The Securities Commission of The Bahamas on Wednesday released a statement justifying its move to cease the customer assets of the local FTX entity, FTX Digital Markets Ltd (FDM). It came after several questions were raised against the action of the Bahamian regulator.
"It is unfortunate that in Chapter 11 filings, the new CEO of FTX Trading Ltd. misrepresented this timely action through the intemperate and inaccurate allegations lodged in the Transfer Motion," the regulator stated.
"It is also concerning that the Chapter 11 debtors chose to rely on the statements of individuals they have (in other filings) characterized as unreliable sources of information and potentially 'seriously compromised'."
The Bahamas financial market watchdog gained a court order on November 12 to make the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange transfer local customers' digital assets to government-controlled wallets for 'safekeeping'.
"Given the nature of digital assets and the risks associated with hacking and compromise, the Commission determined that placing FDM into liquidation was not sufficient to protect the customers and creditors of FDM," the regulator added.
Further, the cyberattack on FTX, resulting in the theft of at least $1 billion in cryptocurrencies, justified the regulator's move.
The Collapse
FTX, valued at $34 billion in the last funding round, collapsed earlier this month. Several misdeeds of its Founder and the former CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried surfaced over the weeks – he reportedly used client deposits. He created a complex loan structure with sister entities backed by the native exchange token, FTT.
FTX.com, FTX US, Alameda Research and over 130 other affiliates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings in Delaware. In addition, the Bahamian entity filed for bankruptcy but Chapter 15 protection in a New York court. The liquidators of FTX have now agreed to move the proceedings of FTX's Bahamas entity to Delaware.
"The Commission will continue to evaluate the situation, continue to act in accordance with directions issued by the Supreme Court of The Bahamas, collaborate with other supervisory authorities, and take such further actions as needed to preserve the assets of FDM and to safeguard the interests of customers and creditors of FDM," the Securities Commission of The Bahamas added.
"In addition, the Commission will continue to investigate the facts and circumstances regarding FTX's liquidity crisis and any potential violations of Bahamian law and hold any responsible companies and individuals accountable, in cooperation with other regulatory agencies and law enforcement both in The Bahamas and in other affected countries in connection with their own investigations."
On top of that, the scale and impact of the collapse of FTX prompted other global regulators to clarify their situation. The Monetary Authority of Singapore recently clarified that FTX is not regulated under its jurisdiction, and thus the protection of its local clients is impossible.