

Both the Western Balkans and EU countries serve as refuge for criminals hiding from rival criminal groups or law enforcement.

“Members of Italian and Turkish criminal networks are reported to be evading justice by locating themselves in the Western Balkans, while Russian criminal organisations are thought to be involved in money laundering activities along the region’s coastline,” said the EMCDDA.

(Reporting by Dina Kartit, Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

Categories
News

FTX begins strategic review, seeks court relief to pay critical vendors

(Reuters) – Collapsed crypto exchange FTX said on Saturday it has launched a strategic review of its global assets and is preparing for the sale or reorganisation of some businesses.

FTX, along with about 101 affiliated firms, also sought court relief to allow the operation of a new global cash management system and payment to its critical vendors.

The exchange and its affiliates filed for bankruptcy in Delaware on Nov. 11 in one of the highest-profile crypto blowups, leaving an estimated 1 million customers and other investors facing total losses in the billions of dollars.

FTX will explore sales, recapitalisations or other strategic transactions for some of its units, the company’s new Chief Executive officer John Ray said in a statement.

In a court filing on Saturday FTX asked for permission to pay prepetition claims of up to $9.3 million to its critical vendors after an interim order and up to $17.5 million after the entry of the final order.

The exchange said that if it fails to receive the requested court relief, it will result in “immediate and irreparable harm” to its businesses.

“Based on our review over the past week, we are pleased to learn that many regulated or licensed subsidiaries of FTX, within and outside of the United States, have solvent balance sheets, responsible management and valuable franchises,” FTX’s Ray said.

FTX has identified 216 debtor bank accounts with positive balances as of Nov. 16, but has only been able to verify the balances in 144 accounts so far, the company said in a separate court filing.

The company has appointed Perella Weinberg Partners LP as its lead investment bank to help with the sale process, subject to court approval.

(Reporting by Akanksha Khushi and Abinaya Vijayaraghavan in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Maria Ponnezhath; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

Categories
News

FTX shows need to regulate crypto before it gets big, says Bank of England

LONDON (Reuters) – The implosion of cryptocurrency exchange FTX shows the need to bring the crypto world within the regulatory framework, Bank of England Deputy Governor Jon Cunliffe said on Monday.

FTX, which has filed for U.S. bankruptcy court protection, has said it owes its 50 biggest creditors nearly $3.1 billion.

“While the crypto world, as was demonstrated during last year’s crypto winter and last week’s FTX implosion is not at present large enough or interconnected enough with mainstream finance to threaten the stability of the financial system, its links with mainstream finance have been developing rapidly,” Cunliffe said.

He added that FTX’s woes highlighted the need for regulators to put in place tighter controls as quickly as possible.

“We should not wait until it is large and connected to develop the regulatory frameworks necessary to prevent a crypto shock that could have a much greater destabilising impact,” Cunliffe told a Warwick Business School event.

Currently, crypto firms in Britain only have to show they can put in place sufficient controls to stop money-laundering, though many firms have had licence applications rejected by UK regulators.

Britain is approving a new financial services and markets law that will introduce regulation for stablecoins, a cryptoasset backed by an asset like a currrency, and marketing of cryptoassets generally.

Cunliffe said the BoE will set out a public consultation to flesh out rules for stablecoins in more detail on how coinholders’ claims on the issuer and wallets should be structured to deliver redemption at par in line with commercial bank money.

“The FTX example underlines how important these aspects are,” Cunliffe said.

The finance ministry will also consult soon on extending the investor protection, market integrity and other regulatory frameworks that cover the promotion and trading of financial products to activities and entities involving crypto assets, he added.

Separately, the BoE and finance ministry are looking at the potential for a digital pound.

“Our aim is to ensure that innovation can take place but within a framework in which risks are properly managed,” Cunliffe said. “The events of last week provide a compelling demonstration of why that matters.”

(Reporting by Marc Jones and Huw Jones)

Categories
News

Collapsed FTX owes nearly $3.1 billion to top 50 creditors

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which has filed for U.S. bankruptcy court protection, said it owes its 50 biggest creditors nearly $3.1 billion.

The exchange owes about $1.45 billion to its top ten creditors, it said in a court filing on Saturday, without naming them.

FTX and its affiliates filed for bankruptcy in Delaware on Nov. 11 in one of the highest-profile crypto blowups, leaving an estimated 1 million customers and other investors facing total losses in the billions of dollars.

The crypto exchange said on Saturday it has launched a strategic review of its global assets and is preparing for the sale or reorganization of some businesses.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Bengaluru; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Categories
News

FTX fires three of its top executives- WSJ

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which recently filed for U.S. bankruptcy court protection, has fired some top executives, including co-founder Gary Wang, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing an FTX spokeswoman.

Other terminated executives include engineering director Nishad Singh and Caroline Ellison, who ran FTX’s trading arm Alameda Research, the newspaper said.

(Reporting by Akanksha Khushi in Bengaluru; Editing by William Mallard)

Categories
News

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire warns about crypto website using its name

(Reuters) – Berkshire Hathaway Inc, run by billionaire Warren Buffett, on Friday warned investors it has no affiliation with a purported cryptocurrency brokerage website using the Berkshire Hathaway name.

The website describes its operator as a Texas-based broker founded in 2020 to give investors “an opportunity to achieve a completely passive income from investment in cryptocurrency mining.”

It includes purported customer testimonials and says the broker is regulated in the United States, United Kingdom, Cyprus and South Africa, using incorrect names for two regulators. Its email format differs from that of Buffett’s company.

Buffett has long been skeptical of cryptocurrency, and in 2018 called bitcoin “rat poison squared.”

In a statement, Buffett’s company said it learned about the website, berkshirehathawaytx.com, on Friday afternoon.

“The entity who has this web address has no affiliation with Berkshire Hathaway Inc or its Chairman and CEO, Warren E. Buffett,” Berkshire said.

The website’s operator did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Buffett has run Berkshire Hathaway Inc since 1965.

The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate owns several dozen companies including the BNSF railroad and Geico auto insurer, and as of Sept. 30 owned more than $306 billion in stocks.

Cryptocurrency has come under renewed scrutiny recently. This week, U.S. crypto investors sued FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and several celebrities who promoted his exchange including NFL quarterback Tom Brady and comedian Larry David, claiming they engaged in deceptive practices to sell FTX yield-bearing digital currency accounts. FTX filed for bankruptcy and is facing scrutiny from U.S. authorities amid reports that $10 billion in customer assets were shifted from FTX to Bankman-Fried’s trading company Alameda Research.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

Categories
News

FTX founder’s remarks pose challenge for his lawyers

By Andrew Goudsward

(Reuters) – FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, facing mounting legal challenges over the collapse of his cryptocurrency exchange, may have harmed his defense by speaking publicly in recent days, legal experts said.

Bankman-Fried has sought to explain the implosion of FTX and disparaged government regulators in posts on Twitter and conversations with reporters. Attorneys said such statements will likely make life more difficult for the defense lawyers seeking to manage fallout from the exchange’s demise and navigate multiple federal investigations.

“There’s this old saying that a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client. The reverse is also true. An individual who is the subject of an investigation and tries to defend themselves in the court of public opinion has a fool for a lawyer,” said Justin Danilewitz, a white-collar defense lawyer at law firm Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr.

In a conversation with a Vox reporter published this week, Bankman-Fried blamed FTX’s collapse in part on “messy accounting,” expressed regret at his decision to file for bankruptcy and denigrated U.S. regulators in profane terms. He later said he did not intend for the conversation to be made public.

FTX is now facing investigations from the U.S. Justice Department, Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, sources have told Reuters. On Tuesday, a group of crypto investors filed a class action against Bankman-Fried and others who promoted FTX.

Bankman-Fried’s statements have already been cited in FTX’s U.S. bankruptcy proceedings. The exchange’s lawyers said in court papers on Thursday that he was undermining their efforts with his “incessant and disruptive tweeting.”

He has become the latest high-profile figure to continue to speak publicly despite facing serious legal scrutiny, joining a group that has included Tesla Inc and Twitter CEO Elon Musk, ex-pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli and former U.S. President Donald Trump.

CONTROLLING THE STORY

Lawyers almost always advise clients in litigation or facing government investigations not to speak about issues related to the case. Such statements could become evidence in court and could undermine a carefully crafted defense. Social media has made it easier for clients with large public platforms to try to mount their own defense, experts said.

“The basic question is who controls the story,” said Stephen Gillers, a law professor at New York University and an expert on legal ethics. “From the lawyer’s point of view, once he or she is hired, it’s the lawyer who controls the story as far as public consumption goes.”

At least one attorney, Martin Flumenbaum of law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, has already parted ways with Bankman-Fried, though the lawyer did not blame the 30-year-old entrepreneur’s controversial statements.

“We informed Mr. Bankman-Fried several days ago after the filing of the FTX bankruptcy that conflicts have arisen that precluded us from representing him,” Flumenbaum said in a statement to Reuters.

Flumenbaum declined to describe the conflicts. A onetime lawyer for convicted financier Michael Milken, Flumenbaum is currently defending Christian Larsen, the founder and chair of crypto payment and exchange company Ripple Labs Inc, in a high-profile lawsuit filed by the SEC. His law firm represents many other financial industry clients.

Bankman-Fried, who did not respond to questions about his legal team this week, has hired Gregory Joseph, a criminal defense lawyer at law firm Joseph Hage Aaronson in New York, and Stanford University law professor David Mills as members of his legal team, according to a report from Semafor. Both of Bankman-Fried’s parents are on the faculty of Stanford Law School.

Joseph is a former president of the American College of Trial Lawyers who has written about racketeering law and rules of evidence. Mills specializes in criminal law and white-collar crime.

Neither Joseph nor Mills replied to requests for comment.

(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward in Washington; Editing by David Bario and Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried cashed out $300 million during funding spree – WSJ

(Reuters) – FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried sold a stake in the company worth $300 million when the crypto exchange raised capital last year, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing the firm’s financial records and people familiar with the transaction.

At the time, Bankman-Fried told investors it was a partial reimbursement of money he’d spent to buy out rival Binance’s stake in FTX a few months earlier, the report added.

Bankman-Fried and FTX did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment on the matter.

The Journal’s report cited FTX’s October 2021 funding round where the company had raised $420 million from a clutch of big name investors including Temasek and Tiger Global, valuing the crypto exchange at $25 billion.

Last week, FTX filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection and Bankman-Fried resigned as chief executive, after Binance walked away from its 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 Maju Samuel)

Categories
News

Bahamas regulator confirms FTX asset seizure after hack accusation

(Reuters) – The Securities Commission of The Bahamas said it had seized digital assets of FTX’s Bahamas unit, an action that the collapsed crypto exchange’s U.S.-based leadership initially believed to be a “hack.”

The regulator said on Thursday it had ordered the transfer of all assets of FTX Digital Markets Ltd to a digital wallet it controlled for safekeeping.

“Urgent interim regulatory action was necessary to protect the interests of clients and creditors of FDM,” the commission said in a statement.

The commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did a spokesperson for FTX.

FTX filed for bankruptcy last week in Delaware in one of the highest-profile crypto blow-ups, after traders rushed to withdraw $6 billion from the platform in just 72 hours and rival exchange Binance abandoned a proposed rescue deal.

Bahamas securities regulators had revoked FTX Digital’s license and began involuntary liquidation proceedings the day before the U.S. bankruptcy case kicked off. The people appointed to oversee that process have challenged the validity of the U.S. proceedings.

FTX’s new CEO John Ray who took over from FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried when the company filed for Chapter 11, said in a Thursday court filing that the asset seizure “flaunted” U.S. bankruptcy law, which stops creditors from seizing assets from bankrupt companies.

FTX was caught off-guard when assets were transferred on November 13 and initially believed that it had been hacked, according to its court filing.

While investigating the hack, FTX learned that Bankman-Fried and FTX co-founder Gary Wang made “unauthorized” transfers at the direction of the Bahamian government while “effectively in the custody of Bahamas authorities,” according to the filing.

FTX accused Bankman-Fried of working with the Bahamas liquidators to “undermine” the U.S. bankruptcy case and shift assets overseas.

Bankman-Fried has said that he regrets filing for Chapter 11 in the U.S. and wants to “win a jurisdictional fight” to move the bankruptcy proceedings out of Delaware.

Bahamas regulators said Thursday that FTX Digital is being liquidated in the Bahamas and is not a part of the U.S. bankruptcy proceeding that includes parent company FTX Trading and more than 100 affiliated companies.

FTX’s U.S. restructuring team will square off against the Bahamas liquidators in U.S. court on Tuesday, with both sides seeking clarity on which courts should control FTX’s bankruptcy.

(Reporting by Ann Maria Shibu in Bengaluru and Dietrich Knauth in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler, Alexia Garamfalvi and Anna Driver)

Categories
News

Explainer-Crypto lender Genesis plagued by contagion concern after FTX blowup

By Hannah Lang and Elizabeth Howcroft

(Reuters) – The uncertain future of Genesis Global Capital, one of the biggest crypto lenders, is fueling concern that the recent collapse of crytpo exchange FTX is having a spillover effect on other players in the highly interconnected market.

Genesis, which brokers digital assets for financial institutions like hedge funds and asset managers, had almost $3 billion in total active loans at the end of the third quarter. On Wednesday, its crypto lending arm stopped making new loans and blocked customers from taking out money because of what it called “unprecedented market turmoil” that rippled through the market after FTX filed for bankruptcy last week.

Genesis is owned by Stamford, Connecticut-based venture capital company Digital Currency Group.

The contagion concerns stem from Genesis’ prominence in crypto, its links to troubled firms and broader reach into the financial world. Genesis’ two biggest borrowers, according to a person familiar with the matter, were Three Arrows Capital, a Singapore-based crypto hedge fund, and Alameda Research, a trading company closely affiliated with FTX. Both are now in bankruptcy proceedings.

“There has been a target on Genesis’s back for days,” said Joseph Edwards, an investment partner at Securitize Capital. “It’s a signal of worse outcomes” for the crypto market, particularly since Genesis also deals with brokers, family offices and money managers.

Genesis received “abnormal withdrawal requests” from customers that exceeded its liabilities on Wednesday, the company said. Two days earlier, it had sought an emergency loan of $1 billion from investors, the Wall Street Journal reported.

While Genesis declined to comment on the Journal report, a spokesperson said it had “massively reduced” its exposure to Alameda after the collapse of Three Arrows. Genesis also said it had “no material exposure” to FTX’s native digital token or those of other crypto exchanges, and had hedged its positions on holdings linked to FTX.

The lender is also embroiled in legal proceedings. Genesis had loaned more than $2.3 billion to Three Arrows, according to a July court filing. Genesis’ parent, DCG, filed a claim for $1.2 billion against Three Arrows.

While it does not directly serve individual investors, Genesis is an important lender that backs products offered by crypto companies such as Circle Internet Financial, the principal operator of one of the largest stablecoins, USD Coin, and by Gemini. Those products pay yield to customers who deposit certain cryptocurrencies on the platforms.

Crypto lenders, who acted as the de facto banks of the crypto world, boomed during the pandemic. But unlike traditional banks, they are not required to hold capital cushions. Earlier this year, a shortfall of collateral forced some lenders – and their customers – to shoulder large losses.

Investors are concerned that those losses could pile up. Last year, Genesis extended $130.6 billion in crypto loans and traded $116.5 billion in assets, according to its website.

KNOCK-ON EFFECTS

Other companies have distanced themselves from Genesis amid concern that its troubles could reverberate. Crypto.com, an exchange, and Tether, which operates the world’s largest stablecoin, on said Wednesday they had no exposure to Genesis.

Paolo Ardoino, Tether’s chief technology officer, said FTX’s connections to institutions could potentially have a domino effect on other companies, although it remains to be seen how that will play out.

“We don’t know what is the size of that cascading effect- could be small, could be big,” he said.

Market participants are fixated on the links between Genesis and FTX.

Genesis also made loans to Alameda, a trading outfit closely linked with FTX, and accepted FTT tokens as collateral, according to a source familiar with the matter. The price of that token has fallen 93% in the last month, according to analytics website CoinGecko.

Genesis has not disclosed its total exposure to Alameda.

Crypto experts said some of the industry’s biggest names could yet be engulfed in Genesis’ troubles. Its parent company, DCG, said the halted withdrawals at Genesis had no impact on its operations or subsidiaries. DCG also owns crypto asset manager Grayscale.

DCG declined to specify if it would take on any of Genesis’ liabilities. Spokespeople for the group declined to comment.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington and Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Editing by Lananh Nguyen, Anna Driver and Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

Exclusive: How FTX bought its way to become the ‘most regulated’ crypto exchange

By Chris Prentice, Angus Berwick and Hannah Lang

(Reuters) – Before it collapsed this month, FTX stood apart from many rivals in the largely unsupervised crypto industry by boasting it was the “most regulated” exchange on the planet and inviting closer scrutiny from authorities.

Now, company documents seen by Reuters reveal the strategy and tactics behind founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s regulatory agenda, including the previously unreported terms of a deal announced earlier this year with IEX Group, the U.S. stock trading platform featured in Michael Lewis’s book “Flash Boys” about fast, computer-driven trading.

As part of that deal, Bankman-Fried bought a 10% stake in IEX, with an option to buy it out completely in the next two and half years, according to a June 7 document. The partnership gave the 30-year-old executive the opportunity to lobby IEX’s regulator, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, on crypto regulation.

That deal and others referenced in the documents, which include business updates, meeting minutes and strategy papers, illuminate one of FTX’s broader goals: quickly crafting a congenial regulatory framework for itself by acquiring stakes in companies that already had licenses from authorities, shortcutting the often drawn-out approval process.

FTX spent some $2 billion on “acquisitions for regulatory purposes,” the FTX documents seen by Reuters from a Sept 19 meeting show. Last year, for example, it bought LedgerX LLC, a futures exchange, which gave it three Commodity Futures Trading Commission licenses in one swoop. The licenses gave FTX access to U.S. commodities derivatives markets as a regulated exchange. Derivatives are securities that derive their value from another asset.

FTX also saw its regulatory status as a way of luring new capital from major investors, the documents show. In documents to support its ask for hundreds of millions of dollars in funds, it held out its licenses as a key competitive advantage. The “regulatory moats,” it said, created barriers for rivals and would give it access to lucrative new markets and partnerships beyond the reach of unregulated entities.

“FTX has the cleanest brand in crypto,” the exchange proclaimed in a June document presented to investors.

Bankman-Fried did not respond to a request for comment on questions about FTX’s regulatory strategy. FTX did not respond to requests for comment.

An SEC spokesperson declined to comment for this article. The CFTC also declined to comment.

In a text exchange this week with Vox, Bankman-Fried made an about-face on regulatory matters. Asked if his prior praise of regulations was “just PR,” he said in a sequence of texts: “yeah, just PR… fuck regulators… they make everything worse… they don’t protect customers at all.”

An IEX spokesperson declined to confirm details of the transaction with FTX, except to say that FTX’s “small minority stake” in IEX cannot be sold to a third party without its consent. “We are currently evaluating our legal options with respect to the prior transaction,” the spokesperson said.

PATCHWORK OF REGULATORS

FTX collapsed last week after a futile bid by Bankman-Fried to raise emergency funds. It had come under some regulatory oversight through the dozens of licenses it picked up via its many acquisitions. But that didn’t protect its customers and investors, who now face losses totaling billions of dollars. As Reuters reported, FTX had been secretly taking risks with customer funds, using $10 billion in deposits to prop up a trading firm owned by Bankman-Fried.

Four lawyers said the fact that Bankman-Fried was courting regulators while taking massive risks with customer funds without anyone noticing exposes a yawning regulatory gap in the cryptocurrency industry. “It’s a patchwork of global regulators — and even domestically there are huge gaps,” said Aitan Goelman, an attorney with Zuckerman Spaeder and former prosecutor and CFTC enforcement director. “That’s the fault of a regulatory system that has taken too long to adjust to the advent of crypto.”

A person familiar with the SEC’s thinking on crypto regulation said the agency believes crypto firms are illegally operating outside of U.S. securities laws and instead lean on other licenses that provide minimal consumer protection. “Those representations, while nominally true, don’t cover their activity,” the person said.

GRAPHIC: Exponential growth- https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/gdpzqyyxmvw/chart.png

‘STEP 1: LICENSES’

Bankman-Fried had big ambitions for FTX, which by this year had grown to more than $1 billion in revenues and accounted for about 10% of trading in the global crypto market, from a standing start in 2019. He wanted to build a financial app, where users could trade stocks and tokens, transfer money and bank, according to an undated document titled, “FTX Roadmap 2022.”

“Step 1” toward that goal, the “Roadmap” document said, “is to become as licensed as reasonably possible.”

“Partially this is to make sure that we’re regulated and compliant; partially this is to be able to expand our product offering,” the document said.

That’s where FTX’s acquisition spree came in, according to the documents. Instead of applying for every license, which can take years and sometimes uncomfortable questions, Bankman-Fried decided to buy them.

But the strategy also had its limits: At times, the companies it acquired didn’t have the precise licenses it needed, the documents show.

One of FTX’s goals, according to the documents, was to open up the U.S. derivatives markets to its customers in the country. It estimated the market would bring additional trading volume to the tune of $50 billion a day, generating millions of dollars in revenue. To do that, it needed to persuade the CFTC to amend one of the licenses held by LedgerX, FTX’s newly acquired futures exchange.

The application process went on for months, and FTX had to pony up $250 million for a default insurance fund, a standard requirement. FTX anticipated the CFTC could ask it to increase the fund to $1 billion, according to minutes of a March meeting of its advisory board.

FTX collapsed before it could get the approval, and has now withdrawn its application.

Buying companies for licenses also had other advantages, the documents reviewed by Reuters demonstrate: It could give Bankman-Fried the access he desired to regulators.

A prime example is the IEX deal, which was announced in April. In a joint interview to CNBC, Bankman-Fried and IEX CEO Brad Katsuyama said they wanted “to shape regulation that ultimately protects investors.” What matters the most here, Bankman-Fried added, is that “there is transparency and protection against fraud.”

Reuters could not determine how much FTX paid for the stake.

Bankman-Fried was invited to meet SEC Chairman Gary Gensler and other SEC officials along with Katsuyama in March.

A source close to IEX said the purpose of the meeting was to let the SEC know in advance about its deal with FTX, which had not been publicly announced at that point, and to discuss the possibility of IEX creating a trading venue in digital assets, such as bitcoin. FTX’s role was to provide the crypto-trading infrastructure, the source said.

SEC officials outright rejected their initial plan because it would have involved the creation of a non-exchange trading venue that is more lightly regulated, something the agency opposes for cryptocurrencies, the source familiar with the SEC’s thinking said.

Reuters could not determine the extent of Bankman-Fried’s involvement in subsequent conversations with the SEC. In their mind, SEC officials had agreed to meet with Katsuyama in March, and Bankman-Fried was just tagging along, the source familiar with the SEC’s thinking said. He kept mostly silent during the meeting, with Katsuyama in the “driver’s seat,” the source added.

Whatever his involvement, FTX talked up its discussions to its investors. In a September meeting of its advisory board, FTX said talks with the SEC were “extremely constructive.”

“We are likely to have pole position there,” it said, according to the meeting minutes.

The person familiar with the SEC’s thinking said they would dispute FTX was in the “pole position.” Anything the SEC did to regulate crypto trading would be open to all market participants, the source said.

The source close to IEX said the exchange never entered into any operational agreements with FTX, adding that it never got to that point.

A May FTX document provides a rundown of FTX’s contacts with individual regulators. The document, which has not been previously reported, shows how in most cases FTX was able to resolve the issues that cropped up.

In February, for example, South African authorities published a warning to consumers that FTX and other crypto exchanges were not authorized to operate there. So FTX entered into a commercial agreement with a local exchange to continue providing the services. “FTX is now fully regularised in respect of its current activities in South Africa,” FTX said.

The regulator, South African Financial Sector Conduct Authority, did not respond to a request for comment.

The May document also shows that FTX had a brush with the SEC. The SEC had conducted inquiries earlier this year into how crypto companies were handling customer deposits. Some firms were offering interest on deposits, which the SEC said could make them securities and should be registered under its rules. In the list of its regulatory interactions, FTX noted that the inquiry was looking at whether those assets were being “lent out or otherwise used for operational purposes.”

This month, as Reuters has reported, it emerged that FTX had done just that, moving billions of dollars in client funds to Bankman-Fried’s trading firm, Alameda Research.

In the May document, FTX said the SEC’s exam staff, which scrutinizes market practices that could present a risk to investors, was concerned about a different matter: a rewards program that it offered to customers, under which it paid interest on crypto deposits.

According to the document, FTX told the regulator it did not have the same issues as products from other providers that the agency had investigated.

“We confirmed these were solely rewards based and do not involve lending (or other use) of the deposited crypto,” FTX wrote. The SEC wrote back, saying it had completed its “informal inquiry” and did not need further information “at this time.”

The SEC had no comment on the inquiry. In an email to Reuters, Bankman-Fried wrote: “FTX’s response there was accurate; FTX US’s rewards program did not involve lending out any assets.”

(Reporting by Chris Prentice and Hannah Lang in Washington, Angus Berwick in London; editing by Megan Davies, Paritosh Bansal and Chris Sanders)

Categories
News

Hong Kong’s leading crypto retail operator says it ceases trading as FTX fallout roils sector

By Georgina Lee

HONG KONG (Reuters) – A leading cryptocurrency retail service provider in Hong Kong said it has ceased trading as the broader fallout from the collapse of FTX, and solvency issues at other major crypto firms, continues to roil the sector.

Genesis Block, which at one time operated one of Asia’s biggest bitcoin ATM networks, said it would be closing down its over-the-counter trading portal on Dec. 10, according to an email to customers sent by its compliance department reviewed by Reuters.

“We have ceased trading, as we don’t know which counterparties would fail next, so we would rather close out all our positions to regain some of our liquidity,” chief executive Wincent Hung told Reuters this week.

The company is also asking customers to withdraw their funds, the email shows, and will not accept new customers.

Genesis Block has no connection with a separate crypto player called Genesis Global Capital which suspended customer redemptions this week.

Even before FTX’s bankruptcy, Genesis Block had been winding down its Hong Kong business, according to three people familiar with the situation, cutting ties with the failed exchange earlier this month.

One person with knowledge of the matter said one Genesis Block official was previously a director in FTX Hong Kong, but resigned from the directorship this month. FTX Hong Kong is one of the about 130 FTX-affiliated companies backed by Sam Bankman-Fried that have filed Chapter 11 bankrupcy proceedings in the United States.

The people declined to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the press.

Genesis Block executives declined to comment.

Genesis Block’s website still shows a guide to how to buy FTT, the native token of the failed exchange, using the ATM network, which spans 29 locations in Hong Kong and six in Taiwan.

The ATMs are now operated by a brand called CoinHero, which is expanding in Hong Kong after Genesis Block sold the business to a third party last year, according to the people with knowledge of the matter.

CoinHero’s website offers a guide for its customers on how to buy FTT through Genesis Block’s trading desk in Hong Kong.

CoinHero did not reply to Reuters’ request for comment. Genesis Block didn’t respond to questions on the ATM network.

Genesis Block’s withdrawal from Hong Kong, ranked by market data provider Forex Suggest as one of the most “crypto-ready” cities in the world in terms of the number of ATM relative to its population, underlines the challenges in enforcing investor protection in the highly connected $900 billion crypto world.

In Hong Kong’s busy Causeway Bay shopping district, cryptocurrencies bitcoin, tether and dogecoin can be traded easily at both ATMs and trading desks.

Meanwhile the city’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) is currently consulting the industry on its proposal to allow retail trading of virtual assets in a move it hopes will bolster Hong Kong’s status as a fintech hub.

If adopted, such a move would represent a major relaxation of the city’s virtual asset services provider licensing regime, expected to become effective in March 2023. The SFC had initially proposed limiting trading to professional investors only.

(Reporting by Georgina Lee; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)

Categories
News

Explainer-What’s next in FTX’s bankruptcy

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) – Crypto exchange FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States on Friday following its precipitous collapse, saying it could owe money to more than 1 million creditors. Here is what likely awaits in the case:

WHERE DO THINGS STAND IN FTX’S BANKRUPTCY CASE?

FTX had an unusually slow start to its bankruptcy, taking nearly a week to file “first-day” papers that describe the company’s debts and how it ended up in bankruptcy.

The reason for that delay became apparent when FTX’s new CEO, John Ray, described the “unprecedented” chaos at the company in court filings on Nov. 17.

“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, a restructuring expert with decades of experience who oversaw the multiyear liquidation of energy firm Enron after its collapse in 2001.

Ray, who took over as CEO when FTX filed for bankruptcy protection, said his immediate priorities are locating and securing assets, investigating claims against insiders like former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, and cooperating with dozens of regulatory investigations in the United States and abroad.

The dire situation at FTX will make it difficult for the company to borrow new money that could be used to reorganize the company or buy time for a sale, according to University of Pennsylvania law professor David Skeel.

HAS FTX BEEN ABLE TO SECURE CUSTOMER ASSETS?

Bankman-Fried secretly used $10 billion in customer funds to prop up his trading company Alameda Research, and at least $1 billion of those deposits have vanished, sources have told Reuters.

Under its new management, FTX has located and secured $740 million in cryptocurrency, which represents “only a fraction” of the digital assets the company will seek to recoup for creditors.

Bankman-Fried claimed in 2021 that customers held $15 billion on FTX’s platform, but FTX has not verified that amount. FTX did not record customer deposits as balance sheet assets, and balance sheets prepared under Bankman-Fried’s leadership cannot necessarily be trusted, Ray wrote.

FTX is attempting to recover additional assets, including $372 million that was withdrawn without authorization on the day of the company’s bankruptcy filing. FTX believes the company’s co-founders and other insiders may have further information about additional crypto wallets that are unknown to the company’s restructuring team, according to the Nov. 17 filing.

WILL CUSTOMERS GET THEIR MONEY BACK?

Unlike deposits at banks, customer accounts at crypto platforms like FTX are not protected by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The U.S. government will not step in to cover customer deposits as they would in a traditional bank failure, so customers will have to rely on the bankruptcy process.

A Chapter 11 case halts attempts to recoup assets from a bankrupt company, so customers will have to wait for the bankruptcy court to determine how much, if anything, they will get back. One of the key questions for the court will be whether customers own the cryptocurrency they deposited or whether it is FTX’s property.

There is very little legal precedent for that question. In recent crypto bankruptcies, Celsius Network and Voyager Digital both claimed they owned all crypto held on their platforms. That means the crypto would be pooled with all of the bankrupt company’s assets and divided to pay all creditors. In that scenario, customers would have what are known as unsecured claims that would be relatively low in priority.

If customers are found to own the crypto, they stand a greater chance of recovering a larger portion of their deposits. But the recovery will still depend on how much FTX owes and what assets it has left.

Bankruptcy judges have so far accepted Celsius and Voyager’s arguments, although that could be subject to future court battles, said James Van Horn, a bankruptcy attorney in Washington, D.C.

WHAT ABOUT FTX CUSTOMERS WHO WITHDREW MONEY FROM FTX?

Customers who withdrew their assets from FTX before its collapse are not necessarily in the clear. The bankruptcy court might authorize FTX to claw back those withdrawals so that there can be a more equal payout for creditors who were unable to make withdrawals. In cases involving fraud, the clawback period can be extended for years.

“It’s risky to feel like you dodged a bullet, because sometimes you didn’t,” Harvard professor Jared Elias said.

WHAT OTHER RISKS DO FTX CUSTOMERS FACE?

The bankruptcy might result in the publication of FTX customers’ names, email addresses and transaction history.

Bankruptcy depends on transparency – at a minimum, the court needs to know who is owed money, how much they are owed, and how to contact creditors. The courts’ preference for transparency are at odds with crypto customers’ expectations of anonymity.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New York; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

Tumbling bitcoin overshadows El Salvador’s crypto conference

By Nelson Renteria

SAN SALVADOR (Reuters) – El Salvador’s long-awaited bitcoin conference, which was in the limelight in 2021 after the small nation became the world’s first to adopt the cryptocurrency as legal tender, has lost its luster this time amid a deep rout in the digital currency universe.

The absence of big names from the bitcoin world and empty seats were noticeable at “Adopting Bitcoin: A Lightning Summit in El Salvador,” which began Tuesday and ends Thursday in the capital of San Salvador.

“The fact that prices are low, that there are problems elsewhere (…) causes an uncertain environment,” said Juan Fonseca, 41, a Guatemalan who traveled to the conference.

Like other cryptocurrencies, bitcoin fell sharply over the year as U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate hikes and ultra-high inflation prompted investors to ditch riskier assets.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, has plummeted further following the spectacular collapse of crypto exchange FTX, now trading around $16,600, from an all-time high of nearly $69,000 in November last year.

Some enthusiasts see today’s problems as just a temporary blip.

Crypto exchange “Bitfinex will redouble its efforts to build a free, unstoppable, resilient and open bitcoin and technology infrastructure for El Salvador,” said Paolo Ardoino, the firm’s chief technology officer.

Ifinex, Bitfinex’s parent, has agreed to collaborate with El Salvador’s government to create a digital asset and securities regulatory framework.

“El Salvador will become the financial and tech center of Central America. The noise won’t distract the builders,” Ardoino added after meeting with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele.

Bukele, who championed the adoption of the cryptocurrency as legal tender alongside the U.S. dollar, said on Twitter on Wednesday night, “We are buying one Bitcoin every day starting tomorrow.”

So far, his government has acquired 2,381 bitcoins for about $107 million, according to private estimates.

(Reporting by Nelson Renteria, Writing by Carolina Pulice; Editing by Anthony Esposito and Richard Chang)

Categories
News

Factbox-FTX’s new CEO assesses the exchange’s failings

By Tom Hals

(Reuters) – John J. Ray III, the new chief executive of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX, on Thursday laid out his assessment of the failures that led to the biggest collapse in the world of digital assets.

LACK OF CONTROLS

– “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,” Ray said in a declaration filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

– FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, with an estimated $10 billion to $50 billion in both liabilities and assets, after founder Sam Bankman-Fried secretly used $10 billion in customer funds to prop up his trading business. At least $1 billion in client funds are thought to be missing.

– Ray said he had secured $740 million in cryptocurrency, a “fraction” of what he hopes to recover during the bankruptcy.

– At least $372 million in unauthorized transfers were initiated when FTX filed for bankruptcy and about $300 million in the company’s FTT tokens were minted after the filing, Ray said. Bankman-Fried and his co-founders failed to identify wallets that might contain FTX assets, he added.

– FTX used software to conceal the misuse of customer funds, according to Ray, and he said many senior executives were unaware of fund shortfalls or comingling of customer and company assets.

– Bankman-Fried communicated using apps that automatically deleted messages and he encouraged staff to do the same.

– Workers submitted payment requests in an online chat and supervisors approved them with personalized emojis and employees in the Bahamas used corporate funds to purchase homes and personal items without documentation, the filing says.

– Record keeping was so lax that Ray said he was unable to compile a complete list of FTX employees.

– Ray said FTX did not have an accurate list of its bank accounts and banks have been instructed to freeze cash and not accept instructions from Bankman-Fried or other signatories.

CORPORATE STRUCTURE

– Ray said he identified four “silos” in the FTX corporate family, each controlled by Bankman-Fried with minority investments by Zixiao “Gary” Wang and Nishad Singh.

– No outside investor owned more than 2% of any silo, according to Ray, who said he did not have confidence in the balance sheet information for each silo.

-The West Realm Shires Inc or WRS silo includes FTX US and subsidiaries that acted as a broker-dealer and offered custodial services and it had $1.36 billion in assets, which included a loan of FTT tokens to BlockFi Inc valued at $250 million.

– The second silo is Alameda Research LLC, which Ray described as a crypto hedge fund owned by Bankman-Fried and Wang with assets of $13.46 billion. The assets included a loan between one of Alameda’s subsidiaries to an entity controlled by Bankman-Fried, Wang and Singh and separate loans of $1 billion to Bankman-Fried, $543 million to Singh and $55 million to Ryan Salame, who is co-chief executive of FTX’s Bahamian business.

– The other silos were Ventures, which manages private investments and had around $2 billion in assets, and Dotcom, which owned non-U.S. exchanges with $2.25 billion in assets.

– Ray said the Dotcom silo’s financials were audited by Prager Metis, which touted itself as the first accounting firm to officially open headquarters in the Metaverse platform Decentraland.

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Del.; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

Analysis-U.S. regulators could be pressured by slim Republican House control

By Ross Kerber and Chris Prentice

BOSTON/ WASHINGTON (Reuters) – With the U.S. House of Representatives under their control, Republicans have a new pulpit to try to constrain President Joe Biden’s administrative oversight of business issues from consumer finance to climate rules.

Policy analysts said Wednesday’s projected win in the midterm elections will embolden Republicans who have alleged the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) have overstepped their authority under Democratic leadership.

Republicans argue the agencies have written rules outside of the legal process and taken a hostile approach to industries they regulate, while Democrats say they are only fulfilling their mandate to protect investors and consumers.

Many expect Republicans to grill regulators like SEC Chair Gary Gensler and financial executives at public hearings, though the Democrats’ continued hold on the U.S. Senate means they can fend off many challenges to the agencies’ authority.

Jennifer Schulp, a director at the libertarian think tank Cato Institute, said the Republicans’ unexpectedly tight margin of control in the House will not prompt them to tone down their rhetoric.

“The key to the ability to make noise and to put up roadblocks in the form of oversight turns on which party has control of the House, no matter how slim the majority, because it comes with the ability to control the committees,” Schulp said.

An SEC spokesperson said: “Chair Gensler looks forward to continuing to work with Congress on the shared goal of protecting investors, maintaining fair, orderly and efficient markets, and facilitating capital formation.”

The CFPB did not respond to a request for comment.

‘REGULATORY EXUBERANCE’

Patrick McHenry, a North Carolina Republican in line to lead the House Financial Services Committee in the new Congress, said in an emailed statement to Reuters before the election that Biden’s administration “is pushing its agenda through financial regulators because they don’t have the votes to pass it in Congress.”

“Committee Republicans will work together to conduct appropriate oversight of activist regulators and market participants who have an outsized impact,” McHenry said.

Republicans have also pressed current Congressional leaders to have Gensler testify on issues like workforce matters recently highlighted by the agency’s internal watchdog.

At a minimum, House investigations and testimonies can take up hundreds of hours of staff time for the regulators and make the agencies more vulnerable to private litigation.

“There’s going to be a ton more accountability coming,” the chief legal officer of brokerage Robinhood Markets, Dan Gallagher, said at a recent industry event. “This irrational regulatory exuberance is nonsense.”

The hours lost could distract the regulators from finalizing rules, such as the SEC’s efforts to force more transparency on private equity firms or CFPB efforts to curb bank fees.

BEYOND THE FIREWORKS

What remains unclear is whether such investigations will lead to more than just fireworks at Congressional hearings. Democrats retained control of the Senate in the Nov. 8 midterm elections and its powerful Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, to date chaired by Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio.

Bryan McGannon, managing director for sustainable investment group US SIF, said the power split will stop Republicans from using federal budget maneuvers to interrupt Democratic priorities.

Rather he expects Republicans will propose big changes with little chance of passage. “The appropriations process in the House will be a messaging exercise, and it’s less worrisome since the Democrats will have the Senate,” McGannon said.

To be sure, a separate avenue to undo business regulation could come via the legal system, where a 6-3 conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court has shown an appetite for aggressive action.

In June, for instance, the court curtailed the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to restrict greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, and another dispute under deliberation could clear the way for a wave of new challenges to federal regulators.

ANTITRUST CONCERNS

Before the election, exploiting antitrust concerns was seen as an additional area of focus for Republicans, especially on investors’ growing concern for environmental, social and governance (ESG) matters that has led to some joint efforts by asset management companies.

On Nov. 3 five Republican senators warned corporate law firms Congress would “scrutinize the institutionalized antitrust violations being committed in the name of ESG.”

While those Senators will not be in the majority, House Republicans have also criticized companies on ESG-related matters. Companies including BlackRock Inc have defended their participation in trade groups meant to address topics like climate change, saying they still act solely for client fiduciary interests. But the high-profile Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero recently relaxed a mandate that its members phase out fossil fuels because of antitrust concerns.

In addition, before the election there had been hopes for bipartisan legislation to regulate cryptocurrencies soon.

The collapse of the FTX exchange dashed those expectations, and Cato’s Schulp said any bills on the matter likely will have to wait until 2023.

Dante Disparte, chief strategy officer at Circle, the principal operator of one of the world’s largest stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency, said the FTX saga could lead to comprehensive reforms in the same way the 2008 financial crisis led to wide-ranging banking rules.

“What I’m hearing, seeing and perhaps hoping, is that the collapse of FTX is met with the same kind of resolve,” Disparte said.

(Reporting by Chris Prentice in Washington and by Ross Kerber in Boston; Additional reporting by Hannah Lang and Diane Bartz in Washington and by John McCrank in New York; editing by Megan Davies and Deepa Babington)

Categories
News

Brazil crypto law back on agenda as FTX collapse sends shockwaves

By Isabel Woodford

(Reuters) – Brazilian crypto advocates are urging lawmakers to give final approval on a bill aimed at boosting oversight of the sector, after the collapse of FTX – once an industry darling – raised fresh concern about unregulated digital currencies.

Roberto Dagnoni, a top executive at SoftBank-backed exchange Mercado Bitcoin, said the law had been “kind of dormant” during the election period but now needed to be a priority.

“If there is a good side (to the FTX disaster), it would be that it gets the law prioritized,” he told Reuters on Tuesday. “The rules that currently exist have not been applicable to some players, so they can do whatever you want … This (law) would change a lot.”

The bill, passed earlier this year by the senate and now awaiting lower chamber approval, would force all locally active crypto providers to have a physical entity in the country, and mandatory disclosure of suspected money laundering and other criminal activities. The text outlines fines and even imprisonment for breaches.

Brazil is one of the top 10 active markets globally for crypto, according to 2022 Chainalysis data.

Fernando Furlan, the former president of the country’s blockchain association, also said he hoped the FTX saga would be “a push enough” to get the law passed.

Furlan added that while the law may make it harder for so-called ‘dot com’ crypto exchanges and smaller groups to operate due to higher reporting standards, this was a healthy trade-off.

“If it’s good for Brazilian investors, then it’s a good law,” he added.

The law could be passed sooner than previously expected.

Newspaper Folha de S. Paulo last week cited Lower House Speaker Arthur Lira as saying the chamber was ready to vote on the law before year-end.

The president of Brazil’s securities regulator said in a public panel that “it is important that we start to have rules” in crypto, and that the bill “is very close.”

Nonetheless, some key actors are skeptical the bill will pass so quickly, given 2023 budget issues that have taken priority following Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s victory in presidential elections.

Lira did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

FTX filed for bankruptcy last week and is facing scrutiny from U.S. authorities, amid reports that $10 billion in customer assets were shifted from the crypto exchange to FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s trading company Alameda Research.

FTX did not have a large presence in Latin America.

Dagnoni told Reuters that Mercado Bitcoin, mainly active in Brazil and Portugal, had no exposure to FTX, having developed its own custody solution to store customer assets.

He added that his exchange had even seen “net positive” volume flows, despite mass withdrawals globally.

“I think people are separating between the asset and bad management,” he said.

(Reporting by Isabel Woodford in Mexico City; Additional reporting by Marcela Ayres in Brasilia and Stephen Coates)

Categories
News

‘Wave’ of lawsuits over FTX expected, but investors will face legal hurdles

By Jody Godoy

(Reuters) – A lawsuit by FTX account holders in the United States is likely the first of many that will be brought over billions of dollars in losses on the cryptocurrency exchange, though the cases will face obstacles including proving that U.S. securities law applies to FTX’s products, experts said.

The lawsuit, filed in Miami federal court on Tuesday, claims FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and celebrities including NFL quarterback Tom Brady and basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal, engaged in deceptive business practices by promoting unregistered securities.

While some courts have ruled that certain cryptocurrencies fit the legal definition of securities, the issue remains unsettled.

Cases against FTX, which is based in the Bahamas, will be made more complex by the fact that U.S. securities laws generally apply only to domestic transactions, said Yuliya Guseva, a professor who heads the fintech and blockchain research program at Rutgers Law School.

“It is more complicated than your plain vanilla crypto exchange story,” she said.

Representatives for Bankman-Fried, O’Neal and Brady did not reply to requests for comment on the lawsuit.

FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11 and is facing scrutiny from U.S. authorities. Sources told Reuters that $10 billion in customer assets were shifted from FTX to Bankman-Fried’s trading company Alameda Research, and that more than $1 billion of customer funds is missing.

Tuesday’s lawsuit, a proposed class action brought on behalf of FTX yield-bearing account holders in the United States, claims the accounts were unregistered securities because they used investors’ pooled funds to engage in activities that generated the returns account holders received.

It is an open question whether U.S. securities laws apply to interest-bearing crypto accounts like those offered by FTX.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has recently alleged that other yield-bearing accounts constituted unregistered securities. Investors have made similar allegations in court against Voyager Digital Ltd and Celsius Network over their crypto accounts, but judges have yet to rule on those claims.

The lawsuit filed on Tuesday did not name FTX as a defendant but instead targeted individuals.

Other investors will likely bring more lawsuits as the details of FTX’s collapse come to light.

Guseva said a “wave” of litigation is the “expected result of a large debacle like this.”

FTX’s new CEO, John J. Ray III, said in bankruptcy filings on Thursday that the company’s situation was “unprecedented” and involved a “complete failure of corporate controls.”

Cases against FTX and related companies will be paused during bankruptcy proceedings, but cases against individuals who have not filed for bankruptcy may be allowed to go forward, said Guseva.

Several law firms have said they are considering bringing claims on behalf of investors in the FTX Token, or FTT, a cryptocurrency tied to the exchange whose value has plummeted from around $25 per token to less than $2 in the wake of the FTX liquidity crisis.

New lawsuits may also target celebrity promoters of FTX crypto products.

Tuesday’s complaint alleges that such promoters violated Florida consumer protection law by failing to disclose what they were paid to endorse the company.

Investors have brought similar claims against reality TV star Kim Kardashian over her promotion of EthereumMax tokens. A judge has not yet ruled on whether the case can go forward.

Kardashian has argued that the lawsuit should be dismissed because compensation details would not have mattered to investors in the token.

She settled similar claims earlier this year by the SEC for $1.26 million without admitting wrongdoing.

Future investor lawsuits over the FTX meltdown are likely to allege claims beyond securities registration and consumer protection violations, plaintiffs’ attorneys said.

Sean Masson, an attorney at law firm Scott+Scott who represents investors in the case against Kardashian, said there may be potential market manipulation claims based on Bankman-Fried’s activities at Alameda.

Masson did not provide specifics. Market manipulation involves a trader or company attempting to secretly move or maintain the market price of a security or commodity.

“We think that what has come out so far is just scratching the surface on what truly happened,” he said.

(This story has been refiled to fix typographical error in paragraph 13)

(Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Matthew Lewis)

Categories
News

Mark Cuban-backed fintech Dave says no customers exposed to FTX

(Reuters) – Entrepreneur Mark Cuban-backed Dave Inc said on Thursday none of its customers were exposed to FTX and it has not launched any products in partnership with the beleaguered cryptocurrency exchange.

FTX had invested $100 million in the fintech in March, through FTX ventures, to expand Dave’s digital assets offerings and the company had said FTX US would be its exclusive partner for crypto.

“We have not launched any products in partnership with FTX and no customers are exposed through Dave,” the company spokesperson said in an emailed statement to Reuters.

FTX filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States on Friday in the highest-profile crypto blowup to date, after traders pulled billions from the platform in three days and rival exchange Binance abandoned a rescue deal.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru and Saeed Azhar in New York; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

Categories
News

Crypto lender Genesis had sought emergency loan of $1 billion – WSJ

(Reuters) – Cryptocurrency lender Genesis was seeking an emergency loan of $1 billion from investors before it suspended withdrawals on its website, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday, citing a confidential fundraising document.

The document viewed by the Journal cites a “liquidity crunch due to certain illiquid assets on its balance sheet” at Genesis.

On Wednesday, Genesis Global Capital suspended customer redemptions in its lending business, citing the sudden failure of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto exchange FTX.

Genesis did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the WSJ report.

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 prompting investigations by regulators in several countries.

Last week, 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.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)