FTX’s collapse wasn’t as bad as you were told (2024)

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Despite allegations that crypto-exchange founder Sam Bankman-Fried lost $12 billion, FTX has enough assets to make all creditors whole.

Ian Ayres and John Donohue

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Last November, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s closely watched criminal trial ended with his conviction on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy. According to the prosecution, Bankman-Fried stole “billions of dollars” from the crypto exchange’s customers “out of sheer greed”.

One key issue was how much money FTX’s customers lost. During the trial, the prosecution and its witnesses repeatedly – in fact, 97 times – put that number at $US8 billion ($12 billion). Although no proof to substantiate this massive figure was ever offered, the prosecution clearly wanted it to stay in jury members’ heads.

FTX’s collapse wasn’t as bad as you were told (1)

In fact, the figure is misleading. Instead of measuring loss, the $US8 billion reflects the temporary shortfall in cash and other liquid assets needed to cover FTX customers’ remaining redemption requests after FTX’s chief competitor triggered a run on the exchange in November 2022.

At the same time, the presiding judge barred the defence from introducing any evidence to support Bankman-Fried’s claim that FTX was solvent – that it had enough assets to cover all its liabilities to customers – at every point before Bankman-Fried relinquished control to John J. Ray III, a bankruptcy lawyer, shortly after FTX collapsed. The defence was also prohibited from showing that the value of FTX’s assets had grown steadily after crypto markets rebounded.

To date, no independent party has examined the accuracy of these claims. A recent federal appellate court decision ordering the appointment of an independent auditor in the FTX bankruptcy – requested by a government watchdog and opposed by Ray – should provide, in the words of the court, “much-needed elucidation”.

A recent report valued Anthropic, one of Bankman-Fried’s AI investments, at $US18.4 billion, which would add roughly $US2.5 billion to the FTX estate. And that is just the tip of the iceberg. Extrapolating from the numbers in Ray’s September 2023 report to creditors, the assets in the estate right now are sufficient to make whole all creditors, including customers, lenders and investors.

Venture investments

Consider that in the September report, Ray valued the estate’s assets at $US6.7 billion and its liabilities at $US10.6 billion, suggesting FTX was insolvent. This reflects the bankruptcy team’s decision to count only the most liquid assets held by FTX, such as cash and big-name cryptocurrencies like bitcoin. They ignored what Michael Lewis, in a book about Bankman-Fried, described as a “dragon’s hoard” of valuable assets assembled by the FTX founder.

Among the many assets that Ray and his team did not count were FTX’s portfolio of 416 venture investments (including Anthropic and Genesis Digital Assets, a leading bitcoin miner), FTX’s holdings of 1300 less liquid tokens (Ray valued the top 20 alone at US$1 billion); and miscellaneous other token holdings and non-debtor assets that cost FTX $US1.3 billion.

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Including these assets would add billions to Ray’s estimates of value. Since last August, the market value of FTX’s crypto holdings has grown by about $US5 billion. This has been largely driven by the five-fold increase in the market value of Solana, FTX’s largest holding, as well as a 50 per cent increase in its remaining top 10 tokens. Indeed, some FTX account holders are now objecting to a proposed pricing of their claims that is based on the lower US dollar value of cryptocurrencies when FTX filed for bankruptcy in November 2022.

As friends and colleagues of Bankman-Fried’s parents, we have relied exclusively on figures published by Ray and publicly available market prices to avoid any appearance of a conflict of interest, and have tried to estimate appropriate discounts for selling into illiquid markets. While some of these valuations could be significantly off in either direction, the overall picture is clear: the current assets held by the bankrupt estate are more than sufficient to repay all creditors with interest and still have billions left over – if only the bankruptcy team would distribute them.

Brilliant businessman

Whatever else might be said about Bankman-Fried, he was a brilliant businessman. In four short years, he built two companies from scratch that had a combined market value of $US30 billion to $US40 billion and annual revenues of more than $1 billion. Absent the liquidity crisis and the Chapter 11 team’s decision to shut down FTX’s international and US exchanges, the companies could be worth twice that amount today, given the crypto market’s recovery.

The biggest financial loser by far would appear to be Bankman-Fried, who owned a majority interest in both exchanges. The biggest winners will be the lawyers and financial advisers representing FTX, who together billed in excess of $US400 million by the end of 2023, a fact that may explain the sluggish asset distribution. At an average billing rate of $US1230 per hour, Sullivan & Cromwell alone has billed at least $US180 million to the FTX estate.

As a legal matter, the correct measure of losses will likely be raised on appeal. But as a practical matter, the public would view Bankman-Fried very differently if they realised that FTX had sufficient assets to make whole its customers and other creditors all along. The prosecutors must have understood this, which explains why they went to such great lengths to persuade the jury through sheer repetition that FTX’s customers lost $US8 billion, and to prevent the defence from introducing evidence to refute that claim.

Ian Ayres is Professor of Law at Yale University. John Donohue is Professor of Law at Stanford Law School and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Project Syndicate

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FTX’s collapse wasn’t as bad as you were told (2024)

FAQs

Did people lose money with FTX collapse? ›

Sam Bankman-Fried, former CEO of the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX, presided over a spectacular collapse that cost his customers billions of dollars.

Did FTX customers get their money back? ›

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, left, arrives at a federal courthouse in Manhattan on Feb. 16, 2023. Nearly all customers of FTX will get their money back, plus interest, after the cryptocurrency exchange imploded 17 months ago.

What happened with FTX in simple terms? ›

FTX crashed due to mismanagement of funds, lack of liquidity and the large volume of withdrawals. Binance announced it would buy FTX to prevent a larger market crash, but quickly bailed out of the deal as more news reports of mishandled customer funds surfaced.

What triggered FTX collapse? ›

What happened to FTX? FTX and FTX.US crashed due to a lack of liquidity and mismanagement of funds, followed by a large volume of withdrawals from rattled investors. The value of FTT plummeted, taking other coins down with it including Ethereum and Bitcoin, which reached a two-year low on Nov. 9, 2022.

Which celebrity lost money in FTX? ›

Star NFL quarterback Tom Brady, who received a multimillion-dollar deal to be the leading FTX brand ambassador, was estimated to lose $30 million in the aftermath of the collapse. Companies and venture capital firms also saw their money vanish.

Who lost the most money at FTX? ›

Sequoia Capital likely suffered the greatest loss for an outside investor in the exchange with its $200 million investment, which peaked at $350 million in January 2022, according to data obtained by Forbes. RELATED: Who Is FTX Founder Sam Bankman-Fried?

Have FTX customers been repaid? ›

Ryan Knutson: Customers are getting paid back in U.S. dollars, not cryptocurrencies, and they're only getting paid back what those cryptocurrency holdings were worth the day the bankruptcy was filed back in November 2022.

Will FTX creditors be repaid in full? ›

All of FTX's creditors, except the government, will get 100% of their money back in cash plus interest, the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange's estate said late Tuesday.

How much does FTX owe its customers? ›

On May 7, the company said it expects to have as much as $16.3 billion once it's done selling assets, far more than the approximately $11 billion owed to customers and other private-sector creditors, leaving most of them in line to get 118% of what they had in their FTX accounts.

Where did FTX money disappear to? ›

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and senior staff spent customer funds on technology investments, luxury real estate and political contributions, among other things. The missing funds are at the heart of Bankman-Fried's criminal trial, which kicked off in Manhattan federal court this week.

How much money did FTX steal? ›

Kaplan found that FTX customers lost $8 billion, FTX's equity investors lost $1.7 billion, and that lenders to the Alameda Research hedge fund Bankman-Fried founded lost $1.3 billion. He imposed an $11 billion forfeiture order and authorized the government to repay victims with seized assets.

What does FTX stand for? ›

FTX is an abbreviation of "Futures Exchange".

Who are the big losers in the FTX collapse? ›

Tom Brady, Giselle Bündchen, Robert Kraft Among Big Losers in FTX Collapse.

Will FTX customers get their money back? ›

FTX says that nearly all of its customers will receive the money back that they are owed, two years after the cryptocurrency exchange imploded, and some will get more than that.

Whose fault is FTX collapse? ›

Sam Bankman-Fried, the CEO of the exchange, was sentenced to 25 years in prison and ordered to repay $11 billion. Scores of investors and customers pulled their funds out of FTX, forcing the exchange to become insolvent and declare bankruptcy.

Who are the losers in FTX collapse? ›

Aside from the industry's credibility, Yadav said the biggest losers will be FTX's customers. Other losers included large institutional investors such as Sequoia, which is believed to have invested about $210 million in FTX. In a letter to partners on Wednesday, the firm said it was marking its investment down to zero.

How many people affected by FTX collapse? ›

Currently, around $30 billion to $35 billion worth of crypto is locked up in cryptocurrency bankruptcies, with around 15 million people affected, according to Xclaim. There was about $16 billion in crypto stuck in FTX when it collapsed, according to Xclaim.

How did FTX collapse affect the economy? ›

The collapse of FTX has affected confidence in other cryptocurrency exchanges and cryptoassets, however systemic market participants appear to have little or no exposure to the exchange and consequently the impact on the financial system appears limited.

How many people lost money in crypto? ›

According to a survey from lendingtree.com, conducted in November 2022, a higher percentage of 38% of cryptocurrency investors have reported to lost money rather than profited, 28% say they made a profit, and only 13% broke even.

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