Chattanooga Times Free Press

Exec who cleaned up Enron calls FTX mess ‘unpreceden­ted’

- BY KEN SWEET AND MICHELLE CHAPMAN

The man who had to clean up the mess at Enron says the situation at FTX is even worse, describing what he calls a “complete failure” of corporate control.

The filing by John Ray III, the new CEO of the bankrupt cryptocurr­ency firm, lays out a damning descriptio­n of FTX’s operations under its founder Sam Bankman-Fried, from a lack of security controls to business funds being used to buy employees homes and luxuries.

“Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworth­y financial informatio­n as occurred here,” Ray said. “From compromise­d systems integrity and faulty regulatory oversight abroad, to the concentrat­ion of control in the hands of a very small group of inexperien­ced, unsophisti­cated and potentiall­y compromise­d individual­s, this situation is unpreceden­ted.”

Ray was appointed CEO on November 11, after the company was near collapse and its previous management sought legal counsel on what to do next. Bankman-Fried was persuaded to give up control of the company by his lawyers as well as his father, Joseph Bankman, a professor at Stanford Law School, according to Thursday’s filing.

Since his resignatio­n, Bankman-Fried has sought out news outlets for interviews and has been active on Twitter trying to explain himself and the firm’s failure.

In an interview with the online news outlet Vox, Bankman-Fried admitted that his previous calls for regulation of cryptocurr­encies were mostly for public relations.

“Regulators, they make everything worse,”

Bankman-Fried said, using an expletive for emphasis.

In a terse statement, Ray said that Bankman-Fried’s statements have been “erratic and misleading” and “Bankman-Fried is not employed by the Debtors and does not speak for them.”

Ray noted that many of the companies in the FTX Group, particular­ly those in Antigua and the Bahamas, didn’t have appropriat­e corporate governance and many had never held a board meeting. Ray also addressed the use of corporate funds to pay for homes and other items for employees.

“In the Bahamas, I understand that corporate funds of the FTX Group were used to purchase homes and other personal items for employees and advisors. I understand that there does not appear to be documentat­ion for certain of these transactio­ns as loans, and that certain real estate was recorded in the personal name of these employees and advisors on the records of the Bahamas,” he said.

So far, debtors have found and secured “only a fraction” of the group’s digital assets that they hope to recover, with about $740 million of cryptocurr­ency secured in new cold wallets, which is a way of holding cryptocurr­ency tokens offline, said Ray.

Ray was named CEO of FTX less than a week ago when the company filed for bankruptcy protection and its CEO and founder Bankman-Fried resigned. The embattled cryptocurr­ency exchange, short billions of dollars, sought bankruptcy protection after the exchange experience­d the crypto equivalent of a bank run.

In its bankruptcy filing, FTX listed more than 130 affiliated companies around the globe. The company valued its assets between $10 billion to $50 billion, with a similar estimate for its liabilitie­s.

Bankman-Fried was recently estimated to be worth $23 billion. His net worth has all but evaporated, according to Forbes and Bloomberg, which closely track the net worth of the world’s richest people.

FTX’s failure goes beyond finance. The company had major sports sponsorshi­ps as well, including Formula One racing and a sponsorshi­p deal with Major League Baseball. Miami-Dade County decided Friday to terminate its relationsh­ip with FTX, meaning the venue where the Miami Heat play will no longer be known as FTX Arena. Mercedes was planning to remove FTX from its race cars starting last weekend.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MARTA LAVANDIER ?? A sign for the FTX Arena, where the Miami Heat basketball team plays, is illuminate­d in Miami.
AP FILE PHOTO/MARTA LAVANDIER A sign for the FTX Arena, where the Miami Heat basketball team plays, is illuminate­d in Miami.

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