Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

The Untold Story of the Fall of the Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX Empire

Roughly three weeks after the biggest fiasco in cryptocurrency history, it’s an understatement to say that Sam Bankman-Fried is now laying low. Here’s a standout line from his speech at a conference hosted by the New York Times on Thursday, December 1, 2022: “I’ve made a lot of mistakes but I’ve never tried to defraud.”

SBF then tried to justify himself and explain the unthinkable: the collapse in twenty minutes of a $20 billion cryptocurrency empire (stock exchange, trading firm, investment fund) that was supposed to be one of the industry’s benchmarks.

Silicon Valley, the crypto world, and Wall Street were looking for a hero. They thought they had found the new Steve Jobs, but they ended up with a crypto-prestidigitator already compared to Bernard Madoff.

Sam Bankman-Fried ticked all the boxes of the success story that Americans love. With his scruffy nerd look, his chubby face, and his ideal CV, he had managed to seduce prestigious investors.

The son of Stanford University law professors, this graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) had his fingers in the pie in Washington. Ironically, he had been one of the few crypto entrepreneurs to be heard in Congress or to meet Jerome Powell, the powerful chairman of the Federal Reserve.

Sam Bankman-Fried reached the peak of his wealth ($26.5 billion) at just 30 years old. He had amassed in five years a fortune that George Soros, the king of hedge funds, took more than thirty years to acquire. His fall was as meteoric as his rise. FTX’s hedge fund, Alameda Research, lost stratospheric amounts of money with money that was not its own.

Changpeng Zhao delivers the coup de grace to his best enemy

Investigators suspect that some of the deposits of customers of the FTX Group’s crypto exchange landed in the trader’s coffers to mop up his losses. “A simple temporary intra-group loan,” according to the interested party.

At the beginning of November 2022, the first doubts appeared about the strength of the building after an article by the specialized media Coindesk. FTX’s rival and Binance’s boss, Changpeng Zhao, dealt the final blow to a competitor who had not spared him. CZ got rid of the $530 million of FTT (the cryptocurrency created by FTX) that he had received in part when he sold his 20% stake in FTX. CZ paid $100 million for it in 2019 and sold it for $2.1 billion two years later.

It was FTX that bought it back at full price but paid Binance for part of it with its cryptocurrency, the FTT.

As the relationship between the two heavyweights deteriorated, the separation was inevitable. When Changpeng Zhao realized that FTX was sinking, he sold his FTTs en masse, causing its share price to collapse. However, it was the FTT that was used as collateral by Alameda and FTX to obtain loans. This guarantee being now worthless, the group could no longer obtain liquidity and its creditors immediately demanded their money.

The boss of Binance had certainly eliminated a competitor but he was perfectly aware that this bankruptcy would penalize the whole sector (fall of the prices, loss of confidence of the investors, tightening of the regulation…) and thus his company.

In the days preceding the bankruptcy, Sam Bankman-Fried had been working to save his empire. His father, a Stanford law professor, even came to his rescue. To obtain liquidity, his son contacted the largest investment funds, including the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, according to Reuters.

In the middle of the night, SBF swallowed his pride and called his rival, Changpeng Zhao, the boss of Binance, whom he had been criticizing bluntly on Twitter a few days before. The abracadabra financial documents that FTX’s boss presented to all potential investors were deemed not very credible and therefore even more worrying about the real health of the group.

FTX customers tried to withdraw their money en masse when the rumor of bankruptcy became more pressing. But the coffers were more than empty: there would be a shortfall of 8 billion dollars that customers and creditors of the platform hope to recover at the end of the bankruptcy announced on November 11, 2022.

The customers of the FTX platform, which is based in the Bahamas, could recover only a quarter of their money estimated Sam Bankman-Fried. FTX US, its American cousin, regulated in the United States, offers much more guarantees to its customers. To show its goodwill with Washington and the establishment, the group created this platform in the United States, but it is its offshore version that generated the most money for the group.

The collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s empire could claim a million victims from all countries and all walks of life, from hedge funds to individuals. Some will not recover financially. Institutional investors were aware of the risks inherent in investing in this sector. They were supposed to have done all the necessary due diligence. Several weeks after its fall, aftershocks from the earthquake caused by FTX’s sudden collapse are still shaking the cryptocurrency world. Cascading failures remain possible. The latest victim, lending platform BlockFi, has filed for bankruptcy.

Accounting has been relegated to a menial task

The New York prosecutor opened an investigation into FTX a few days after its bankruptcy. Being registered in the Bahamas will not prevent the American authorities from prosecuting the MIT prodigy if he has committed fraud. It can earn him twenty years in prison. Justice will have to determine whether SBF was dishonest or just incompetent in managing a group that grew too fast.

The company did not know the exact number of its employees (520) nor the number of its assets and debts in the tangle of its 130 subsidiaries.

Compliance and accounting had been relegated to menial tasks that no one wanted to deal with. The “paperwork was boring everyone,” according to SBF. In Seattle, the risk controller would respond in emojis to employees asking for millions of dollars to launch an ad campaign (at the Super Bowl) or a new project. A thumbs-up was the green light to spend like crazy.

Money flowed freely to FTX employees. For example, the company chartered a private plane to make Amazon deliveries for employees from Miami, as the group does not operate in the Bahamas. Approximately $300 million belonging to the platform was also allegedly used to purchase villas in the Bahamas for group executives, including Sam Bankman-Fried and his parents.

FTX has loaned more than $1 billion to its top executives.

The group was a reflection of its founder, a hyperactive man known for multitasking. The FTX platform itself was created in the wake of Alameda. Subsidiaries were created around the globe, mostly as local marketing operations for the international platform. In Europe, FTX set up shop in Cyprus, a member state regularly criticized for its lax supervision. The group even financed the acquisition of a stake in the neo-broker Robinhood, a herald of finance for all, and had entered the capital of the American stock exchange IEX.

None of this would have been possible without the financial support of major investors.

SBF has been a big hit in this regard. The list of FTX investors reads like a Who’s Who of Wall Street. It includes the largest manager on the planet, the American BlackRock, with $8 trillion in assets, as well as the Singapore investment company Temasek. The largest tech hedge fund, Tiger, was also present, as was private equity specialist Sequoia Partners. In a goodwill gesture, FTX had invested $300 million in Sequoia’s funds.

These prestigious investors served as moral guarantors for SBF and FTX.

After all, how could such financial professionals, who know the markets inside out, be fooled by an unshaven geek? The FTX debacle certainly caused a lot of soul-searching among these investors. SEC investigators are also looking into the matter.

While we await the conclusions of these investigations, a laudatory portrait of SBF posted online by Sequoia a few weeks before the FTX bankruptcy filing — now deleted — is indicative of the willful blindness of these professionals. In hindsight, this portrait is damning. Speaking of a fundraiser, it says FTX “needed the money to come from credible sources so it could continue to distinguish itself from the parasites who came to cryptos to scam the suckers.”

Without having to make the slightest effort, SBF was contacted directly by Sequoia, which was concerned that the startup would fall into the nets of its competitors. All he had to do was mention an embryonic “super app” project during a video conference to convince them. “I’m sitting ten feet away from him, and I walk up and say, ‘Oh, shit, that was good,’“ recalls one of Sequoia’s investors. “And it turns out this little fucker was playing League of Legends the whole meeting.”

Neither SBF’s obvious disinterest in his backers nor his open disdain for books — he doesn’t read any (“If you wrote a book, you screwed up, it should have been a six-paragraph blog post,” he muses) held Sequoia back. Like many high-profile investors, the fund ultimately wrote off its $213 million investment in the Sam Bankman-Fried-founded group.

Far from The Wolf of Wall Street

Those who remained lived in isolation in their golden prison in the Bahamas, like millionaire crypto lofts. FTX moved its headquarters there from Hong Kong in September 2021. During the COVID-19 crisis, the firm had moved to an island where the containment rules were much less strict. Less than thirty minutes from Miami, the tax haven had become the nerve center of the cryptocurrency empire.

FTX employees stayed in the luxury Albany residential complex in which stars like Tiger Woods and Justin Timberlake had invested.

George Lerner, FTX’s “wellness coach,” told the New York Times about the hobbies of the close-knit group, some of whom shared the same apartments. “They played chess and games most of the time, there were rarely parties. It was a far cry from The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Employee romances, which often result in dismissal in corporate America, were quite accepted and normalized at the highest levels. Sam Bankman-Fried himself was having an affair with Alameda’s boss, Caroline Ellison, which lasted six months, he said.

Five identical pavilions shared the different activities of the group. At the headquarters, there was no receptionist and it was an “open house” all year long without any control.

Traders from Alameda, who were supposed to be separated by a “Chinese wall” from FTX’s operations, were able to roam the premises at will and observe theoretically confidential data on the platform’s clients’ activities. In the offices, the traders, and Sam Bankman-Fried himself, were all wearing shorts, socks, or bare feet. Footstools were set up in the trading room for the short restorative naps the boss was used to. SBF believed that sleeping in the office was restorative and essential when one only slept two to three hours like him.

Today, investors are calling them to account.

This crisis of confidence is reminiscent of the Madoff affair in 2008. Unlike the author of the largest Ponzi scheme in history, who had shut himself up in eternal silence, Sam Bankman-Fried is running around on television, making a lot of shattering statements, to the despair of his lawyers. His ambition knew no bounds. Not content with wanting to revolutionize the world of cryptocurrency, he wanted to disrupt traditional markets, transform social networks and artificial intelligence, and influence American elections.

Ironically, the sensationalist FTX debacle may have provided the impetus for real oversight of the sector.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • NVIDIA's Market Value Surpasses $5 Trillion Again

    On April 24, NVIDIA's stock price rose by 3.08%, reaching $205.790 per share, with a total market value of $5.00 trillion. The stock price hit a new high since late October 2025.

  • Ethereum Foundation to Sell 10,000 ETH to BitMine

    On April 24, the Ethereum Foundation announced the finalization of a sale of 10,000 ETH to BitMine, the first treasury company of Ethereum, through an over-the-counter (OTC) trading platform, at an average price of $2,387 per ETH.

  • Sources: U.S. Justice Department Expected to Drop Criminal Investigation into Powell

    On April 24, multiple informed sources revealed that the U.S. Justice Department is expected to conclude its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell as early as Friday, thereby ending a stalemate that could have delayed the appointment of Powell's successor. Sources indicated that senior officials from the Justice Department recently contacted several senators, including Republican Senator Thom Tillis, a member of the Senate Banking Committee, to inform them of the plan to abandon the investigation into alleged cost overruns related to the renovation of the Federal Reserve's Washington headquarters, and to refer the matter to the Federal Reserve's internal oversight body. Powell's term is set to end next month, but he stated in March that he would remain until Trump's nominee for Federal Reserve Chair, Waller, is confirmed. (ABC News)

  • U.S. Stock Indices Open Higher; Intel Surges Approximately 23% to Record High

    On April 24, U.S. stock indices opened higher across the board, with the Dow Jones up 0.02%, the S&P 500 rising 0.4%, and the Nasdaq increasing by 0.73%. Intel surged approximately 23%, reaching a record high; the company expects second-quarter revenue between $13.8 billion and $14.8 billion, while the market estimate is $13.04 billion. AMD rose over 10%, and Arm increased more than 8%. Nvidia's stock price rose by 0.11%, while Google's Class A shares fell by 0.49%. Apple's stock price decreased by 0.61%, Microsoft’s stock rose by 0.47%, Amazon's stock increased by 1.42%, Meta Platforms Inc Class A shares fell by 0.34%, Tesla's stock remained unchanged, and Netflix's stock dropped by 0.92%.

  • BTC Surpasses $78,000

    Market data shows that BTC has surpassed $78,000, currently priced at $78,013.14, with a 24-hour increase of 0.7%. The market is experiencing significant volatility, so please ensure proper risk management.

  • Central Bank and Eight Departments: Prohibit Online Marketing Services for Virtual Currency Issuance and Trading

    On April 24, the People's Bank of China and eight other departments jointly issued the "Regulations on the Management of Online Marketing of Financial Products," which will take effect on September 30, 2026, systematically regulating online marketing activities for financial products. The regulations specify that only approved financial institutions and their self-operated platforms, as well as entrusted third-party internet platforms, may engage in online marketing of financial products. It prohibits providing online marketing services for illegal financial activities such as illegal fundraising, virtual currency issuance and trading, and illegal foreign exchange margin trading. The regulations detail requirements regarding the authenticity of marketing content, risk disclosure, algorithm recommendations, pop-up advertisements, account naming, trademark usage, cooperation models, and the protection of data and personal information. They also clarify the regulatory responsibilities and penalties for financial management departments, internet information, telecommunications, and market supervision departments.

  • BTC Surpasses $78,000

    Market data shows that BTC has surpassed $78,000, currently priced at $78,049.83, with a 24-hour increase of 0.04%. The market is experiencing significant volatility, so please ensure proper risk management.

  • DeepSeek-V4 Preview Version Officially Launched and Open-Sourced

    On April 24, DeepSeek announced via its official WeChat account that the preview version of the new model series DeepSeek-V4 is officially online and open-sourced. DeepSeek-V4 features a million-word ultra-long context and leads in agent capabilities, world knowledge, and reasoning performance in both domestic and open-source fields. The model is available in two versions based on size. Starting today, users can log in to the official website chat.deepseek.com or the official app to interact with the latest DeepSeek-V4 and explore the new experience of 1M ultra-long context memory. The API service has also been updated; by changing the model_name to deepseek-v4-pro or deepseek-v4-flash, users can access it.

  • Intel CEO: Semiconductor Potential Market Size Approaching $1 Trillion

    On April 24, local time, after the U.S. stock market closed on April 23, Intel officially released its Q1 fiscal year 2026 financial report and held an earnings call. The company delivered its sixth consecutive quarter of better-than-expected results, with revenue, gross margin, and earnings per share all surpassing guidance. The AI business has become the core growth engine, with a surge in demand for server CPUs and advancements in advanced processes and packaging exceeding expectations. Following this financial report, Intel's stock price surged nearly 20% in after-hours trading. During the earnings call, Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger stated that despite continuous improvements in factory capacity, demand across all business segments remains higher than supply, particularly for Xeon server CPUs, which are expected to maintain strong growth momentum over the next two years. Gelsinger also noted, 'In recent years, the focus in high-performance computing has been almost entirely on graphics processors and other accelerators. In recent months, clear signs have shown that central processing units are becoming an indispensable foundation in the era of artificial intelligence.' Looking at the overall market, Gelsinger anticipates that driven by explosive growth in AI demand, the overall potential market size of the semiconductor industry is approaching $1 trillion. However, Intel's management also warned that the company still faces multiple pressures, including declining demand in the PC market, rising costs, expanding capital expenditures, and supply constraints. (Dongxin News Agency)

  • Trump: U.S. to Soon Capture Nearly 50% of Chip Market

    On April 24, U.S. President Trump declared on the 23rd that the United States will soon capture nearly 50% of the chip market, warning that chip companies that do not manufacture in the U.S. will face very high tariffs in a year and a half to two years. U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo stated that the U.S. previously held only 3% to 4% of the chip market while having the largest demand for chips. Under Trump's directive, the U.S. is requiring semiconductor fabs to return to domestic production, with expectations that fabs worth $1 trillion will come to the U.S. Raimondo emphasized that this is not about tech giants purchasing chips, but rather about chip manufacturing. She mentioned commitments from Micron Technology to invest $200 billion and TSMC to invest $165 billion, along with $500 billion in funds from Taiwan expected to flow into the U.S. Raimondo also indicated during a congressional hearing on the 23rd that investments in the U.S. semiconductor industry during Trump's term are expected to reach $1 trillion. (Dongxin News Agency)