A few days before FTX filed for bankruptcy, Sam Bankman-Fried sent out a tweet reassuring customers and investors that the cryptocurrency exchange and its assets were in good shape.
(Bloomberg) — A few days before FTX filed for bankruptcy, Sam Bankman-Fried sent out a tweet reassuring customers and investors that the cryptocurrency exchange and its assets were in good shape.
Bankman-Fried’s FTX co-founder, Gary Wang, testified Friday that was a lie.
“FTX was not fine, and the assets were not fine,” Wang, 30, said in his second day as a prosecution witness in Bankman-Fried’s fraud trial.
Wang, who pleaded guilty in December and agreed to cooperate, said he altered the cryptocurrency exchange’s backend code in 2019, allegedly at Bankman-Fried’s direction. The resulting “special advantage” allowed Alameda Research, an affiliated hedge fund, to borrow essentially unlimited funds from FTX customers. By fall 2022, Alameda had borrowed as much as $14 billion from FTX, an amount it couldn’t repay.
He knew it was wrong, said Wang. “The money belonged to customers, and the customers did not give us permission to use it for other things.”
In more than four hours on the stand, Wang provided an account of FTX’s last days and details on how he and Bankman-Fried, 31, allegedly implemented a multibillion-dollar scheme that made the exchange’s collapse inevitable.
Wang’s testimony goes to the heart of federal prosecutors’ case against Bankman-Fried. They accuse him of orchestrating a scheme to fraudulently transfer funds to Alameda, creating a massive shortfall that led to both companies’ bankruptcies. Wang is one of the government’s three star witnesses, along with former Alameda Chief Executive Officer Caroline Ellison, who is also Bankman-Fried’s ex-girlfriend, and former FTX engineering chief Nishad Singh. Prosecutors said Friday that Ellison would testify next week.
The long friendship between Wang and Bankman-Fried, who first met at a high school math camp and were roommates at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is an additional, though largely unspoken, dimension to the former’s testimony. On both Thursday and Friday, Wang avoided making eye contact with Bankman-Fried as he walked through the courtroom toward the witness stand.
Under questioning Friday by Assistant US Attorney Nicolas Roos, Wang testified about the secret mechanisms that permitted funds to flow from FTX to Alameda. Wang said Bankman-Fried asked that a backend “allow negative” balance feature be added for Alameda. Wang said most users were only able to draw from amounts they had deposited.
Some big customers were given lines of credit at FTX, Wang said. But no one besides Alameda had a credit line of more than $1 billion, and most were much smaller, in the millions of dollars, according to Wang. Alameda’s was $65 billion, he said.
Bankman-Fried also directed that Alameda be exempted from liquidation rules that applied to other FTX accounts, Wang said. He explained that accounts that were in danger of going into the red had their positions sold off to a market maker before that could happen. Wang said the feature existed to protect the exchange and other customers.
Better Books
But Bankman-Fried didn’t want this protection to apply to Alameda, Wang said, and he also occasionally used that special privilege to clean up FTX’s books. Wang described one instance in which Bankman-Fried asked for Alameda to take a loss of hundreds of millions of dollars instead of the exchange’s backstop insurance fund, which didn’t have sufficient funds.
According to Wang, it was better for Alameda to take such losses because its books were less public than FTX’s.
On cross-examination, Bankman-Fried lawyer Christian Everdell tried to suggest that the special privileges Alameda enjoyed on FTX were tied, at least in part, to its role as a market maker and as a large customer of the exchange. The defense will continue its questioning of Wang on Tuesday.
Wang’s description of special treatment for Alameda flies in the face of FTX’s public stance that the exchange treated customers equally, prosecutors allege.
On Thursday, Matt Huang of crypto venture capital firm Paradigm, an investor in FTX, testified his firm was aware of the relation between Alameda and the exchange but was reassured there was no preferential treatment. Huang said it would have been “a concern” if they had known Alameda was not subject to liquidation rules.
“It would’ve meant Alameda could trade with leverage on the platform and could incur negative balances that would need to be repaid somehow,” Huang said, adding, “Given crypto prices are volatile, the business could be insolvent. It would also be damaging to the brand and customers’ trust.”
Shutting Down Alameda
On Friday, Roos showed jurors a July 2019 tweet in which Bankman-Fried said Alameda was a liquidity provider on FTX and that its account was just like everyone else’s. The prosecutor noted that it was the same day Alameda was given its “allow negative” privilege.
Adam Yedidia, another MIT classmate joined them at FTX, testified on Wednesday that he discovered the scale of Alameda’s borrowing and confronted Bankman-Fried in June 2022.
“It concerned me,” Yedidia said. “It seemed like a lot of money for Alameda to be owing FTX. And I wanted to be certain that Alameda could repay that debt.”
But it wasn’t the massive liability but the prospect of a Bloomberg News article on the possible conflicts of interest in Alameda’s relationship with FTX that spurred Bankman-Fried to consider taking action, Wang testified.
Bankman-Fried organized a September 2022 Signal chat that also included Ellison and Singh in which he suggested shutting down Alameda, Wang testified. But Bankman-Fried backed off the idea when he realized Alameda couldn’t repay the $14 billion it owed FTX.
Two months later, shortly after FTX’s bankruptcy filing, Wang said Bankman-Fried asked him again to figure out a way to move funds, this time to put them out of reach of the US proceeding. Company lawyer Ryne Miller had told them no assets could be transferred, but Bankman-Fried said to ignore him, Wang testified.
Wang said he went to prosecutors on Nov. 17 and told them he wanted to cooperate.
–With assistance from Hannah Miller, Beth Williams and Allyson Versprille.
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