Sam Bankman-Fried says he 'didn't ever try to commit fraud'
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[December 01, 2022] By
Carolina Mandl
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder and former CEO of
now-bankrupt crypto exchange FTX, attempted to distance himself from
suggestions of fraud in his first public appearance since his company's
collapse stunned investors and left creditors facing losses totaling
billions of dollars.
Speaking via video link at the New York Times' Dealbook Summit with
Andrew Ross Sorkin on Wednesday, Bankman-Fried said he did not knowingly
commingle customer funds on FTX with funds at his proprietary trading
firm, Alameda Research.
"I didn't ever try to commit fraud," Bankman-Fried said in the hour-long
interview, adding that he doesn't personally think he has any criminal
liability.
He also denied knowing the full scale of Alameda's position on FTX,
claiming that it caught him by surprise.
The liquidity crunch at FTX came after Bankman-Fried secretly moved $10
billion of FTX customer funds to Alameda Research, Reuters reported,
citing two people familiar with the matter. At least $1 billion in
customer funds had vanished, the people said.
Bankman-Fried told Reuters in November the company did not "secretly
transfer" but rather misread its "confusing internal labeling."
FTX filed for bankruptcy and Bankman-Fried stepped down as chief
executive on Nov. 11, after traders pulled $6 billion from the platform
in three days and rival exchange Binance abandoned a rescue deal.
"That week, so much happened," he said.
Bankman-Fried said he was speaking from the Bahamas and that the
interview was against the advice of his lawyers. He was seen in the
video link talking from a room, dressed in a black T-shirt and
occasionally drinking from a mug.
FTX faces a flurry of investigations. The U.S. Attorney's Office in
Manhattan in mid-November began investigating how FTX handled customer
funds, a source with knowledge of the probe told Reuters. The Securities
and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission have
also opened probes.
When asked if he could come to the United States, Bankman-Fried replied
that to his knowledge he could, and that he wouldn’t be surprised if he
traveled to Washington for upcoming congressional hearings on the
company’s collapse.
The implosion of FTX marked a stunning fall from grace for the
30-year-old entrepreneur who rode a cryptocurrency boom to a net worth
that Forbes pegged a year ago at $26.5 billion. After launching FTX in
2019, he became an influential political donor and pledged to donate
most of his earnings to charities.
He said Wednesday that he now has "close to nothing" left and is down to
one working credit card with "maybe $100,000 in that bank account."
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FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried poses for
a picture, in an unspecified location, in this undated handout
picture, obtained by Reuters on July 5, 2022. FTX/Handout via
REUTERS/File Photo
Since FTX filed for bankruptcy, Bankman-Fried has distanced himself
from the image he projected in media interviews and on Capitol Hill,
telling a Vox reporter his advocacy for a crypto regulatory
framework was "just PR" and his discussions on ethics within the
industry were at least partly a front.
Bankman-Fried said he was "confused" as to why FTX's U.S. entity,
which was included in the bankruptcy filing, is not processing
customer withdrawals. Redemptions are currently paused for both U.S.
and international customers.
"To my knowledge all American customers and all American regulated
businesses here are, I think at least in terms of client assets, are
okay," he said, adding that derivatives contracts at one of its U.S.
subsidiaries were "fully collateralized."
WHAT HAPPENED
Bankman-Fried said that Alameda had built up a substantial position
on FTX and that as digital asset prices plummeted this year, Alameda
became increasingly more levered to the point of no return earlier
this month.
"Realistically speaking, (there was) no ability for FTX to be able
to liquidate that position and generate everything that was owed,"
he said.
He added that he "wasn't trying to commingle funds," but said that
when FTX didn't have a bank account, some customers wired money to
Alameda and were credited on FTX, which likely led to discrepancies.
Bankman-Fried stepped down as CEO of Alameda in October 2021, four
years after founding the company, and ceded the role to Caroline
Ellison and Sam Trabucco, who acted as co-CEOs until Trabucco
departed the firm in August.
For his part, Bankman-Fried said he regretted focusing on the bigger
picture at FTX at the expense of risk management, which he said he
paid less attention to over “the last year or two.”
His companies "completely failed" on risk management, he said.
"There was no person who was chiefly in charge of positional risk of
customers on FTX, and that feels pretty embarrassing in retrospect."
(Reporting by Carolina Mandl and Lananh Nguyen in New York and Manya
Saini in Bengaluru; writing by Hannah Lang in Washington; editing by
Megan Davies, Deepa Babington and Sam Holmes)
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