FTX was run as 'personal fiefdom,' faces hacks, missing assets,
attorneys say
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[November 23, 2022] By
Dietrich Knauth, Tom Hals and Tom Wilson
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - FTX was run as a "personal fiefdom" of
former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, attorneys for the collapsed crypto
exchange said in its first bankruptcy hearing as they detailed ongoing
challenges such as hacks and substantial missing assets.
In the highest-profile crypto blowup to date, FTX filed for protection
in the United States after traders pulled $6 billion from the platform
in three days and rival exchange Binance abandoned a rescue deal. The
collapse has left an estimated 1 million creditors facing losses
totaling billions of dollars.
An attorney for FTX said at a bankruptcy hearing on Tuesday the company
now intends to sell off healthy business units, but has been the subject
of cyberattacks and had "substantial" assets missing.
FTX said on Saturday it has launched a strategic review of its global
assets and is preparing for the sale or reorganization of some
businesses. FTX said on Tuesday it was receiving interest from potential
buyers for its assets and would conduct a process to reorganize or sell
them.
The hearing was held at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington,
Delaware and was livestreamed to around 1,500 viewers on YouTube and
Zoom.
An attorney also said the firm had been run as a "personal fiefdom" of
Bankman-Fried with $300 million spent on real estate such as homes and
vacation properties for senior staff. FTX, led since the bankruptcy
filing by new CEO John Ray, has accused Bankman-Fried of working with
Bahamian regulators to "undermine" the U.S. bankruptcy case and shift
assets overseas.
Bankman-Fried did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment.
Reuters earlier reported that Bankman-Fried's FTX, his parents and
senior executives of the failed cryptocurrency exchange bought at least
19 properties worth nearly $121 million in the Bahamas over the past two
years, official property records show.
Attorneys also said an investigation must take place into Binance's sale
of FTX in July 2021. Binance bought a stake in FTX in 2019.
Separately a filing late on Monday by Ed Mosley of Alvarez & Marsal, a
consultancy firm advising FTX, showed FTX's cash balance of $1.24
billion as of Sunday was "substantially higher" than previously thought.
It includes around $400 million at accounts related to Alameda Research,
the crypto trading firm owned by Bankman-Fried, and $172 million at
FTX's Japan arm.
Reuters has reported Bankman-Fried secretly used $10 billion in customer
funds to prop up his trading business, and that at least $1 billion of
those deposits had vanished.
DISCLOSURE DEBATE
At the hearing, FTX representatives argued that names of customers
should be kept secret, as disclosing them could destabilize the crypto
market and open customers up to hacks. FTX also argued its customer list
is a valuable asset, and disclosing it could impair future sale efforts
or allow rivals to poach its user base.
A judge said those names can remain undisclosed until a future court
hearing.
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Representations of virtual
cryptocurrencies are placed on U.S. dollar banknotes in this
illustration taken November 28, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
FTX lawyers also described an uneasy truce with court-appointed
liquidators overseeing the wind-down of FTX's Bahamas unit, FTX
Digital Markets.
The two sides reached an initial agreement to coordinate their
U.S.-based insolvency proceedings before Judge John Dorsey, avoiding
the possibility of conflicting rulings from two different U.S.
bankruptcy judges. But both sides signaled they still have broader
disagreements over how to coordinate the recovery and preservation
of assets held by various FTX affiliates.
Bankman-Fried, FTX and the Bahamas liquidators did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
CONTAGION FEARS
FTX's fall from grace has sent shivers through the crypto world,
driving bitcoin to its lowest level in around two years and
triggering fears of contagion among other firms already reeling from
the collapse in the crypto market this year.
Major U.S. crypto lender Genesis said on Monday it was trying to
avert bankruptcy, days after FTX's collapse forced it to suspend
customer redemptions.
"Our goal is to resolve the current situation consensually without
the need for any bankruptcy filing," a Genesis spokesperson said in
an emailed statement to Reuters, adding it continues to have
conversations with creditors.
A Bloomberg News report, citing sources, had said Genesis was
struggling to raise fresh cash for its lending unit.
The Wall Street Journal reported, citing sources, that Genesis had
approached Binance seeking an investment but the crypto exchange
decided against it, fearing a conflict of interest. Genesis also
approached private equity firm Apollo Global Management for capital
assistance, the WSJ said.
Apollo did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment
on the WSJ report, while Binance declined to comment.
Crypto exchange Gemini, which runs a crypto lending product in
partnership with Genesis, tweeted on Monday it was continuing to
work with the company to enable its users to redeem funds from its
yield-generating "Earn" program.
Gemini said on its blog last week there was no impact on its other
products and services after Genesis paused withdrawals.
Since the implosion of FTX, some crypto players are taking to
decentralized exchanges known as "DEXs" where investors trade
peer-to-peer on the blockchain.
Overall daily trading volumes on DEXs leapt to their highest level
since May on Nov. 10, as FTX imploded, according to data from market
tracker DeFi Llama, but have since pared gains.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New York and Tom Wilson in London;
additional reporting by Manya Saini, Rishabh Jaiswal, Juby Babu and
Lavanya Sushil Ahire in Bengaluru; Editing by Megan Davies,
Alexander Smith and Nick Zieminski)
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