'I didn't steal funds and I certainly didn't stash billions away': Fallen FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried blames crypto giant's implosion on a 'broader market meltdown' and claims sister company Alameda dragged them down in scathing new Substack post

  • In a Substack post Sam Bankman-Fried blames the FTX collapse on Alameda
  • He suggests his collapsed company could be salvaged in a post on Thursday
  • He was 'strong-armed' to appoint a recovery CEO who filed bankruptcy, he says

Sam Bankman-Fried has published a 2,000-word blog post defending and explaining the collapse of his crypto exchange FTX, which he blames on its sister company, Alameda Research.

In a Substack post on Thursday morning, titled 'FTX Pre-Mortem Overview,' Bankman-Fried claims he was 'strong-armed' into appointing a new CEO who filed for bankruptcy, and that with more time he could have paid out customers.

'I believe that, had FTX International been given a few weeks, it could likely have utilized its illiquid assets and equity to raise enough financing to make customers substantially whole,' he wrote.

He also suggested that even now he could potentially salvage the collapsed company, saying: 'If FTX International were to reboot, there would be a real possibility of customers being made substantially whole.'

Bankman-Fried secretly transferred $10 billion of customer funds from FTX to Alameda Research, a trading firm he started in 2017. A large portion of that money disappeared and he is estimated to have lost investors between $1billion and $2billion.

He is now living under house arrest at his parents home in Palo Alto in California, facing federal fraud charges that he plead not guilty to earlier this month. His trial is due to start in October.

Sam Bankman-Fried a posted a 2,000-word blog post defending and explaining the collapse of his crypto exchange FTX

Sam Bankman-Fried a posted a 2,000-word blog post defending and explaining the collapse of his crypto exchange FTX

'I didn't steal funds, and I certainly didn’t stash billions away,' wrote Bankman-Fried in in Thursday morning's post. 

He also shared approximations of old FTX balance sheets suggesting that FTX's financial situation was not as bad the Chapter 11 filing would suggest.

'Nearly all of my assets were and still are utilizable to backstop FTX customers. I have, for instance, offered to contribute nearly all of my personal shares in Robinhood to customers.'

Robinhood is an American financial services app which allows people to trade stocks, exchange-traded funds and cryptocurrencies commission-free.

He said that despite paying out $5billion to customers in the days before FTX went insolvent, $8billion 'of varying liquidity' was still available.

Only approximate numbers and balance sheets were provided, he claimed, because his personal passwords were being managed by the Chapter 11 team now managing the bankrupted company.  

Nonetheless he acknowledges that FTX's illiquidity and inability to pay out customers was tied to a turbulent crypto market that saw Alameda suffer in 2022.   

'Alameda lost about 80 percent of its assets’ value over the course of 2022, due to a series of market crashes,' Bankman-Fried wrote. 'FTX was impacted by Alameda’s decline.'

Alameda Research, which he described as having had a 'contagion' that 'spread to FTX,' a was at one point run by Bankman-Fried's ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison (pictured)

Alameda Research, which he described as having had a 'contagion' that 'spread to FTX,' a was at one point run by Bankman-Fried's ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison (pictured)

Bankman-Fried's approximation of the FTX US balance books before he handed over the company in November last year

Bankman-Fried's approximation of the FTX US balance books before he handed over the company in November last year

Alameda Research, which he described as having had a 'contagion' that 'spread to FTX,' was at one point run by Bankman-Fried's on-off girlfriend, Caroline Ellison. 

Ellison told a New York court last month that as CEO of the company she had access to an 'unlimited' amount of FTX client money.

Alameda was founded by Bankman-Fried in October 2017. He met with Ellison in San Francisco the following year to discuss the possibility of her joining the company, after which she climbed its ranks to become CEO in August 2022. She was terminated from her position by John Ray after the Chapter 11 filing. 

Ellison has since confessed that she knowingly engaged in 'illegal' business tactics with the disgraced FTX founder in a bombshell court testimony given as part of a plea deal with authorities.

In Thursday's post, Bankman-Fried addressed the extent to which FTX was dependent on Alameda for liquidity, but suggested that dependence had dropped enormously in recent years, all the while maintaining that its own implosion was responsible for the FTX collapse.

In 2021 Alameda was going strong, he said, but it' failed to sufficiently hedge against the risk of an extreme market crash.'

'Alameda's assets–a combination of altcoins, crypto companies, public equities, and venture investments–fell around 80% over the course of the year, raising its leverage bit by bit,' he said.

Bankman-Fried in his blog post (excerpt pictured) predominantly blamed the collapse of the crypto market for the Alameda collapse, which in turn impacted FTX

Bankman-Fried in his blog post (excerpt pictured) predominantly blamed the collapse of the crypto market for the Alameda collapse, which in turn impacted FTX

Bankman-Fried said Sullivan & Cromwell worked with FTX's General Counsel to coerce him into appointing insolvency CEO John Ray (pictured)

Bankman-Fried said Sullivan & Cromwell worked with FTX's General Counsel to coerce him into appointing insolvency CEO John Ray (pictured)

Bankman-Fried presented a graph to demonstrate that FTX's reliance on Alameda for liquidity dropped from around 50 percent in 2019 to 2 percent

Bankman-Fried presented a graph to demonstrate that FTX's reliance on Alameda for liquidity dropped from around 50 percent in 2019 to 2 percent

Bankman-Fried took aim at law firm Sullivan & Cromwell, which he says worked with FTX's General Counsel to coerce him into appointing insolvency CEO John J. Ray III to take over.

'S&C and the GC were the primary parties strong-arming and threatening me into naming the candidate they themselves chose as CEO of FTX--including for a solvent entity in FTX US--who then filed for Chapter 11 and chose S&C as counsel to the debtor entities,' he wrote.

A damning Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing revealed that Bankman-Fried was loaned $1 billion by Alameda and that company money was used to buy luxury property in the Bahamas, where it was based.

On January 3 Bankman-Fried plead not guilty to fraud and other criminal charges. His trial is due to begin in October

On January 3 Bankman-Fried plead not guilty to fraud and other criminal charges. His trial is due to begin in October

Bankman-Fried is now facing eight criminal counts, accusing him of defrauding FTX investors whose money he was holding. He made his first appearance in a Manhattan court last month, when a judge released him on bail on a $250million bond.

On January 3 he plead not guilty to fraud and other criminal charges. A judge has set his trial to begin on October 3. He is currently under house arrest in California.

Continuing to speak out publicly like this is likely to raise eyebrows, as he ignore lawyers that advised he should 'recede into a hole.' Attorneys said such statements will likely make life more difficult for the defense lawyers in his upcoming trial.

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