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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)

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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)

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Spain adds Bitstamp to its list of virtual exchange providers

MADRID (Reuters) – Spain’s central bank has added European cryptocurrency exchange Bitstamp to its list of virtual exchange providers, it said.

Inclusion means Bitstamp must uphold a professional reputation and comply with procedures to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing, the Bank of Spain said on its website.

“It does not entail the supervision of the exchange provider,” it said.

Crypto assets are in focus worldwide following the collapse of crypto exchange platform FTX, which filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday.

The Bank of Spain now has 46 exchange providers registered on its list.

(Reporting by Jesús Aguado; editing by Inti Landauro and Nick Macfie)

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Factbox-What are FTX’s investors saying?

(Reuters) – FTX, formerly one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges, is seeking new funding after a rush of customer withdrawals left it on the brink of collapse.

Regulators froze some assets of the digital currency exchange and industry peers are trying to limit losses, while former FTX Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried is coming under scrutiny.

Founded in 2019, FTX expanded rapidly and was valued at $32 billion in January 2022 during a fundraising exercise.

Here’s what investors in FTX are saying now:

SOFTBANK

The total investment of SoftBank Group Corp’s Vision Fund in the U.S. and international operations of FTX is less than $100 million, a source close to SoftBank said on Friday.

SoftBank is marking down its FTX investments to zero, the source said. The complications at FTX are the latest difficulty for the Vision Fund, hit in recent quarters by a global tech rout.

SEQUOIA CAPITAL

Sequoia Capital said on Wednesday it would mark down its total investments in FTX to $0.

On Twitter, Sequoia said its Global Growth Fund III invested $150 million in FTX.com and FTX US, which accounted for less than 3% of the fund’s committed capital, while the Sequoia Capital Global Equities fund invested $63.5 million.

“The fund remains in good shape,” it said.

ONTARIO TEACHERS PENSION PLAN

The Ontario Teachers Pension Plan (OTPP) said on Thursday it had invested a total of $95 million in FTX.

Any financial loss from the exposure will have limited impact on the pension plan, OTTP said.

TEMASEK

Singapore’s state investor Temasek Holdings said on Thursday it would write down the value of its full investment in collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, irrespective of the outcome of its bankruptcy filing.

Temasek said it invested a total of $275 million for a minority stake of about 1% in FTX International and about 1.5% in FTX U.S.

In a statement, Temasek said that during eight months of due diligence in 2021, it had reviewed “FTX’s audited financial statement, which showed it to be profitable”. Temasek did not have a board seat, it said.

“It is apparent from this investment that perhaps our belief in the actions, judgment and leadership of Sam Bankman-Fried, formed from our interactions with him and views expressed in our discussions with others, would appear to have been misplaced,” Temasek added.

CIRCLE

Fintech company Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said on Twitter on Wednesday, “Circle is a tiny equity holder of FTX, and FTX is a tiny equity holder of Circle.”

PARADIGM

Crypto investment giant Paradigm, which raised a $2.5 billion investment fund in November 2021, told investors in a letter that it had invested $278 million in FTX, or 3.2% of the firm’s total assets.

“It is possible that other Paradigm portfolio companies could be impacted by these events, and we are actively partnering with founders to help,” it said in the Nov. 9 letter.

The firm has written the investment down to zero.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Additional reporting by Niket Nishant; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and Clarence Fernandez)

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Singapore’s deputy PM: FTX case has raised ‘serious allegations’

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The collapse of crypto exchange FTX has raised “very serious allegations that amount to potential fraud”, Singapore’s finance minister and deputy prime minister said on Thursday.

Lawrence Wong said recent developments in the crypto market reinforced the city-state’s position that it was “on the right track” in focusing on digital assets innovation, but also taking a strong stance against crypto speculation and trading by retail investors.

FTX was one of the largest exchanges in the world but had a spectacular collapse in recent weeks and has filed for bankruptcy. A Reuters report found that at least $1 billion of client funds were missing at the failed crypto firm.

FTX representatives did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

FTX founder and former chief executive Sam Bankman-Fried has said he expanded the business too quickly and failed to notice red flags. He tweeted on Tuesday that his main goal was “to do right by customers” and was meeting with regulators to that end.

Singapore is in the midst of tightening rules around retail investment in cryptocurrencies, such as not allowing exchanges to offer incentives for referrals.

Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings has said it would write down the value of its entire investment of $275 million in FTX.

(Reporting by Chen Lin; Writing by Xinghui Kok; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor and Mark Potter)

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Bankman-Fried says filing for FTX bankruptcy was a mistake – Vox

(Reuters) – The founder of collapsed crypto exchange FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried, said he regretted his decision to file for bankruptcy and, in an interview published by Vox, criticized regulators.

Bankman-Fried said later on Twitter that the basis of the interview, an exchange of messages on the same platform, was not supposed to be public.

The collapsed company, which filed for bankruptcy last week, has appointed five new independent directors at each of its main affiliated companies, including Alameda research. The five new directors and newly appointed Chief Executive John J. Ray are working to navigate through the bankruptcy process.

In the interview, Bankman-Fried said those in charge of FTX’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy process were “trying to burn it all to the ground out of shame,” and that he had two weeks in which to raise $8 billion and save the company.

“That’s basically all that matters (raising the money) for the rest of my life,” he said.

His single biggest mistake had been “Chapter 11. If I hadn’t done that, withdrawals would be opening up in a month with customers fully whole.”

Regulators make everything worse, he added. “They don’t protect customers at all,” he said.

In a statement published on Twitter, Ray said Bankman-Fried had no ongoing role at FTX, FTX US or Alameda Research and did not speak on their behalf.

FTX has said it is in contact with dozens of global regulators, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

After Vox published the interview, Bankman-Fried said some of what he had said had been “thoughtless or overly strong” and that he was venting about something that was not intended to be public.

“It’s *really* hard to be a regulator. They have an impossible job: to regulate entire industries that grow faster than their mandate allows them to,” he wrote on Twitter, adding that the message exchange with Vox’s reporter was “not intended to be public.”

A Vox spokesperson said all communication with Vox reporters was on-the-record unless the subject and reporter had agreed otherwise.

“Our reporter is clearly identified as such in her Twitter bio, has previously interviewed Mr. Bankman-Fried, and in this instance, as an additional courtesy, notified him via email that she planned to write about their on-the-record exchange. He made no objection in his reply prior to publication.”

Bankman-Fried did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for further comment.

(Reporting by Shubham Kalia and Jahnavi Nidumolu in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Jaiveer Shekhawat; Editing by Bradley Perrett)

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As FTX collapses, Temasek becomes latest backer to write down $275 million funding

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings said it would write down the value of its entire investment of $275 million in collapsed crypto currency exchange FTX, in the latest move by FTX’s investors.

“In view of FTX’s financial position, we have decided to write down our full investment in FTX, irrespective of the outcome of FTX’s bankruptcy protection filing,” Temasek said in a detailed statement on Thursday.

FTX’s other backers such as SoftBank Group Corp’s Vision Fund and Sequoia Capital have also marked down their investment to zero after FTX, founded by Sam Bankman-Fried, filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States last week in the highest-profile crypto blowup to date.

Temasek said it had invested $210 million for a minority stake of about 1% in FTX International, and $65 million for a minority stake of about 1.5% in FTX US, across two funding rounds from October 2021 to January 2022.

“The cost of our investment in FTX was 0.09% of our net portfolio value of S$403 billion ($294.3 billion) as of 31 March 2022,” it said.

Temasek said its early stage investments made up about 6% of its total portfolio.

It said the thesis for its funding of FTX was to invest in a leading digital asset exchange that would provide it with “protocol agnostic and market neutral exposure” to crypto markets with a fee income model and no trading or balance sheet risk.

Temasek said it currently had no direct exposure in cryptocurrencies.

It said it had conducted an extensive due diligence process on FTX from February to October 2021, during which it had reviewed FTX’s audited financial statement, which showed it to be profitable.

“It is apparent from this investment that perhaps our belief in the actions, judgment and leadership of Sam Bankman-Fried, formed from our interactions with him and views expressed in our discussions with others, would appear to have been misplaced,” it said.

($1 = 1.3693 Singapore dollars)

(Reporting by Anshuman Daga in Singapore; Additional reporting by Sameer Manekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

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Coinbase CFO says full contagion impact of FTX collapse still to show – WSJ

(Reuters) – The full extent of the fallout on the crypto industry from the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX was yet to come out, Coinbase Global Inc Chief Financial Officer Alesia Haas told the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday.

“What we are seeing now is a fallout of FTX is becoming much more like the 2008 financial crisis where it’s exposing poor credit practices and is exposing poor risk management,” Haas told the WSJ in an interview.

It will take a few days or weeks to understand the full contagion of the event, Haas added.

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.

The collapse has fanned fears about the future of the crypto industry after FTX outlined a “severe liquidity crisis”. Since then regulators have opened investigations and lawmakers have called for clearer rules on how the industry operates.

“We’re gonna see a drive towards regulation both in the U.S. and globally,” Haas told the Journal.

Coinbase, which many believe is poised to gain market share from FTX’s collapse, recently underwent a second round of job cuts this year.

Cryptocurrencies have been roiled as higher interest rates and worries of an economic downturn force investors to dump risky assets. Shares in Coinbase are down roughly 81% so far this year.

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

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U.S. Treasury’s Yellen: more effective oversight needed for crypto markets

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The recent failure of a major cryptocurrency exchange and its impact on holders and investors of crypto assets demonstrate the need for more effective oversight of crypto markets, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday.

Treasury and othe regulators identified risks in crypto markets over the past year and some of them were “at the center of the crypto market stresses observed over the past week,” Yellen said in a statement, without directly naming collapsed crypto exchange FTX.

“The federal government, including Congress, also needs to move quickly to fill the regulatory gaps the Biden administration has identified,” Yellen added.

(Reporting by Katharine Jackson and Ismail Shakil; Editing by Caitlin Webber)

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FTX’s Bankman-Fried, Tom Brady and other celebrity promoters sued by crypto investors

By Jody Godoy

(Reuters) – 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.

The proposed class action filed on Tuesday night in Miami alleges that FTX yield-bearing accounts were unregistered securities that were unlawfully sold in the United States.

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.

At least $1 billion in client funds are missing, sources have told Reuters.

When the crypto exchange faltered on liquidity concerns, U.S. investors sustained $11 billion in damages, the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit seeks damages from Bankman-Fried and 11 athletes and other celebrities who promoted FTX, including David, the creator of “Seinfeld” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”

David starred in a commercial for FTX that aired during the 2022 Super Bowl in which he portrayed fictional characters dismissing important innovations throughout history and ended with the message “Don’t Miss Out on Crypto.”

Brady, tennis star Naomi Osaka and professional basketball team the Golden State Warriors are also defendants in the lawsuit.

Representatives for Bankman-Fried, Brady, Osaka, David and the Golden State Warriors did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.

John J. Ray III, FTX’s new chief executive who is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit, declined to comment on the allegations.

The lawsuit was brought on behalf of Edwin Garrison, an Oklahoma resident who had an FTX yield-bearing account which he funded with crypto assets to earn interest, and others like him.

Garrison alleges that while FTX lured U.S. investors to its yield-bearing accounts, it was a “Ponzi scheme” where investor funds were shuffled to related entities to maintain the appearance of liquidity.

Investors and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission have previously gone after celebrities for deceptively touting cryptocurrencies.

Reality TV star Kim Kardashian agreed in February to pay the SEC $1.26 million to settle claims that she failed to disclose she was paid to promote EthereumMax tokens. She did not admit wrongdoing.

Private investors also have sued Kardashian and others over their roles in promoting the tokens.

Garrison cited these cases in his lawsuit, as well as a February ruling by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that allowed BitConnect cryptocurrency investors to sue individuals who promoted the coin online.

His lawsuit alleges Bankman-Fried and FTX promoters engaged in a conspiracy to defraud investors and violated Florida state laws requiring securities to be registered and prohibiting unfair business practices.

Sean Masson, an attorney at Scott+Scott who represents crypto investors in the EMAX case, said investors have used the Florida unfair trade law to target crypto promoters in lawsuits that are pending.

“To be successful, they are going to need to establish a deceptive act or unfair practice, and that it caused actual damages,” Masson said.

(Reporting by Abinaya Vijayaraghavan in Bengaluru and Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Anna Driver and Matthew Lewis)

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Grayscale Bitcoin Trust falls as cryptocurrencies slide again

(Reuters) – Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, the world’s largest bitcoin fund, fell almost 7% on Wednesday, as investors dumped more digital assets after last week’s high-profile unraveling of crypto exchange FTX.

Crypto investment bank Genesis Global Trading said in a tweet it was temporarily suspending redemptions and new loan originations in the wake of FTX’s collapse, which has given cryptocurrencies another hammering this year.

Genesis, the latest company to be hit by FTX turmoil, is owned by Digital Currency Group (DCG), which is also the parent company of Grayscale.

DCG tweeted that freezing Genesis’ lending business had no impact on the firm and its wholly-owned subsidiaries.

Grayscale said it would be business as usual for its products and its underlying assets were unaffected.

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust’s discount to its net asset value, which hit an all-time low of 41% last week, is now at 37%. Shares have not traded at a premium since March 2021, Coinglass data showed.

The trust is a close-ended fund, whose short-term price is driven by supply, demand and market sentiment unlike an exchange traded fund that generally trades in line with its value.

In June, Grayscale sued the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for nixing the digital asset manager’s proposal to convert bitcoin trust into a spot bitcoin exchange traded fund.

Grayscale bitcoin fund, which has $10.7 billion worth of bitcoin under management, has slumped about 75% in the past 12 months.

Grayscale Ethereum Trust, which has $3.8 billion assets under management, shed 81% in the past year. By comparison, bitcoin, which was down 2% at $16,505 on Wednesday, has slumped 72% in the past year.

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal in Bengaluru)

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Collapse of FTX should serve as reminder of risks of crypto assets, ECB’s De Cos says

MADRID (Reuters) – The collapse of crypto exchange platform FTX should serve as a reminder for clients of the risks crypto assets entail, European Central Bank policymaker Pablo Hernandez de Cos said on Wednesday.

“We hope that the events we have recently experienced will make citizens aware of the risks associated with these cyrpto assets,” De Cos said when asked about FTX’s collapse.

The exchange, which had been among the world’s largest, filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday in one of the highest-profile crypto blowups after panicked traders withdrew $6 billion from the platform in just 72 hours and rival exchange Binance abandoned a rescue deal.

(Reporting by Jesús Aguado and Emma Pinedo; editing by David Latona)

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FTX’s Bahamas liquidators “reject the validity” of US bankruptcy

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) – FTX’s Bahamas-based liquidators said they “reject the validity” of the crypto exchange’s U.S. bankruptcy proceedings, according to court documents filed in the U.S. late Tuesday.

FTX and 130 affiliates filed for bankruptcy in the U.S. on Nov. 11, leaving an estimated 1 million customers and other investors facing total losses in the billions of dollars. But its Bahamas subsidiary FTX Digital Markets entered liquidation proceedings first, and its court-appointed liquidators said late Tuesday that their case may “impact” FTX’s effort to reorganize in the U.S.

(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth)

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U.S. House committee to hold hearing on collapse of FTX

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. House Financial Services Committee plans to hold a hearing in December on the collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX.

The committee said it expects to hear from the companies and individuals involved, including FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, Alameda Research, Binance, FTX and related entities, among others. 

(Reporting by David Shepardson)

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FTX’s Bahamas unit seeks Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection -filing

(Reuters) – FTX’s Bahamas unit, FTX Digital Markets, is seeking protection from creditors in the United States under Chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, a court filing showed on Tuesday.

Such a move allows a foreign debtor to shield assets in the country. Non U.S.-companies use the measure to block creditors who want to file lawsuits or tie up assets in the United States.

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

(Reporting by Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

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Crypto broker Genesis to suspend redemptions, new loan originations – tweet

(Reuters) – Genesis is temporarily suspending redemptions and new loan originations at its lending business, the crypto broker said in a tweet on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Mehnaz Yasmin in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta)

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Special Report-FTX’s Bankman-Fried begged for a rescue even as he revealed huge holes in firm’s books

By Angus Berwick, Anirban Sen, Elizabeth Howcroft and Lawrence Delevingne

(Reuters) – As customers withdrew billions of dollars from crypto exchange FTX one frantic Sunday this month, founder Sam Bankman-Fried worked the phones in a futile bid to raise $7 billion in emergency funds.

Hunkered in his Bahamas apartment, Bankman-Fried toiled through the night, calling some of the world’s biggest investors, including Sequoia Capital, Apollo Global Management Inc and TPG Inc, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

Sequoia was among investors that lined up only months before to pump money into Bankman-Fried’s empire. But not now. Sequoia was shocked at the amount of money Bankman-Fried needed to save FTX, according to the sources, while Apollo first asked for more information, only to later decline. Both firms and TPG declined to comment for this article.

In the end, the calls came to naught and FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, leaving an estimated 1 million customers and other investors facing total losses in the billions of dollars. The collapse reverberated across the crypto world and sent bitcoin and other digital assets plummeting.

Some details of what happened at FTX have already emerged: Reuters reported Bankman-Fried secretly used $10 billion in customer funds to prop up his trading business, for instance, and that at least $1 billion of those deposits had vanished.

Now, a review of dozens of company documents and interviews with current and former executives and investors provide the most comprehensive picture so far of how Bankman-Fried, the 30-year-old son of Stanford University professors, became one of the richest men in the world in just a couple of years, then came crashing down.

The documents, reported here for the first time, include financial statements, business updates, company messages and letters to investors. They, along with the interviews, reveal that:

— In presentations to investors, some of the same assets appeared simultaneously on the balance sheets of FTX and of Bankman-Fried’s trading firm, Alameda Research – despite claims by FTX that Alameda operated independently.

— One of Bankman-Fried’s close aides tweaked FTX’s accounting software. This enabled Bankman-Fried to hide the transfer of customer money from FTX to Alameda. A screenshot of FTX’s book-keeping system showed that even after the massive customer withdrawals, some $10 billion in deposits remained, plus a surplus of $1.5 billion. This led employees to believe wrongly that FTX was on a solid financial footing.

— FTX made about $400 million in “software royalty” payments to Alameda over the years. Alameda used the funds to buy FTX’s digital coin FTT, reducing supply of the coin and supporting its price.

— In the second quarter of this year, FTX posted a $161 million loss. Bankman-Fried, meanwhile, had spent some $2 billion on acquisitions.

— As Bankman-Fried tried to rescue FTX in its frantic final days, he sought emergency investments from financial behemoths in Saudi Arabia and Japan – and was joined at his Bahamas headquarters by his law professor father.

Bankman-Fried told Reuters in an email that due to a “confusing internal account,” Alameda’s leverage was substantially higher than he believed it was. He added that FTX processed roughly $6 billion of client withdrawals.

He said FTX and Alameda together made a profit of roughly $1.5 billion in 2021, which was more than all of the expenses put together of both organizations since their founding. “I was unfortunately unable to communicate much of what was going on to the broader company in real time because much of what I posted in Slack appeared on Twitter soon after,” he added.

FTX did not respond to questions for this article.

The U.S. Department of Justice, Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission are now all investigating FTX, including how it handled customer funds, Reuters has reported. The collapse has shaken investor confidence in cryptocurrencies and led to calls from lawmakers and others for greater regulation of the industry. The CFTC and DOJ declined to comment for this article. The SEC did not respond.

A LIFE IN THE BAHAMAS

Born in 1992, Bankman-Fried grew up around Stanford University’s Palo Alto-area campus, where both his parents taught at the law school. He landed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied math and physics and embraced the idea of effective altruism, a movement that encourages people to prioritize donations to charities.

After graduating from MIT in 2014, he took a job on Wall Street with a quantitative trading firm. Bankman-Fried founded Alameda Research three years later, billing it as “a crypto quant trading firm.”

Rejected initially by venture investors, he cobbled together loans and assembled a team of young traders and programmers, many of them sleeping and working in a small walkup apartment in the San Francisco area, according to a profile that later appeared on the website of FTX investor Sequoia.

Alameda found early trading success by arbitraging cryptocurrency prices on international markets, with half of profits going to charity, according to the same profile. By 2019, the company handled $55 million for clients, an Alameda company booklet said. Reuters could not independently confirm these details.

The booklet flagged the risks of crypto trading, particularly how sudden sales of tokens could trigger a “domino effect” that would lead to a “cascading set of liquidity failures.” It noted that “nothing fundamental” backed bitcoin’s value.

Using profits from Alameda, Bankman-Fried launched FTX in 2019. His aim was to build an “FTX Superapp” that combined cryptocurrency trading, betting markets, stock trading, banking, and peer-to-peer and business payments, according to an FTX marketing document from earlier this year.

The company’s growth over the next two years was only surpassed by his vision.

FTX’s revenues grew from $10 million in 2019 to $1 billion in 2021. From almost nothing in 2019, FTX handled about 10% of global crypto trading this year, a September document shows. It spent roughly $2 billion buying companies, the document shows.

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

In an undated document, titled ‘FTX Roadmap 2022,’ the company laid out its goals for the next five to 10 years. It hoped to be “the largest global financial exchange,” with $30 billion in annual revenue, more than what U.S. retail brokerage giant Fidelity Investments earned in revenues last year.

In October 2021, Bankman-Fried, then 29 years old, landed on the cover of Forbes, which pegged his net worth at $26.5 billion – the 25th richest person in America. FTX said on its website that “FTX, its affiliates, and its employees have donated over $10m to help save lives, prevent suffering, and ensure a brighter future.”

Bankman-Fried’s personal finances suggest he lived frugally for a billionaire. A financial statement reviewed by Reuters shows that for 2021, he drew an annual salary of $200,000, declared $1 million in real estate assets, and spent $50,000 on personal expenses.

But in the Bahamas, his lifestyle was more luxurious than his finances showed. At one point, he lived in a penthouse overlooking the Caribbean, valued at almost $40 million, according to two people who worked with FTX.

Bankman-Fried told Reuters he lived in a house with nine other colleagues. For his employees, he said FTX provided free meals and an “in-house Uber-like” service around the island.

“ULTIMATE SOURCE OF TRUTH”

This year began with FTX seemingly everywhere.

Its logo was emblazoned on a major sports arena in Miami and on Major League Baseball umpire uniforms. Sports stars and celebrities including Tom Brady, Gisele Bundchen and Steph Curry became partners in promoting the company. None of them commented for this article. Bankman-Fried became a regular presence in Washington, donating tens of millions of dollars to politicians and lobbying lawmakers on crypto markets.

FTX was also planning partnerships with some of the world’s largest companies. An FTX document from June 2022, which has not been previously reported, shows a list of FTX’s “select partners” for business-to-business (B2B) services. Prospective partners included retail giant Walmart Inc, social media titan Meta Platforms Inc, payment-system provider Stripe, and financial website Yahoo! Finance, according to the document.

A Yahoo spokesperson said, “While we were in very early stages of a prospective partnership with FTX, nothing was close to completion when the events of last week occurred.”

A person with knowledge of the matter said Stripe has no contract with FTX to enable Stripe users to accept crypto payments. Walmart didn’t respond to a request for comment about a proposed partnership with FTX for employee investing. Meta too didn’t comment about discussions to make FTX a digital-wallet provider for Instagram users.

Investors loved Bankman-Fried’s ambition. FTX had already received more than $2 billion from backers including Sequoia, SoftBank Group Corp, BlackRock Inc and Temasek. In January, FTX raised a further $400 million, valuing the business at $32 billion.

FTX expected to take its international and U.S. businesses public, an investor due-diligence document from this June said. The document is reported here for the first time.

At the peak of his powers, Bankman-Fried urged the crypto industry to help governments shape laws to supervise it, saying FTX’s goal was to become “one of the most regulated exchanges in the world.” “FTX has the cleanest brand in crypto,” it proclaimed earlier this year.

Behind his rapid growth, there was a secret Bankman-Fried kept from most other employees: he had dipped into customer funds to pay for some of his projects, according to company documents and people briefed on FTX’s finances. Doing so was explicitly barred in the exchange’s terms of use, which affirmed user deposits “shall at all times remain with you.”

FTX generated 2 cents in fees for every $100 traded, documents seen by Reuters show, reaping hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue by 2021. Nonetheless, FTX barely broke even during its first two years, 2019 and 2020. It generated around $450 million in profit in 2021, when crypto markets boomed, but it slumped to a $161 million loss in the second quarter of this year, according to financial records, which are reported here for the first time.

Some of the $10 billion in removed customers’ money went to cover losses that Alameda sustained earlier this year on a series of bailouts, including in failed crypto lender Voyager Digital, according to the three FTX sources briefed on the company’s finances.

FTX also financed acquisitions such as the purchase in May of a $640 million stake in trading platform Robinhood Markets Inc. Robinhood didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Bankman-Fried told Reuters he did not believe that Alameda had substantial losses, including on Voyager, without providing further details.

Around $1 billion of the $10 billion sum is not accounted for among Alameda’s assets, Reuters reported on Friday. Reuters has not been able to trace these missing funds.

According to the three FTX sources, only Bankman-Fried’s innermost circle of associates knew about his use of client deposits: his co-founder and chief technology officer, Gary Wang; the head of engineering, Nishad Singh; and Caroline Ellison, chief executive of Alameda. Wang and Singh both worked with Bankman-Fried at Alameda previously.

Wang, Singh and Ellison did not return requests for comment.

To conceal the transfers of customer funds to Alameda, Wang, a former Google software developer, built a backdoor in FTX’s book-keeping software, the people said.

Bankman-Fried often told employees tasked with monitoring the company’s financials that the book-keeping system was “the ultimate source of truth” about the company’s accounts, two of the people said. But the backdoor, known only to his most trusted lieutenants, allowed Alameda to withdraw crypto deposits without triggering internal red flags, they said.

FTX also had a vulnerability: its bespoke cryptocurrency.

Shortly after its launch, FTX introduced its own digital token, called FTT, described on its website as the exchange’s “backbone.” Staff could opt to receive pay and bonuses in the token, and many of them accumulated fortunes in FTT as its value exploded in 2021, according to the three current and former executives. One executive invested all their savings in FTT, worth millions of dollars, the executive said, “because of loyalty to Sam.”

According to a June 2022 due diligence document Bankman-Fried sent to a potential investor and the company’s financial records, FTX paid $400 million to an Alameda subsidiary since 2019 as “software royalty” payments for development work. The subsidiary used the funds to buy FTT and remove the digital tokens from supply, so supporting the price.

FTX disclosed on its website that it was using part of its trading fees to buy FTT. It did not reveal the arrangement with Alameda.

Over the years, Alameda accumulated a huge holding of FTT, valued at around $6 billion before last week, according to a balance sheet later sent to investors. It used the FTT reserves to secure corporate loans, people familiar with its finances said. This meant that Bankman-Fried’s business empire was dependent on the token.

That little-known holding became Bankman-Fried’s undoing.

PRESSURE BUILDS

On Nov. 2, news outlet CoinDesk reported a leaked balance sheet disclosing Alameda’s reliance on FTT. The head of the world’s largest crypto exchange – Bankman-Fried’s chief rival – pounced on that report. Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, citing “recent revelations,” said Binance would sell its entire FTT holding due to “risk management.”

Bankman-Fried retorted on Twitter that Zhao was spreading “false rumors.” In a since-deleted tweet, he wrote: “FTX has enough to cover all client holdings. We don’t invest client assets.”

Nonetheless, FTT came under intense selling pressure, forcing Alameda to buy more of the tokens in an attempt to stabilize the price, a person with knowledge of the trades said. Customers panicked and rushed to withdraw deposits from FTX, with over $100 million flowing out of the firm each hour that Sunday, company documents reviewed by Reuters show.

In his email to Reuters, Bankman-Fried said, “To my knowledge, Alameda did not buy very much FTT during the crash to stabilize it.”

Staff initially remained calm. The finance team could still see ample assets on the book-keeping portal as of last week. About $10 billion in client deposits remained, with a $1.5 billion surplus to cover any further withdrawals, according to a screenshot of the database seen by Reuters.

In reality, those funds were gone.

Several hours after Zhao’s Sunday tweet, Bankman-Fried has told Reuters, he gathered his lieutenants Wang and Singh at his apartment to decide on a plan. It was a “rough weekend,” he messaged staff on Slack that evening, but “we’re chugging along.”

The following day, he summoned several other senior managers to his home to join Wang and Singh. He broke the news to them: FTX was almost out of money.

This account of the scramble that ensued is based on interviews with three current and former FTX executives briefed by top staff and documents that Reuters reviewed.

Bankman-Fried showed the executives spreadsheets that revealed there was a $10 billion hole in FTX’s finances – because customer deposits had been transferred to Alameda and mostly spent on other assets. The executives were shocked. One of them told Bankman-Fried the spreadsheet presentation contradicted what FTX told regulators about its use of client funds.

To make up the shortfall, they calculated that Alameda could sell around $3 billion of the assets within hours, mainly money held in company trading accounts on other crypto exchanges. The rest would take days or weeks to offload because it was hard to trade those assets. And FTX urgently needed a further $7 billion in cash to survive.

So began Bankman-Fried’s search for a savior.

While money continued to drain away from FTX, the three sources told Reuters, he and his aides worked through the night, contacting about a dozen potential investors.

He turned to the crypto community, too, ringing up the organization behind Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin, and asking for a loan. His father, Joseph Bankman, a Stanford Law professor, also arrived to advise his son. Bankman did not respond to a request for comment. In return for any funding, Bankman-Fried pledged to investors most of Alameda’s assets, including its holding of FTT, along with his own 75% stake in FTX. But no one came through with an offer.

One of the investors who turned down Bankman-Fried said his numbers were “very amateurish,” without elaborating. Another red flag was that the spreadsheets showed ties between FTX and Alameda, the investor said.

Around 3 a.m., Bankman-Fried resorted to Zhao, his archrival at Binance. Zhao, widely known by the initials CZ, came to the phone. A few hours later, Zhao sent over a non-binding letter of intent to acquire FTX.com, which Bankman-Fried signed. The pair tweeted a joint announcement later that morning.

For most FTX employees, this was the first they heard about the company’s dire situation. “Just complete disbelief and feelings of betrayal,” Zane Tackett, FTX’s head of institutional sales, wrote on Twitter the day after. He declined to comment.

Tackett and some others resigned. “I can’t do it any more,” another FTX team member texted colleagues.

To worsen the pain, the price of the FTT token crashed 80% within three hours of the news, shrinking Alameda’s assets further and wiping out many employees’ net worth. The executive with millions of dollars in FTT said watching it collapse “was like seeing my world diminishing.”

Bankman-Fried pleaded for employees’ forgiveness on Slack, saying he “fucked up” but that the Binance deal allowed them to “fight another day.” Less than 30 hours later, Binance pulled out, citing its due diligence. Sequoia then wrote off its $150 million investment in FTX.

Scrambling to find a savior, Bankman-Fried expanded his search around the world. “I’ll keep fighting,” he messaged staff.

He sought to persuade officials at major financial institutions such as Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and Japanese investment bank Nomura Holdings Inc to invest, according to a message he sent on Thursday to advisors, along with two other people familiar with the talks. Those appeals are reported here for the first time. PIF and Nomura did not comment.

Bankman-Fried also tried to get a group of crypto firms to each pitch in $1 billion. But a balance sheet FTX sent to investors, showing only $900 million in liquid assets, spooked them, according to two people familiar with the matter.

By Friday, when FTX filed for bankruptcy in the United States, “we were all doomed,” an executive said.

GRAPHIC: FTX’s liquid assets – https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/byvrljjzbve/chart.png

GRAPHIC: FTX’s less liquid assets – https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/gdvzqyyzmpw/chart.png

(Reporting by Angus Berwick and Anirban Sen in NEW YORK, Elizabeth Howcroft in LONDON and Lawrence Delevingne in BOSTON; additional reporting by Tom Wilson in LONDON, Greg Roumeliotis in NEW YORK and Hannah Lang in WASHINGTON; editing by Paritosh Bansal and Janet McBride)

Categories
News

Binance CEO Zhao: significant interest in crypto industry recovery fund

ABU DHABI (Reuters) – Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao said on Wednesday there was significant interest from industry players in a recovery fund his company plans to launch to help crypto projects facing a liquidity squeeze following the collapse of rival FTX.

Speaking at a conference in Abu Dhabi, Zhao said that he doesn’t have a specific limit in mind for the size of the recovery fund.

“There are players that have strong financials and we should band together; we’ve got significant interest so far,” he said declining to give any names at this point.

Zhao said Binance has healthy reserves but did not give a figure for how much the company would contribute to the fund.

“Crypto doesn’t need saving,” Zhao said. “Crypto will be fine.”

More details concerning the fund will be available over the next two weeks, Zhao said.

(Reporting by Rachna Uppal; Writing by Lina Najem)

Categories
News

Currencies on edge as traders assess risks from Poland

By Kevin Buckland and Ankur Banerjee

TOKYO (Reuters) – The safe-haven U.S. dollar firmed in volatile trading on Wednesday as markets took stock of geopolitical risks following news of a Russian-made rocket striking NATO-member Poland.

U.S. President Joe Biden said early information suggested the blast in Poland may not have been caused by a missile fired from Russia, even as the United States and its NATO allies investigated the blast, which killed two.

Russia denied it was responsible for the explosion but the report sparked turbulent trading overnight as fears of the war in Ukraine spilling over to its neighbors rattled investors.

Biden was speaking after global leaders held an emergency meeting on Wednesday following the deadly explosions that Ukraine and Polish authorities said were caused by Russian-made missiles.

“The market is trying to size up the risk and what that really means,” said Moh Siong Sim, currency strategist at Bank of Singapore. “Is that something that is going to lead to further tension or perhaps this is something that will deescalate over the next few days.”

“Right now, it’s a bit of a tussle in the market as to how to price this risk,” he added.

The turbulent trading saw major currencies swing between gains and losses, with the U.S. dollar index, which measures the currency against six peers and weights the euro most heavily, rising as much as 0.31% to 106.76 before last trading 0.13% higher at 106.57.

The euro was up 0.11% at $1.0361, having slipped 0.18% earlier in Asian trade. The currency saw similar moves overnight.

Sterling was last trading at $1.1873, up 0.13% after reversing its losses from earlier in the day. The Japanese yen weakened 0.38% versus the greenback to 139.82 per dollar.

“The currency market is stabilising, toying with the notion that this was a stray missile or an intercepted missile and doesn’t necessarily imply an escalation in the war, with NATO needing to get involved,” said Rodrigo Catril, a senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank.

Risk-sensitive Antipodean currencies slipped, with Australian dollar down 0.09% versus the greenback at $0.675, while the kiwi fell 0.23% to $0.614.

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

Currency bid prices at 0347 GMT

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

Previous Change

Session

Euro/Dollar

$1.0359 $1.0351 +0.10% -8.87% +1.0387 +1.0331

Dollar/Yen

140.0450 139.3100 +0.57% +21.81% +140.1850 +138.9100

Euro/Yen

145.09 144.14 +0.66% +11.33% +145.2600 +143.5800

Dollar/Swiss

0.9456 0.9447 +0.11% +3.67% +0.9458 +0.9431

Sterling/Dollar

1.1855 1.1868 -0.04% -12.28% +1.1886 +1.1834

Dollar/Canadian

1.3285 1.3278 +0.08% +5.11% +1.3304 +1.3256

Aussie/Dollar

0.6750 0.6756 -0.08% -7.13% +0.6771 +0.6733

NZ

Dollar/Dollar 0.6145 0.6158 -0.19% -10.21% +0.6168 +0.6132

All spots

Tokyo spots

Europe spots

Volatilities

Tokyo Forex market info from BOJ

(Reporting by Kevin Buckland and Ankur Banerjee in Singapore; Editing by Edmund Klamann and Bradley Perrett)

Categories
News

FTX creditors may number over 1 million as regulators seek answers

By Akriti Sharma and Daniel Leussink

(Reuters) – Collapsed crypto exchange FTX outlined a “severe liquidity crisis” in U.S. bankruptcy filings, which said the group could have more than 1 million creditors, as regulators opened probes and the crypto pain spread with the Wall Street Journal reporting BlockFi was planning layoffs and a possible bankruptcy filing.

FTX’s late Monday filing to a U.S. bankruptcy court said it was in contact with dozens of global regulators and had appointed five new independent directors at each of its main companies, including its sibling trading firm Alameda Research.

The exchange, which had been among the world’s largest, filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday in one of the highest-profile crypto blowups after traders pulled $6 billion from the platform in three days and rival exchange Binance abandoned a rescue deal.

Top crypto exchanges by volume https://graphics.reuters.com/FINTECH-CRYPTO/zdpxdyzzgpx/index.html

“FTX faced a severe liquidity crisis that necessitated the filing of these cases on an emergency basis last Friday,” the court filing stated.

FTX’s bankruptcy case includes more than 100,000 creditors, and this number could surpass 1 million, the filings said. The numbers were disclosed as FTX requested that multiple FTX group companies file one consolidated list of major creditors, rather than separate ones.

The documents also confirmed that FTX had responded to a cyber attack on Nov. 11, after saying on Saturday it had seen “unauthorized transactions” on its platform.

FTX engaged Alvarez & Marsal as financial adviser, and said it has been in contact with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), and dozens of federal, state and international regulatory agencies over the past 72 hours.

The fallout has so far been limited to crypto exchanges and traders, but is featuring in mainstream policy discussions too.

Michael Barr, the Federal Reserve’s top Wall Street cop, on Tuesday said he is concerned about risks from the nonbank sector for which the U.S. central bank and other regulators have poor visibility.

“That includes obviously crypto activity, but more broadly risks in parts of the financial system where we don’t have good visibility, we don’t have good transparency, we don’t have good data. That can create risks that blow back to the financial system that we do regulate,” he told the Senate Banking Committee.

Crypto industry peers and partners have been quick to distance themselves from FTX and tout their sound financials, though some, including U.S. cryptocurrency broker Genesis Trading, have disclosed they are exposed to FTX, either having held tokens on the exchange or by owning FTX’s native token, FTT.

FTT plunged around 94% last week, while bitcoin lost 22%.

Crypto lender BlockFi, which previously acknowledged it has significant exposure to FTX, plans to lay off workers while preparing to file for bankruptcy, the Wall Street Journal reported. The newspaper reported that BlockFi was recently working with Kenric Kattner, a bankruptcy partner at Haynes & Boone, citing people familiar with the situation. BlockFi and Kattner did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Separately, bankrupt crypto lender Voyager Digital no longer plans to sell itself to FTX, Bloomberg reported, while Canadian crypto exchange Bitvo said it terminated its deal to be bought by FTX.

FTX founder and former chief executive Sam Bankman-Fried said his main goal is “to do right by customers,” in a tweet on Tuesday.

“I’m contributing what I can to doing so. I’m meeting in-person with regulators and working with the teams to do what we can for customers,” he said on Twitter.

Bloomberg reported that American and Bahamian authorities had been talking about bringing Bankman-Fried to the United States for questioning.

Bankman-Fried tried to raise cash from investors over the weekend to repay FTX clients even after the company had sought bankruptcy protection and he had resigned as CEO, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Bankman-Fried said he expanded his business too fast and failed to notice red flags at the exchange, in an interview with the New York Times published late on Monday.

REGULATORY SCRUTINY

The sudden collapse of FTX, once a seen as a mainstay of the crypto industry with a $32 billion valuation as of January, has sparked investigations by financial regulators and other supervisory bodies around the world.

The Securities Commission of the Bahamas, in a statement dated Monday, said two PwC partners had been approved by the Supreme Court as joint provisional liquidators for FTX.

Several global regulators have removed licenses from local FTX units, and are looking into the company, and investigations by the U.S. Justice Department, the SEC and CFTC are also under way, a source with knowledge of the investigations told Reuters.

Some argued regulators should have taken action earlier.

Ken Griffin, founder and CEO of hedge fund Citadel, told the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore: “FTX is one of these absolute travesties in the history of financial markets. People will lose billions of dollars collectively and that undermines trust in all financial markets.”

(Additional reporting by Anshuman Daga in Singapore; Writing by Vidya Ranganathan, Alun John and John McCrank; Editing by Megan Davies, Jane Merriman and Matthew Lewis)