On Thursday, the Securities Commission of the Bahamas said that it has ordered the transfer of all digital assets held by FTX Digital Markets Ltd (FDM) to a government-controlled wallet for 'safekeeping'. The order was issued last Saturday.
"The Securities Commission of The Bahamas ('the Commission'), in the exercise of its powers as regulator acting under the authority of an Order made by the Supreme Court of The Bahamas, took the action of directing the transfer of all digital assets of FTX Digital Markets Ltd. ('FDM') to a digital wallet controlled by the Commission, for safekeeping," the regulator stated in the press release.
"Urgent interim regulatory action was necessary to protect the interests of clients and creditors of FDM."
The Commission did not explain why it announced the order publicly after five days or provide any details about the transfer.
Another announcement by the Bahamian regulator last Saturday clarified that it did not order FTX to resume withdrawals for the residents of the islands, contradicting previous claims of the collapsed crypto exchange.
Jurisdictional War?
FTX Digital Markets Ltd, operated as FTX.com, was headquartered in The Bahamas. The global crypto exchange, its US subsidiary, Alameda Research, and about 130 other affiliates filed for bankruptcy in the United States on November 11. Interestingly, the Bahamas-based exchange unit filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection in a New York district court, whereas the other entities sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Delaware.
The latest announcement by the Bahamas financial market watchdog indicates a tussle between the authorities in the United States and the Bahamas for jurisdictional claims over the collapsed crypto exchange, FTX.
Meanwhile, the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange was hacked last weekend, draining nearly a billion dollars worth of cryptocurrencies to hacker-controlled wallets.
FTX grew fast before it collapsed to rubble. The exchange was valued at $34 billion in its last funding round, attracting funds from major venture capitals. Temasek, Sequoia Capital and Soft Bank's Vision Fund wrote off hundreds of millions of dollars of their investment into the collapsed crypto exchange.