Bankman-Fried Warns: Some Crypto Exchanges Already “Secretly Insolvent” (2024)

After throwing lifelines to troubled digital currency platforms BlockFi and Voyager Digital, Sam Bankman-Fried, the 30-year-old billionaire founder of FTX, warns that some crypto exchanges will soon fail.

The question on everybody’s mind in the crypto world is whether we’ve reached the market bottom. Nearly $2 trillion in crypto market value has evaporated since November. Two bellwether digital assets Luna, a $40 billion crypto asset associated with TerraUSD, a $16 billion stablecoin designed to maintain parity with the U.S. dollar, have collapsed. Earlier this month bitcoin traded for below $20,000, its lowest level since December 2020.

But the fallout is far from complete. Earlier this month, Singapore-based Three Arrows Capital (3AC), a highly levered crypto trading firm with $200 million of exposure to Luna revealed that it was nearly insolvent. Three Arrows’ had borrowed large sums from numerous crypto firms including New Jersey’s Voyager Digital and New York-based BlockFi. In order to survive Three Arrows default, the two digital asset exchanges turned to billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of FTX and the richest person in crypto, worth some $20.5 billion. Between FTX and his quantitative trading firm Alameda, he provided the companies with $750 million in credit lines. There is no guarantee that Bankman-Fried will recoup his investment. “You know, we're willing to do a somewhat bad deal here, if that's what it takes to sort of stabilize things and protect customers,” he says.

“We’re willing to do a somewhat bad deal here, if that’s what it takes to sort of stabilize things.”

Bankman-Fried’s cash infusions are far from altruistic. He has emerged as a smart vulture capitalist in the beleaguered crypto market, knowing full well that his own fortune depends on its healthy rebound and growth. Bankman-Fried has also bought into crypto brokerage Robinhood, where FTX has already accumulated a 7.6% stake, and is rumored to be considering an acquisition.

Bankman-Fried denies any active merger talks with Robinhood but tells Forbes that more crypto exchange failures are coming. “There are some third-tier exchanges that are already secretly insolvent,” says Bankman-Fried.

Fried’s FTX, along with Coinbase, Kraken and Binance, are giants among digital asset exchanges. They have millions of customer accounts and functionally they operate similarly to online stock brokerages. But outside of these whales, there are more than 600 crypto exchanges around the world operating in a largely unregulated frontier. Never heard of AAX, Billance and Hotbit? You aren’t alone, but like Coinbase they trade bitcoin, ether and dogecoin and offer generous margin loans–as much 20 times their initial capital— to their clients. Lacking any meaningful regulatory oversight many crypto exchanges have been vulnerable to scammers and hacks.

Japanese exchange Coincheck was hacked for $530 million in crypto in 2018, Seychelles-based exchange KuCoin lost $275 million in 2020, and then in December 2021 Cayman Island-based Bitmart was breached for $200 million. Back in 2016, Bitifinex was hacked to the tune of nearly 120,000 bitcoin worth $2.5 billion now.

But, despite the generous bailouts, not even Bankman-Fried is able, or willing, to throw good money after bad in perpetuity. “There are companies that are basically too far gone and it's not practical to backstop them for reasons like a substantial hole in the balance sheet, regulatory issues, or that there is not much of a business left to be saved,” says Bankman-Fried, who declined to name any specific crypto exchanges.

As Forbes reported in its analysis of the world’s best 60 crypto exchanges, the digital asset exchange business generally lacks standards to certify a new entity before or after they start soliciting client funds. The SEC doesn’t regulate the exchanges and the Commodities Futures and Trading Commission has oversight of only a handful of crypto derivatives markets. In the United States there is no member organization like FINRA to self- regulate crypto exchanges.

Bankman-Fried is worried about continued failures because during the euphoria of rising crypto prices, exchanges kept upping the ante to attract customers with generous yields for deposits. BlockFi or Voyager were promising yield payments to customers, upwards of 12% per year that had to be paid for either by charging at least that much more interest to borrowers or more likely, by putting that money to work in decentralized finance DeFi applications. That worked fine when crypto was going nowhere but up. It looks disastrous now.

“There are companies that are basically too far gone and it's not practical to backstop them.”

Like J.P. Morgan during the stock market panic and crash of 1907, Bankman-Fried is taking advantage of the crypto chaos to expand his empire. He recently closed the acquisition of Liquid, a troubled Japanese exchange. BlockFi and Voyager Digital are in his grip and despite his denials, Robinhood may be next. According to sources familiar with his loans to Voyager, Alameda is likely to lose at least $70 million of the credit it has already extended. In 2021, publicly-traded Voyager’s Digital had a market value of more than $3 billion. Today it shares trade for pennies and its market cap of $62 million points to an imminent bankruptcy filing.

Despite the carnage, Bankman-Fried tells Forbes that FTX remains profitable and has been for the past 10 quarters. FTX’s biggest rival Coinbase lost $432 million in the first quarter of 2022 and its stock is down almost 90% from its all-time high.

Bankman-Fried also has his eye on crypto miners, many of whom leveraged their balance sheet at breakneck pace to quickly scale and take advantage of this 21st century digital gold rush. The stocks of publicly-trading crypto miners including Marathon Digital Holdings and Riot Blockchain are down more than 60% year to date.

One bellwether crypto asset Bankman-Fried is not worried about is Tether, world’s largest dollar-pegged stablecoin with a market cap exceeding $70 billion. Many industry watchers have deemed it a ticking time bomb with questionable collateral whose failure would almost certainly be an existential threat to the entire cryptocurrency market. Tested during the Luna collapse Tether briefly lost its $1 peg and fell to a price 95 cents. However, it successfully processed over $10 billion worth of withdrawals and has since recovered.

Says Bankman-Fried, “I think that the really bearish views on Tether are wrong…I don’t think there is any evidence to support them.”

*This article has been updated to reflect that KuCoin is a Seychelles-based crypto exchange, not Singaporean.

MORE FROM FORBES

MORE FROM FORBESMeet The World's Richest 29-Year-Old: How Sam Bankman-Fried Made A Record Fortune In The Crypto FrenzyBy Steven EhrlichMORE FROM FORBESWhy Female Entrepreneurs Welcome The End Of The Girlboss Era-Once And For AllBy Maggie McGrathMORE FROM FORBESTrump-Endorsed Candidates Have Funneled At Least $1.4 Million Into His BusinessesBy Zach EversonMORE FROM FORBESAustralian Mining Billionaire Touts A Green Revolution In U.S. Coal Country - With Skepticism Trailing Close BehindBy David Jeans

Bankman-Fried Warns: Some Crypto Exchanges Already “Secretly Insolvent” (2024)

FAQs

Which crypto declared bankruptcies? ›

Crypto exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy in November 2022, and the affiliated hedge fund Alameda Research also filed for bankruptcy. It's the first major crypto exchange to file for bankruptcy. Some investors remain unable to withdraw their money. FTX investors included Canada's biggest pension plan.

Which cryptocurrency investor says he saw serious red flags with FTX founder sam bankman fried? ›

Alex Pack, now managing partner of Hack VC, says he saw obvious "red flags" after conducting a due diligence review. The deal didn't go through and Pack says his experience foreshadowed recent revelations about Bankman-Fried. "After spending months with him, we realized his risk-taking was catastrophic," Pack says.

What is Sam Friedman's net worth? ›

The Bahamas-based company received hefty backing from well-known investment firms such as Sequoia Capital, SoftBank and others; it was valued at $32 billion in early 2022 before it imploded in November. Bankman's net worth, once estimated by Bloomberg to be as high as $26 billion, is now near zero.

How did the FTX collapse affect the crypto market? ›

After peaking at $3 trillion in November 2021, the value of the overall crypto market plummeted through 2022, hitting a two-year low of $796 billion as FTX imploded. It has since clawed back some ground, hovering above $1 trillion most of this year.

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.

Did FTX users lose money? ›

At Bankman-Fried's sentencing hearing, Kaplan agreed. He said FTX's customers had lost some $8bn and that its investors had lost $1.7bn.

Which cryptocurrency company did Sam Bankman found? ›

Bankman-Fried founded the FTX cryptocurrency exchange and was celebrated as a "poster boy" for crypto. At the peak of his success, he was ranked the 41st-richest American in the Forbes 400.

Is FTX's original sin a warning to all of Crypto? ›

FTX's Original Sin Is a Warning to All of Crypto; Evidence from the criminal trial of Sam Bankman-Fried suggests fraud was built into FTX from the very beginning.

Does FTX still exist? ›

FTX collapsed in early November 2022 after journalists reported an affiliated trading firm, Alameda Research, derived most of its value from speculative cryptocurrency tokens.

Who went from 20 billion dollars to $100,000? ›

Former FTX CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) was living the living billionaire dream until earlier this month. Then FTX collapsed in a matter of days and the man who held a personal fortune of $26 billion at one time is now down to his last $100,000, Axios reported.

How much is FTX founder worth? ›

FTX was once valued at more than $30 billion, with Bankman-Fried's net worth estimated at more than $20 billion.

What did Alameda do? ›

As a quantitative trading firm specializing in cryptocurrencies, Alameda's strategies included arbitrage, market making, yield farming, and trading volatility.

How much has been recovered from FTX collapse? ›

Those who lost money when the exchange collapsed in November 2022 are owed around $11 billion, but the estate been able to recover as much as $16.3 billion, court records filed on Tuesday show.

How much did Bitcoin fall after FTX collapse? ›

The leading cryptocurrency by market value fell over 8% to under $62,000, data from charting platform TradingView show. That's the biggest single-day percentage (UTC) decline since Nov. 9, 2022. That day, prices tanked over 14% as Sam Bankman Fried's FTX exchange, formerly the third largest, went bankrupt.

Will Coinbase benefit from FTX collapse? ›

In addition to benefiting from FTX's demise, analysts also believe that Coinbase could benefit from increased demand for cryptocurrencies as well as institutional adoption of digital assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum.

Which crypto currency collapsed? ›

FTX collapsed in early November 2022 after journalists reported an affiliated trading firm, Alameda Research, derived most of its value from speculative cryptocurrency tokens.

Which crypto went bust recently? ›

The cryptocurrency market faced a tumultuous year in 2022 with major companies like FTX, BlockFi, Three Arrows Capital, Voyager Digital, and Celsius Network going bankrupt due to various factors.

Which crypto failed recently? ›

The company's new reorganisation plan says almost all of its customers will get at least the total amount they lost when FTX collapsed in November 2022. In March this year, FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison for defrauding customers and investors of the now-bankrupt firm.

Which crypto shut down? ›

OKX, a prominent crypto exchange renowned for its high trading volume, is discontinuing its services in India due to regulatory obstacles in the country.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Margart Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5591

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Margart Wisoky

Birthday: 1993-05-13

Address: 2113 Abernathy Knoll, New Tamerafurt, CT 66893-2169

Phone: +25815234346805

Job: Central Developer

Hobby: Machining, Pottery, Rafting, Cosplaying, Jogging, Taekwondo, Scouting

Introduction: My name is Margart Wisoky, I am a gorgeous, shiny, successful, beautiful, adventurous, excited, pleasant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.