The Guardian Australia

‘I f **** d up’: the rise and fall of US crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried

- Edward Helmore in New York

He drives a Toyota Corolla to work, lives in a house with 10 roommates and a goldendood­le dog named Gofer, sometimes sleeps under his desk on a beanbag and was, until this week, worth tens of billions of dollars.

But on Friday, Sam Bankman-Fried, a curly-haired crypto king and Democratic mega-donor who claimed to be reinventin­g digital finance, gave up a week-long fight to save FTX, which in three short years since being launched had become the world’s second largest digital currency exchange. He resigned as chief executive and the company and 130 affiliates were placed under US bankruptcy protection.

In the space of a few days, the 30year-old has lost a $17bn fortune as a series of crises piled up. Concerns about FTX mounted until on Sunday, punters pulled $5bn of their cash from its digital coffers. The run came to an end on Tuesday morning, when FTX blocked further withdrawal­s in an attempt to remain solvent. Bloomberg called it the biggest one-day collapse of personal wealth ever.

FTX’s lawyer said the company was “investigat­ing abnormalit­ies with wallet movements related to consolidat­ion of FTX balances across exchanges”. That came after Reuters reported that at least $266m had been withdrawn from FTX in 24 hours and that Bankman-Fried may have secretly transferre­d $10bn of FTX customer funds to Alameda Research, a hedge fund he owns and is run by his girlfriend Caroline Ellison.

This week, Bankman-Fried sought a bailout from arch rival Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, founder of Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency exchange. Zhao first agreed, then walked away, leaving Bankman-Fried even more exposed and casting around for other investors to fill a reported $8bn hole in his trading balance. The collapse has huge implicatio­ns for thousands of FTX customers, and for the crypto industry and its brand of highly speculativ­e capitalism.

Bankman-Fried had set himself up as the acceptable face of a shady sector viewed with deep suspicion by regulators as a refuge for criminals, money launderers and sanctions busters – as a giant online casino in which bedroom traders could rack up life-altering losses.

He spent millions funding Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign, becoming the largest Democratic donor after financier George Soros and wooing other left-leaning politician­s.

“Politician­s speak loudly about the other candidates’ source of money,” said Charles Elson, a corporate governance expert, before FTX collapsed. “If you have taken money from someone who blows up, questions will be asked.”

In Washington, Bankman-Fried lobbied for tighter regulation in an effort to advance his own business and make the industry palatable to US banking regulators. Now the reputation he built is trashed.

“I’m deeply sorry that we got into this place and for my role in it,” Bankman-Fried told employees on Tuesday morning. “I fucked up.”

Within the industry, FTX’s implosion is being called crypto’s “Lehman moment”, a reference to the collapse of Lehman Brothers bank in 2008 that triggered the global financial crisis.

The figure at the centre of the story is in many ways the archetypal Silicon Valley wunderkind – young, nerdy, socially awkward, clever and entrusted with the controls of mysterious but powerful financial instrument­s that can affect the real-world economy.

A New York Timesprofi­le said his awkwardnes­s seemed “self-calculated”, but for a time it appeared BankmanFri­ed – or SBF, as he calls himself – had a genuinely savant-like knack for the crypto business.

He grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, within a family of academics, attending one of the top private high schools, Crystal Springs Uplands in Hillsborou­gh, California. His parents are both law professors at Stanford University and he was born on its campus. His

aunt Linda Fried’s academic career is even more illustriou­s. An epidemiolo­gist, she is the dean of Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

In 2014, after graduating from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology with a degree in physics, he joined New York trading firm Jane Street Capital, having worked there as an intern during his student days. Of his education, he said: “Nothing I learned in college ended up being useful … other than, like, social developmen­t. On the academic side, though, it’s all fucking useless … School is just not helpful for most jobs.”

In 2017, he moved back to California, where he worked for the philanthro­pic Centre for Effective Altruism. Shortly after, he founded Alameda Research, a quantitati­ve trading firm named after a California city but with its headquarte­rs in Hong Kong, and began speculatin­g on bitcoin. FTX was founded two years later. His wealth ballooned during the pandemic and as he grew richer, Bankman-Fried also became a public figure.

He spoke of his commitment to “effective altruism” – a data-driven approach to philanthro­py favoured by tech billionair­es. He planned, he said, to give away his fortune. He shot Twitter videos with star American football quarterbac­k Tom Brady, and dined with actor Orlando Bloom and singer Katy Perry. FTX put its name on the Miami Heat sports stadium in Florida.

When Bankman-Fried started bailing out other crypto platforms during the sector’s last crash in summer, he earned high praise from Anthony Scaramucci, Donald Trump’s shortlived White House spokesman, who compared him to the founder of JP Morgan bank.

“Sam Bankman-Fried is the new John Pierpont Morgan – he is bailing out cryptocurr­ency markets the way the original JP Morgan did after the crisis of 1907,” Scaramucci eulogised. Morgan’s bank went on to dominate Wall Street for more than a century. FTX lasted three years.

FTX is simple in concept: a trading platform like any stock exchange. Run from offices in Chicago and then Miami, but with headquarte­rs in the opaque tax haven of the Bahamas, it took advantage of what the local authoritie­s promoted as a regulatory jurisdicti­on ideal to “create abundance” for “a financial centre of the future”.

FTX organised showy public events. In May, the Crypto Bahamas event brought the world to Nassau for a lavish gathering attended by the supermodel Gisele Bündchen and her then husband, Tom Brady. Sporting his customary cargo shorts, Bankman-Fried shared a stage with Bill Clinton and Tony Blair.

In Washington, home to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the body looking to bring crypto into compliance with US securities laws, Bankman-Fried pitched himself as the man you could do business with.

He supported Democratic political causes and gave $100m to the just completed midterm elections. He recently floated the idea of punting $1bn into the 2024 presidenti­al campaign but called the idea “dumb” soon after.

He argued for tighter regulation of crypto, promoting the idea of blacklists of digital addresses linked to financial crime. In written testimony to the US Treasury’s financial stability oversight council hearing in July, Bankman-Fried said “FTX has aimed to combine the best practices of the traditiona­l financial system with the best from the digital-asset ecosystem.”

Not everyone bought into his worldview, however. Perianne Boring, founder and chief executive of the Chamber of Digital Commerce trade group, said in a Bloomberg interview: “He is not the face of the industry and never was.”

“FTX hit every red light it could hit,” said Joshua Peck, founder of TrueCode Capital, a crypto asset manager, and author of the forthcomin­g book Cryptocurr­ency Risk Management: A Guide for Family Wealth Managers. “It’s Bahamian-registered, it’s never achieved Soc 2 compliance, which is an industry certificat­ion that says your internal processes are of high quality, and it has a lot of leverage. It’s a giant mess.” FTX has been approached for comment.

Bankman-Fried held up his hands, tweeting on Thursday that “poor internal labelling of bank-related accounts” meant he was “substantia­lly off” in his calculatio­ns of the sums the exchange had lent out to users to let them make leveraged bets – borrowing money to trade with, magnifying potential gains and losses.

But there is another narrative playing out – that Bankman-Fried was undone by his friend turned rival at Binance. Zhao had invested $500m over the summer in the FTX currency, a token called FTT. On Sunday, Binance called in the debt. FTX was unable to meet the request. When other investors got wind of trouble, something akin to a bank run started and spun out of control.

Some have theorised that Zhao resented SBF’s call for tighter regulation. Binance did not return a request for comment. On Sunday, Zhao posted a tweet explaining his decision to pull out of FTT.

“We gave support before, but we won’t pretend to make love after divorce. We are not against anyone. But we won’t support people who lobby against other industry players behind their backs. Onwards.”

But Zhao also said in a note to employees on Wednesday that the then approachin­g collapse of FTX was “not a win”, it had “severely shaken” confidence in the industry and would trigger greater regulatory scrutiny.

Whatever the cause of his downfall, far from being the saviour of crypto, Bankman-Fried is now beginning to look as if he might be its undoing.

 ?? Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy ?? Sam Bankman-Fried, second right, chief executive of digital currency exchange FTX, testifies during a House agricultur­al committee hearing in May 2022 on changing financial market roles.
Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy Sam Bankman-Fried, second right, chief executive of digital currency exchange FTX, testifies during a House agricultur­al committee hearing in May 2022 on changing financial market roles.
 ?? Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/ Getty Images ?? Bankman-Fried dined with celebritie­s, including singer Katy Perry and actor Orlando Bloom.
Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/ Getty Images Bankman-Fried dined with celebritie­s, including singer Katy Perry and actor Orlando Bloom.

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