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FTX hurtles toward bankruptcy with Us$8bil hole, US probe

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NEW YORK: The crisis engulfing Sam Bankman-fried’s Ftx.com is rapidly worsening, with the onetime crypto wunderkind warning of bankruptcy if his firm can’t secure funds to cover a shortfall of as much as Us$8bil (Rm37.6bil).

Bankman-fried informed investors of the gap, shortly before rival exchange Binance abruptly scrapped a takeover offer.

He said Ftx.com needed Us$4bil (Rm18.8bil) to remain solvent and is attempting to raise rescue financing in the form of debt, equity, or a combinatio­n of the two, according to a source.

Bankman-fried told investors on the call that he would be “incredibly, unbelievab­ly grateful” if investors could help.

An FTX representa­tive declined to comment.

The acknowledg­ment of his firm’s deepening troubles and limited options is a stunning turn for Bankman-fried, who was once worth Us$26bil (Rm122.5bil) and likened to John Pierpont Morgan.

It also underscore­s the uncertaint­y hanging over FTX, its clients and cryptocurr­ency markets.

US authoritie­s are investigat­ing FTX, the vast bulk of Bankman-fried’s wealth has evaporated and rivals are benefiting from his woes. Robinhood Markets Inc has seen its biggest crypto inflows ever in the last two days, chief executive officer Vlad Tenev said yesterday.

Binance and Coinbase Global Inc have also seen large inflows, data from Cryptoquan­t showed.

Investor Sequoia Capital wrote down the full value of its holdings in Ftx.com and FTX. us, an indication that the firm sees no clear path to recouping its investment.

Hanging in the balance as the exchange teeters is not just the fate of its investors and lenders but anyone who has been unable to retrieve customer assets since it halted some withdrawal­s earlier in the week.

The failure of crypto firms Celsius and Voyager saw billions in client money tied up in bankruptcy proceeding­s.

FTX has a prominent list of backers such as Sequoia Capital, Blackrock Inc, Tiger Global Management and Softbank Group Corp.

Still, Bankman-fried remained defiant during a hectic period of roughly 24 hours that included mounting speculatio­n that Binance wouldn’t go through with the deal.

He repeatedly told investors during the conference call on Wednesday afternoon that it was simply not true that Changpeng Zhao was walking away from the takeover, the source said.

About an hour later, Binance said it was indeed backing out.

“Our hope was to be able to support FTX’S customers to provide liquidity, but the issues are beyond our control or ability to help,” Binance, the crypto exchange founded by Zhao, said in a statement.

In addition to the financial strains, FTX is drawing attention from US authoritie­s.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are investigat­ing whether the firm properly handled customer funds, as well as its relationsh­ip with other parts of Bankman-fried’s crypto empire, including his trading house Alameda Research, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday.

Officials from the Justice Department also are working with SEC attorneys.

Zhao said in a memo earlier that there was no “master plan” to take over FTX, and that “user confidence is severely shaken.” — Bloomberg

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