FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried Borrowed From Alameda To Buy Robinhood Shares (coindesk.com) 71
Former FTX chief Sam Bankman-Fried borrowed hundreds of millions of dollars from Alameda Research to purchase his stake in trading app Robinhood Markets (HOOD), according to court documents (PDF). CoinDesk reports: In an affidavit provided to a Caribbean court before his arrest, Bankman-Fried said he and FTX co-founder Gary Wang together borrowed over $546 million from Alameda via promissory notes in April and May. They used that money to capitalize Emergent Fidelity Technologies Ltd., the shell corporation that in May bought a 7.6% stake of Robinhood. The affidavit provides a new curveball in the three-way race to lay claim to the 56 million Robinhood shares. Crypto lender BlockFi, FTX Group and Bankman-Fried himself have all attempted to lay claim to the shares, which could be worth over $440 million.
Crypto lender BlockFi, which like FTX has filed for bankruptcy, alleged in a court document (PDF) that it was owed the rights to the Robinhood shares due to a deal Bankman-Fried made in early November. The shares were pledged as collateral against a loan taken out by Alameda Research -- the same firm whose funds were used to purchase the shares to begin with, according to Tuesday's filing.
Crypto lender BlockFi, which like FTX has filed for bankruptcy, alleged in a court document (PDF) that it was owed the rights to the Robinhood shares due to a deal Bankman-Fried made in early November. The shares were pledged as collateral against a loan taken out by Alameda Research -- the same firm whose funds were used to purchase the shares to begin with, according to Tuesday's filing.
Re:Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on CryptoD (Score:5, Insightful)
I disagree. Crypto is indeed tech. By definition it is nothing but tech. Created by tech, stored in tech, and now dissipated into entropy by tech.
The painstaking details of bankruptcy law may be too involved, but the general outlines of which vulture gets the choice parts of the corpse are interesting.
The question now is when do they convert Chapter 11 to Chapter 7 (complete liquidation).
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I agree. This is how technology is changing investing/payments. Advancements, failures, and dangers of that new technology.
There are plenty of news articles posted on Slashdot that I'm not interested in. I just don't read any more than the headline and scroll on by.
Or just go to your Slashdot account Options and then Exclusions and exclude such stories. Or just do as that guy did and cry about it like a little bitch.
Re: Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on Crypto (Score:2)
I agree. This is how technology is changing money laundering and extortion. Advancements, failures, and dangers of that new technology
FTFY
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But much more likely they are just the same typical disaster stories like pandemics, wars, the economy, etc., that are considered the most newsworthy on any g
Re:Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on SEOdot (Score:1)
Black hat SEO indeed.
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No, the real question is when do these perps get their orange jumpsuits, long jail sentences and any scraps of remaining assets seized for restitution to the fools they duped during their financial crime spree?
Re:Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on CryptoD (Score:4, Interesting)
No, the real question is when do these perps get their orange jumpsuits, long jail sentences and any scraps of remaining assets seized for restitution to the fools they duped during their financial crime spree?
Oh it is way more interesting than that. See SBF's parents are experts in...wait for it...regulatory compliance. They both teach that at MIT (Sloan I think). In addition, his father was the former head of the SEC. SBF funded an effort in Congress to get crypto compliance moved from the SEC to another much smaller regulator for ag commodities. He got multiple prominent members of Congress in his pocket [marketwatch.com]. In addition, SBF's exchange (FTX) got a "no action letter" from the SEC which basically means we know you aren't following the law but we are going to look the other way.
Re:Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on CryptoD (Score:5, Informative)
SBF's dad (Joseph Bankman) is a law professor at Stanford, specializing in taxes; his mother (Barbara Fried) is a retired Stanford law professor, and writer.
Re:Not tech. Doesn't matter. This Hour, on CryptoD (Score:4, Interesting)
SBF's dad (Joseph Bankman) is a law professor at Stanford, specializing in taxes; his mother (Barbara Fried) is a retired Stanford law professor, and writer.
So I misremembered, sorry about that. It was Caroline Ellison's father (CEO of Alameda Research) who was a compliance professor at MIT and one of his colleagues was a former head of the SEC named Gary Gensler.
Running a crypto currency, by chance? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's absolutely amazing the way every story that involved crypto was a tech story worthy of Slashdot for YEARS, and when people pushed back and warned on Slashdot that this stuff was just the latest incarnation of a basic Ponzi scheme, the pro-crypto crowd would tolerate little of it. Now, with the biggest and most spectacular implosion centered on the FTX crypto business, we're told "shut up, it's NOT a tech story!"
Crypto people are tech people, and they were pushing SBF and his FTX as shining examples of how great and how safe crypto was. SBF was promoted everywhere as "the JP Morgan of crpto". I take their word for it: SBF is the best example of a guy running crypto, a giant among fleas, an example for all other crypto guys to follow and emulate...
If crypto was a tech thing on the way up, then it's a tech thing on the way down... ALL the way down...
Consistency can be painful and/or embarrassing.
Re:Running a crypto currency, by chance? (Score:4, Interesting)
Cryptocurrency is a ponzi, albeit usually a crowdsourced one. But of course on top of that you have other scams to worry about - ICOs, pump & dumps, pyramid schemes, rugpulls, swampland sales and even more ponzis. There's a channel on YouTube called Coffeezilla and the guy is exposing crypto scams left and right and they never stop coming. e.g. He just ran a series about Logan Paul ripping off his idiot followers with a pump and dump / rugpull crypto scam which in a just world would end up with that asshole behind bars for fraud.
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warned on Slashdot that this stuff was just the latest incarnation of a basic Ponzi scheme
Not really. Crypto is a scam in many forms, but if there's one thing that we could potentially get out of here is educating Slashdotters what a Ponzi scheme is, and more importantly what it isn't.
Hint: Just because something with perceived value rises due to popularity doesn't make it a ponzi scheme.
Just because something has no underlying value doesn't make it a ponzi scheme.
It's not crypto bros defending it as not a ponzi scheme, it's anyone who has taken basic economics, ... or even anyone who has looked
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All that said, *BItcoin* was a Ponzi scheme.
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All that said, *BItcoin* was a Ponzi scheme.
Except it's not (and was not) and doesn't fit it by any definition. Keep trying.
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Where did the profits of the early investors come from then?
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Ok, let's start this out right. So that we have a common basis for discussion, please provide YOUR definition of what a Ponzi scheme is.
The one you get out of any textbook, or Wikipedia, or Investopedia, or literally look up any source you want, hell go straight to the Legal Information Institute to get the actual legal definition if you want. Wherever you go, crypto doesn't fit the requirement.
Ponzi schemes rely on direct transfer of wealth from new investors to old. That doesn't happen with crypto. Crypto provides no transfer of wealth.
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We don't care about bankruptcy law.
Yet here you are, contributing to the discussion.
They better decide who owns the shares quick. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:They better decide who owns the shares quick. (Score:4, Informative)
Beat me to it. At a $7.65 closing price [marketwatch.com], someone better take possession soon before it's all gone.
2008? (Score:5, Interesting)
why weren't the 2008 bankers held to the same standard as this guy?
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Because a rather large part of the banking system would be missing if they had. The alternative would have been putting these banks under government control and that never really works. It could have been done if there had been political will though, just with some delay and one-by-one and some preparation for this case _before_. Personally, I think banksters should should be treated the same as tax-evaders regarding prison time. As long as they walk free, history will repeat itself again and again and agai
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[citation needed]
That would seem to contradict the actual history of western banking which pretty conclusively leans in favor of government run banking.
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Central Reserve Bank, yes. Commercial banks, pretty much no, same as any other sort of enterprise. Of course there are exceptions and commercial banks are heavily regulated anyways. You still need the people in there to run things, you cannot simply swap them all out.
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[citation needed]
See the Soviet Union. Or compare the per capita GDP of countries in the west with countries that have nationalized banks (like say India). You could use GDP growth but that shows the same thing. In fact, I really can't find a situation in history where nationalizing banks let to a good outcome but perhaps you could enlighten us.
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It is weird how SBF was asking for regulation in crypto and yet he was doing all this unsupportable leveraging. I guess he figured the music would never stop.
Yep, looks like it. A pyramid schemer that deeply believed in the pyramid. I have run into the occasional student of economics that thought the same. When you show them that pretty much every person on earth has to be in the pyramid several times before anybody than the top layers gets a pay-out, at least some of them have a revelation. What I do not get is that SBF gets described as exceptionally smart regularly. He cannot be. I guess he is just exceptionally persuasive.
Re:2008? (Score:5, Informative)
The alternative would have been putting these banks under government control and that never really works.
It worked in the UK. They didn't just bail out the banks for free, the gave the money in return for equity & became major shareholders. Within a couple of years the banks managed to buy out all the equity and the Government even ended up coming away with a profit.
Re:2008? (Score:4, Interesting)
The alternative would have been putting these banks under government control and that never really works.
It worked in the UK. They didn't just bail out the banks for free, the gave the money in return for equity & became major shareholders. Within a couple of years the banks managed to buy out all the equity and the Government even ended up coming away with a profit.
Same in the USA
Re:2008? (Score:4, Informative)
The alternative would have been putting these banks under government control and that never really works.
It worked in the UK. They didn't just bail out the banks for free, the gave the money in return for equity & became major shareholders. Within a couple of years the banks managed to buy out all the equity and the Government even ended up coming away with a profit.
That's how it worked in the US too. Look up TARP.
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GP referred to government control, not nationalisation. In this case, as a majority shareholder the government got the right to make its own nominations for the board and have a proportional influence on day-to-day operations.
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Some pretty greedy and ethically marginal lending decisions were made but they weren't done with intent to defraud.
I am not buying that. I think in 2008 they just thought they had a good change to get away with it. Same as now.
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why weren't the 2008 bankers held to the same standard as this guy?
Slashdot really needs a moderator category for "Whataboutism". I generally mod those posts "off topic", but "whatabout" seems more accurate.
Nah, some idiot would.... (Score:5, Insightful)
decide that "whataboutism" is a negative thing, rather than something akin to "insightful"
so-called "whataboutism" is necessary in any civilized society that pretends to have the Rule of Law. It is the method by which people who have little power in a particular situation demand fair treatment from the powerful. When a black man goes to jail for stealing a candy bar, and a white guy walks freely after stealing a thousand dollars, the black man is right to point at that whit guys and say "what about HIM?" When a man can own property and a woman cannot, the woman is right to say "what about HIM?" When a poor person is punished for sleeping on a public park bench, but a rich politician can rope-off and camp upon a public beach, the poor person is right to ask "what about HIM?". When a politician of one political party is investigated for something while a politician of another party who does the same thing is not, the first is right to point at the second and say "what about HIM?".
The Rule of Law is a principle that each person is treated the same by the law and the courts as any other person in the same situation - and without "whataboutism" this does not exist. I get it that because many loving and tolerant people despise the bad orange man and his supporters, and because he and his supporters have asked questions about equal treatment, people have invented the term "whataboutism" and pretended it's a bad thing, just as many of the same people have in recent years suddenly decided that free speech is a bad thing. People need to calm down, step back, and consider that very basic principles should not be discarded in a moment of time when a person they despise is helped by those principles - eventually the shoe may be on the other foot any they just might need those principles themselves.
Re:Nah, some idiot would.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Those examples are not whataboutism. They are pointing out hypocrisy. Being unfairly treated for a trivial offense, and pointing out how others get away with gross offenses is indeed necessary.
Whataboutism is done not to point out hypocrisy but to deflect from blame for what one has done. It's being fairly treated for a gross offense and pointing out how others get away with trivial offenses, to try to deflect attention and blame.
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decide that "whataboutism" is a negative thing, rather than something akin to "insightful"...
Then proceeds with two full paragraphs of "whataboutism". Whataboutism is NOT insightful, but rather is "the technique or practice of responding to an accusation or difficult question by making a counteraccusation or raising a different issue." SBF ran a crypto exchange, where he took depositors money. He replaced that money with his own home-made Monopoly money, then took his depositors money to Las Vegas, bet it all on Black Jack and lost. But "whatabout all the bankers in 2008 who crafted shoddy real-est
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decide that "whataboutism" is a negative thing, rather than something akin to "insightful"
We already have a mod for that. It's called "Offtopic". If whataboutism is supposed to be on topic then it is a distraction and a negative thing by definition in this argument.
The only way whataboutism isn't negative is if it's offtopic.
How do you want to downvote?
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Because the bankers wore sharper suits and "power" ties.
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Fundamentally, because they were not self-dealing and lying like FTX and Alameda people were. The companies that rated bundles of bad mortgages were truly independent of the companies that bundled them and sold them, and of the companies and quasi-government entities that bought them. They were all following direction from the US government -- particularly Congress -- to improve equity of homeownership and mortgage availability. The "2008 bankers" were held to higher standards.
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I guess this guy really is clueless (Score:4, Informative)
He seems to have overlooked that if you borrow something, you may well be required to repay it. Or go to jail. And be poor afterwards. Which he will now do.
To be fair, the Lehman scandal and others have shown that the financial system has insufficient safeguards against somebody just not understanding what they are doing and creating massive debt. As a consumer, you may be denied a $10 credit on suspicion only, as a banker, trader, crypto-bro, you can apparently lend a few $100M without anybody looking into you, if you have some minimal skills.
Re:I guess this guy really is clueless (Score:5, Interesting)
SBF was running a multi-stage fraud, straight-up. This was not being clueless. Now as a fraudster he may be lacking lots of clues given the just revealed "FTX fiat old” account on FTX. SBF referred to it as “our Korean friend’s account”, which was not included on FTX's balance sheets, and into this account he dumped 8 billion dollars in debts to make them disappear off the books.
This is much less sophisticated than Enron's "partnership" scheme in which it would create shell company "partnerships" which it secretly controlled. The Enron would borrow real money, keep the borrowed money on Enron's books, and transfer the debt to the partnership that would agree to take ownership of it for no reason. Moving debts to a mislabeled account on your own corporate account system is a much stupider move.
We are also beginning to see that he pledged the same asset multiple times to cover various debts, so the debt holders seeking to claim the assets will have a few problems.
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Yep. It is really quite staggering what he did. Even a single, superficial financial audit of the whole enterprise would have blown him up. Yet at the same time, he comes over as genuinely sorry and seemed to have thought this would all work out. Well, probably a bit like Nick Leeson, who also though he was doing well and nobody did question him until it was far too late.
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SBF was running a multi-stage fraud, straight-up. This was not being clueless. Now as a fraudster he may be lacking lots of clues given the just revealed "FTX fiat oldâ account on FTX. SBF referred to it as âoeour Korean friendâ(TM)s accountâ, which was not included on FTX's balance sheets, and into this account he dumped 8 billion dollars in debts to make them disappear off the books.
Sounds just like what Nick Leeson was doing with account 88888 at Barings Bank back in 1995.
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Indeed, it does.
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Isn't every company an incredible risk, until it looks pretty good, then looks great, then it looks dicey, and then it is sold for pennies? Some take decades to travel this arc; others do it in less than a year.
He seems to have overlooked that if you borrow something, you may well be required to repay it. Or go to jail. And be poor afterwards. Which he will now do.
Pretty much every financial company in the western world is based on borrowing money to buy something, working (or just waiting) until it appreciates, and then selling it.
The successful ones manage to sell or rent some or all of it when it is worth more than they paid for it; others not so much. (M
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He seems to have overlooked that if you borrow something, you may well be required to repay it.
No. He seemed to have overlooked that if you borrow something from a limited liability company it's called "embezzlement" and it is illegal. Whether you can repay it or not is irrelevant.
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That seems to be a special aspect of US law. You are forgetting none of these companies are US companies and for good reasons.
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Err no it most certainly is not a special case in US law. In fact basically every country with the concept of limited liability companies / corporations has laws against embezzlement on the books in some form or another.
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Borrowing stuff is not embezzlement. You seem to be making a mental leap there that does not work.
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Borrowing stuff is not embezzlement. You seem to be making a mental leap there that does not work.
There's very strict rules on how you borrow something from a LLC, SBF didn't borrow anything. He engaged in embezzlement. There's no leap of logic here.
Grifters buying shares in (Score:2)
I’m not sure exactly what to make of it, but I know one thing - this massive clusterf*&k did absolutely nothing for real people, or the real economy.
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This describes all of crypto-currency.
SBF is gonna get off scot free (Score:5, Interesting)
This is what the UN says about him
In a report released this month, the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, established by the UN Commission on Human Rights, found a “staggering display of lack of objectivity and impartiality” on the part of Judge Lewis Kaplan of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, who has handled much of the US part of Donziger’s case.
Typo (Score:1)
Buying HOOD??? (Score:4)