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Here’s a good FTX summary — 30 Comments

  1. I wouldn’t buy crypto, not least because I don’t understand how it has any value. Around 12 years ago I was offered/given some free bitcoins for open source work, and regret that I didn’t have/find them a few years ago when their value was ridiculous. But I wouldn’t knowingly invest in crypto.

  2. His parents are far left Stanford professors so he came by his left wing views honestly. He was smart enough to buy protection from Democrats who are mostly ignorant about finance and economics. Trump would have seen through this kid as fast as he saw through Epstein.

  3. Not everyone believes the spin around the supposed lack of evidence for a “Ukrainian connection” (Troy Nehls, R-Texas, is certainly concerned, and what is initially “debunked” by AP and the MSM generally turns out several months later to have been true all along). It is also curious that the NYT recently announced an event (DealBook Summit, scheduled for 30 November) featuring SBF, Zelensky, Zuckerberg, and Yellen. On the general topic of Ukraine, Maurice Richards just posted a fascinating piece at AmericanGreatness entitled “It is Time To Speak the Truth About Ukraine.”

  4. so again, where did he get the money to buy crypto in bulk, there are so many gaps in this story, and when they assure us something doesn’t happen, i’m skeptical

  5. yes there are parallels with epstein, the latter earned a physics degree, epstein was a mathematician, they both hung out on shadowy islands, their financing was equally suspect, we’re not really clear what he did for his partners,

  6. Apparently FTX was actually audited by a mid-level US CPA firm, which did not look at internal controls. I find that a contradiction in terms.

  7. that is called ‘air guitar’ auditing, they were paid off, how do operations like hsbc, deutsche, banamex avoid criminal prosecution,

    i’m reminded of a line from french connection 2, the caid (corsican kingpin) tells his american partner, ’80 cops wanted to talk to me, 50 wanted to talk to my money,’

  8. j e:

    The anti-Ukrainian wing loves the FTX narrative that implicates Ukraine and I doubt that group will be giving it up no matter what. I don’t know if that particular guy is in that wing, but quite a few people on the right are, certainly in the blogosphere and podcast world.

  9. I’ll be surprised if they are around in a year.

    The CPA’s:

    Armanino, one of the 20 largest accounting companies in the nation by sales

    Prager Metis, which bills itself as the first accounting company to open a headquarters in the metaverse, had audited its 2021 financial reports.

    https://www.fxmag.com/crypto/ftx-crash-causing-its-auditors-to-come-into-question

    And supposedly the were audited and met Gaap?
    https://blockworks.co/news/ftx-joins-coinbase-kraken-with-us-gaap-audit-pass

  10. FTX’s FTT token is an important factor in all this. What is an FTT token?

    I found this article which amusingly seems to speak glowingly of it.

    What is the FTX Token?
    The FTX token goes by the ticker FTT and is an exchange token issued by the FTX Exchange to power its ecosystem and provide utility within the operations of the exchange.

    FTX Exchange & Alameda Research
    The genesis block for the FTT token occurred in April 2019, but the token didn’t begin trading on exchanges until August of the same year. The exchange and token were launched with the assistance of Alameda Research, a full-service cryptocurrency trading firm.

    This review will focus on the FTT token highlighting its uses and utility, its history, current events, and what might the future hold. That said, we will begin with some background regarding the FTX Exchange, its history, and what it is trying to accomplish within the cryptocurrency exchange ecosystem.

    FTX Overview
    The FTX Exchange was launched in April 2019. Rather than being simply an exchange, it is a derivatives exchange, allowing traders to participate in the cryptocurrency markets through its futures tokens and leveraged tokens.

    These tokens allow for leverage on popular cryptocurrencies without the need for a margin account. The exchange has grown to also offer a range of other derivative digital assets, such as its tokens on the outcome of the 2020 Presidential elections.

    The purpose for the creation of the exchange was an effort by its founders to avoid clawbacks in cryptocurrency exchanges. It does this through a three-tier liquidation model that uses rate-limited orders to close positions, and takes advantage of an insurance fund which prevents customer losses.

    One way it does this is by sharing collateral across all the tokens in one universal stablecoin wallet. This model mimics the functioning of traditional futures markets. It also allows traders to open short positions or to leverage their capital without using margin or futures.

    The leveraged tokens offered by FTX trade in the same way as any other token on the spot market, but they allow for 3x, -1x, or -3x leverage on a number of popular cryptocurrencies. The OTC order desk at FTX is powered by Alameda Research, the same company that helped to create the exchange.

    FTX Leveraged Tokens
    Arguably the biggest innovation created by FTX is its leveraged cryptocurrency tokens. Thanks to these tokens the trouble of managing a futures position in cryptocurrencies is no longer a necessity. Instead investors can use the +3x, -1x, or -3x tokens created by FTX.

    As of March 2020 there are leveraged tokens available for Bitcoin, Ethereum, EOS, Ripple, Tezos, Bitcoin Cash and over a dozen other altcoins. There are also leveraged tokens for Tether, PAX, and a number of other stablecoins.

    FTX Leveraged Tokens
    These leveraged tokens give investors a significant advantage in the markets by allowing them to avoid using the more complicated futures to accomplish the same task. With leveraged tokens there are no margin requirements, and it becomes far easier to assess the value at risk of an investment.

    Because trading futures is so complex many investors have a hard time understanding the risks they expose themselves to, and the potential for blowing up an account and losing all their money. And of course futures trading exposes everyone on the exchange to the potential problem of clawbacks.

    Clearly FTX has created a much better way to gain leverage and to hedge positions.

    My takeaways:
    That FTT blew up doesn’t necessarily mean that crypto-coins are worthless. FTT is a leveraged futures trading security tied to crypto coins with some considerable level of indirection.

    FTT seems to me to a risk layered on top of another risk, on top of yet another risk. And the cool thing is that traders in it don’t have to mess with margin accounts or futures collateral accounts. Anybody can play even if they don’t have a clue about any of those above risks. That last point reminds me of how Robinhood became insolvent for a time. Democratize these complex and risky market operations down to all the people that don’t understand it and can ill afford to lose sizeable sums of money.

  11. An auditor who did not examine internal controls and yet certified the company in compliance with gaap ought to be out of business, and may soon be.

  12. Among others, the MSM itself was responsible for lauding Bankman-Fried and the company to the skies, helping to give him and FTX the patina of reliability.

    (Emphasis mine.)

    It hasn’t really ended; the NY Times puff piece/interview that never once mentions ‘fraud’ or any rewordings that could be construed as synonymous. The WaPo piece on Caroline Ellison is a similar level of puffery, more notable for mentioning trolls than anything of substance on its purported subject, Ellison.

    Bankman-Fried grew up in that eco-system, and he’s, altruistically I’m sure, spent money to gain and maintain ‘friendships.’ The most obvious one, of course, is that he or one of the other top names at FTX has donated generously to each and every member of the Congressional committee that’s supposed to investigate that boondoggle.

    To be fair, that last is almost a requirement in that business space, and if that’s not an indictment (of finance, and of Congress) then I don’t know what is.

  13. sharksauce @ 4.50 p.mm.
    Thanks much.
    The cutting edge of scams ALL TIME.
    (Till the next one, that is…)

    Arnold Kling @ 5:00 p.m.
    Thanks much for that.
    Simply outrageous segment.
    Cohodes called it perfectly.
    (Should one wonder how many people who may have saw this interview started pulling their money out immediately…?)
    Actually, I also wonder whether there is a connect between FTX and BBB… (Though “Biden” is probably up to “his” eyeballs trying to bail out Democratic-run cities and states…
    (Staying solvent is expensive!!)

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  15. If there’s no investigation these will remain only allegations, not facts.

    If there’s an investigation, then coverage and opinion can be outlawed under “coordinating harm”

    See how that works?

  16. “The most obvious one, of course, is that he or one of the other top names at FTX has donated generously to each and every member of the Congressional committee that’s supposed to investigate that boondoggle.”

    Yep, the freaks be running the circus.

    And, forsooth, it sure looks like the Lover Boy Wonder was ALSO polyamorous with the SEC (in addition to his select gang of moral, etc., preverts)…

  17. “…MMT…”
    Well perhaps, but I was “wondering”/wandering along the lines of that historically profound statement by “Biden”—whom else?— just over a year ago (IIRC) along the lines that “his” mega-inflationary BBB “policy” could not possibly be an economic burden on anybody (or the country, generally) BECAUSE it would end up paying for itself….

    Et voila!, there’s this “endless stream” of ponzi-cash available via FTX (and who knows what other flim/flam outfits running similar schemes/scams??—actually, I exaggerate, it’s not “endless”; maybe “open-ended”, though!)—

    (Though to be fair to “Biden”, “he” may have meant that BBB wouldn’t be an economic burden on anybody because “he”‘d just be raising taxes and/or raiding long-term savings accounts/investment instruments and portfolios and/or demanding kickbacks (I mean heart-felt donations) from corporations “of means”…etc/)

    And so, BBB (actually, BS-BS-BS) pays for itself…(and then some!..).
    Well, at least it pays for SOMETHING…(to someone…).

    To be sure, I may not have clearly understood the exquisite subtleties of the operation…so I’ll just think of it as Russiagate (or should that be Nov. 2020?), but in a “financial” context….

    File under: The Democrats NEVER fail to impress…

  18. Love that link…
    …especially the quote…
    “…While the system works well enough for most transactions, it still suffers from the inherent weaknesses of the trust based model.”

    I wonder if the above epitomizes the Japanese sense of humor…i.e., even more so than all those dreadfully hilarious Godzilla flicks….?
    (Well, at least someone still has one….)

  19. Since his protection was his cover, Leftists hardly ever investigate Leftists, somehow thinking maybe he and consort will go away eventually that will be the end and nothing else will come of billions disappearing.
    Hey it was all for a ‘good’ cause so what’s the harm?

  20. The arbitrage opportunity B-F exploited was well known at the time and frequently discussed. He hadn’t discovered anything nor did he invent arbitrage.

    But that appears to be the primary basis of the claims that he’s a ‘financial genius’. The fact that so many in the financial media seemingly don’t understand what arbitrage is or how and when it’s possible is either a testament to their ignorance or mendacity.

    And FWIW 60% spreads were likely a one time affair and probably not with bitcoin but one of the other digital currencies. Situations like that require an unusual liquidity event / conditions. What’s more likely is that he was pursuing a high volume of cross-market trades with much smaller spreads and capitalized appropriately to do that profitably.

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