FTX Bankruptcy Team Releases Second Investigative Report; $7B Recovered

Tuesday, 27/06/2023 | 09:02 GMT by Jared Kirui
  • The report noted that the exchange owed customers $8.7 billion.
  • Former FTX executives reportedly commingled and misused customer funds.
FTX

FTX's bankruptcy team tasked with recovering customer funds released a new report yesterday (Monday) showing the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange has so far recovered $7 billion out of the $8.7 billion owed to customers.

According to the report, the extensive commingling of funds complicates the efforts to recover the remaining amount. The company's previous management had hidden its actions with the assistance of a senior attorney as early as August 2022, the team claimed.

FTX’s Alleged Misappropriations

Additionally, the report explained about $6.4 billion of the funds that FTX owed to its customers were in fiat currency and stablecoins which were reportedly misappropriated. Besides the $7 billion which has since been recovered, the bankruptcy team said it was expecting more recoveries.

The assets claimed to have been misappropriated were reportedly used for speculative trading, venture investments, and acquisitions. Moreover, the funds were used for political donations, charitable donations, and investments in luxury real estate in the Bahamas, described the report.

"Notwithstanding extensive work by experts in forensic accounting, asset tracing and recovery, and blockchain analytics, among other areas, it is extremely challenging to trace substantial assets of the debtors to any particular source of funding or to differentiate between the FTX Group's operating funds and deposits made by its customers," said John Ray, the CEO of FTX who is tasked with recoveries.

The 33-page document accused FTX's top management and at least one senior attorney saying: "They lied to the banks and auditors, executed false documents, and moved the FTX Group from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, taking flight from the US to Hong Kong to the Bahamas, in a continual effort to enable and avoid detection of their wrongdoing."

'False Testimony'

Additionally, Ray's team claims that Sam Bankman-Fried gave false testimony before Congress about how his company protected customer funds. Earlier, in a separate press release, Bankman-Fried had claimed that the protection of customers was the top priority at the exchange.

The report is the second filing by Ray after disclosing accounting failures in an initial examination described inadequate management control under Bankman-Fried's watch. FTX is going through bankruptcy in Delaware, while Bankman-Fried is facing criminal charges and is expected to appear in court in October, Finance Magnates reported.

FTX's bankruptcy team tasked with recovering customer funds released a new report yesterday (Monday) showing the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange has so far recovered $7 billion out of the $8.7 billion owed to customers.

According to the report, the extensive commingling of funds complicates the efforts to recover the remaining amount. The company's previous management had hidden its actions with the assistance of a senior attorney as early as August 2022, the team claimed.

FTX’s Alleged Misappropriations

Additionally, the report explained about $6.4 billion of the funds that FTX owed to its customers were in fiat currency and stablecoins which were reportedly misappropriated. Besides the $7 billion which has since been recovered, the bankruptcy team said it was expecting more recoveries.

The assets claimed to have been misappropriated were reportedly used for speculative trading, venture investments, and acquisitions. Moreover, the funds were used for political donations, charitable donations, and investments in luxury real estate in the Bahamas, described the report.

"Notwithstanding extensive work by experts in forensic accounting, asset tracing and recovery, and blockchain analytics, among other areas, it is extremely challenging to trace substantial assets of the debtors to any particular source of funding or to differentiate between the FTX Group's operating funds and deposits made by its customers," said John Ray, the CEO of FTX who is tasked with recoveries.

The 33-page document accused FTX's top management and at least one senior attorney saying: "They lied to the banks and auditors, executed false documents, and moved the FTX Group from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, taking flight from the US to Hong Kong to the Bahamas, in a continual effort to enable and avoid detection of their wrongdoing."

'False Testimony'

Additionally, Ray's team claims that Sam Bankman-Fried gave false testimony before Congress about how his company protected customer funds. Earlier, in a separate press release, Bankman-Fried had claimed that the protection of customers was the top priority at the exchange.

The report is the second filing by Ray after disclosing accounting failures in an initial examination described inadequate management control under Bankman-Fried's watch. FTX is going through bankruptcy in Delaware, while Bankman-Fried is facing criminal charges and is expected to appear in court in October, Finance Magnates reported.

About the Author: Jared Kirui
Jared Kirui
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