FTX spent $40 million on expenses in 9 months — including lavish hotels, $2,500 lunches, travel, and entertainment



FTX spent tens of millions on expenses in just over nine months — including on luxurious hotels, travel, food, and entertainment, according to a new report.

Between January 2022 and September 2022, FTX spent $40 million on expenses, according to bankruptcy court documents reviewed by Insider.

The Bahamas-based crypto exchange spent $15.4 million on luxury hotels, according to the bankruptcy filings. Approximately $5.8 million was spent on accommodations at the Albany Hotel — a 600-acre, oceanside luxury resort community with a golf course designed by star golfer Ernie Els and a yacht marina located on the island of New Providence in the Bahamas. The grounds of the opulent hotel feature a replica of the iconic "Charging Bull" statue seen on Wall Street. The statue was cast by the original creator, Arturo Di Modica.

Fortune described the Albany Hotel as the "most exclusive but laid-back luxury resort community in the Bahamas." A one-night stay at the Albany Hotel can cost as much as $60,000 during the high season.

Before his arrest last month, FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried lived at his $40 million penthouse dubbed "the Orchid" at the Albany Hotel.

Before Bankman-Fried's $32 billion crypto empire collapsed, FTX splurged $3.6 million on hotel rooms at the Grand Hyatt Baha Mar in Nassau, the Bahamas.

In April 2022, FTX hosted the Crypto Bahamas retreat at the Grand Hyatt Baha Mar, featuring speaking appearances by former President Bill Clinton, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, NFL quarterback Tom Brady, and model Gisele Bündchen.

FTX spent $800,000 at the five-star Rosewood, where the price for one night's stay begins at $1,100

"Luxurious and low-key, Rosewood Baha Mar is undoubtedly the most lavish of the three resorts in the Bahamian capital’s sprawling hotel development," Forbes said of the ritzy resort.


Insider reported that Bankman-Fried's digital asset trading house owes more than $55,000 to singer Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville beach resort in the Bahamas.

Bankruptcy court filings show that FTX paid $6.9 million in expenses for "meals and entertainment." FTX forked out $1.4 million for catering at the Grand Hyatt Baha Mar.

The now-defunct crypto platform FTX footed a nearly $1 million catering bill from Six Stars Catering in Nassau.


Fox Business reported that Bankman-Fried often spent $2,500 just for lunch at the Cocoplum Bahamian bistro.

"It is the type of place where a lone diner will spend $80 and change for a New York strip steak and two Diet Cokes," the outlet said. "Workers said the restaurant was just one of several local caterers to deliver lunch on a regular basis, for a combined cost of about $10,000 a day."

Workers at FTX’s U.S. branch were reportedly provided with $200 per day toward DoorDash food delivery.

A former FTX employee told the Financial Times that the company paid for "free groceries, barbershop pop-up, and bi-weekly massages."

Employees also enjoyed a "full suite of cars and gas covered for all employees [and] unlimited, full expense covered trips to any office globally."

FTX burned through $3.9 million for flights. Plus, FTX spent more than $500,000 for "postage and delivery." FTX reportedly hired private planes to fly Amazon packages from Miami because the online retailer didn't deliver to the Bahamas.

The wild spending spree in the first nine months of 2022 occurred despite paramount financial losses prior. Bankman-Fried's Alameda Research trading firm, founded in 2017, and FTX, founded in 2019, had a net operating loss carryover of $3.7 billion since their inceptions, according to 2021 tax returns analyzed by Forbes.

In November, Reuters reported that at least $1 billion in FTX customer funds had gone missing. Bankman-Fried had previously transferred $10 billion of customer funds from FTX to Alameda Research, according to sources.

Democrat megadonor Sam Bankman-Fried under criminal investigation for market manipulation, which may have helped wipe $1 trillion from crypto market



Disgraced Democrat megadonor Sam Bankman-Fried is in hot water, and not just for running his crypto exchange FTX into the ground or for admitting that he masqueraded as a "woke westerner."

Federal prosecutors have reportedly launched a criminal investigation into whether SBF manipulated prices of two cryptocurrencies in order to benefit his companies.

Fixing to win

The New York Times reported that U.S. prosecutors in Manhattan are looking into whether SBF manipulated and drove down the prices of two interlinked cryptocurrencies — TerraUSD and Luna — in order to benefit his companies FTX and Alameda Research.

SBF, called "one of the greatest fraudsters in history" by former rival and Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, claimed in a statement that he was "not aware of any market manipulation and certainly never intended to engage in market manipulation."

The Democrat benefactor did not, however, expressly state that he had not engaged in market manipulation.

SBF said, "To the best of my knowledge, all transactions were for investment or for hedging."

The fall

TerraUSD is a so-called "stablecoin" whose value was supposed to be tied to the U.S. dollar. It operates on the Terra blockchain.

According to Investopedia, the currency was always intended to be worth exactly one dollar, "enabling transactions to process with predictable results and giving cryptocurrency investors and traders an option to store their assets in cryptocurrency without the risk and volatility associated with typical digital currencies."

Luna was the sister cryptocurrency of TerraUSD.

KRON reported that the idea behind Luna was that it was interchangeable with Terra, helpful if either traded under the desired price.

Both currencies became virtually worthless in May, with TerraUSD hitting a low of roughly $0.30 on May 11 and Luna dropping from $85 the previous week to about 4 cents, together wiping away over $50 billion in market value.

The New York Post reported that the crash of these currencies cleaned out billionaires and retail investors alike, resulting in bankruptcies and suicide attempts.

The resultant financial outlook became so bleak for so many investors that national suicide hotlines for various nations were reportedly pinned to the top of the Terra/Luna subreddit.

The consequence of this incident was not isolated. Instead, it sent ripples throughout the crypto world, bankrupting various prominent companies and, according to the Times, helping erase $1 trillion in value from the crypto market.

The push

The Times reported that prior to the crash, there were reports of a "flood of sell orders" for TerraUSD that "overwhelmed the system" and sent the currencies' prices plummeting. Luna prices also began to rapidly drop, owing to the incestuous linkage between the two currencies.

These sell orders for Terra USD just happened to originate from SBF's trading firm Alameda Research, a source told the Times. Alameda Research reportedly had also bet against Luna's price at the time of the crash.

Perhaps in a karmic twist, SBF's empire would ultimately reap the whirlwind he allegedly kicked up. The resultant market chaos reportedly led to loans conferred on Alameda getting recalled.

The Times indicated that SBF's ex-lover and Alameda chief executive Caroline Ellison told staff that Alameda, unable to get its hands on the borrowed funds, ended up using FTX customer funds to pay back the loans.

When panic set in about the crypto exchange's viability, customers tried to withdraw their money en masse. Unable to meet the demands, FTX eventually imploded.

The investigations

While SBF has yet to be charged with a crime, Richard Levin, a partner and financial technology lawyer at Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, told CNBC that the former FTX CEO presently faces three different legal threats in the U.S. alone:

  • criminal action from the Department of Justice for "criminal violations of securities laws, bank fraud laws, and wire fraud laws";
  • civil enforcement action, brought "by the Securities Exchange Commission, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and by state banking and securities regulators"; and
  • class action lawsuits.

CNBC noted that wire fraud is the most likely criminal charge SBF would face.

With hundreds of thousands of potential victims and billions in losses, Levin suggested the Democrat megadonor could be looking at "potential incarceration for decades" as well as heavy monetary penalties.

Bloomberg first reported — and the Times has confirmed — that the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York began investigating FTX for money laundering prior to its collapse. The focus of the investigation was initially on the company's apparent noncompliance with the Bank Secrecy Act.

The Wall Street Journal reported in November that the Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating FTX after its sudden implosion.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is reportedly also looking into the circumstances of FTX's bankruptcy.

Bahamas Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs Ryan Pinder confirmed late last month that FTX is the focus of an "active and ongoing" investigation by Caribbean authorities. According to Pinder, the "affairs of FTX Digital Markets" are being examined by both "civil and criminal authorities."

Report: Over $1 billion missing after Democrat megadonor 'secretly' transferred customer funds from FTX to his trading company



Democrat megadonor Sam Bankman-Fried's troubles appear to be mounting.

On Election Day, he lost nearly 94% of his estimated $15.6 billion fortune. On Friday, his crypto exchange FTX, once assigned a value of $32 billion, fired him as CEO and filed for bankruptcy.

In addition to investigations by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department, Bankman-Fried now also faces questions about why $1 billion of customer funds appear to be unaccounted for.

Secret transfers

Two sources who held senior FTX positions until this week told Reuters that a "financial hole" was exposed when Bankman-Fried shared records with other senior executives last Sunday.

The meeting, confirmed by Bankman-Fried, was held in Nassau, Bahamas, with the purpose of establishing how much external funding was needed to cover FTX's shortfall.

According to Reuters, the 30-year-old former billionaire showed the heads of the company's regulatory and legal teams spreadsheets that indicated FTX had transferred $10 billion from FTX to Bankman-Fried's quantitative crypto trading company Alameda Research.

Bankman-Fried told Reuters he "disagreed with the characterization" of the $10 billion transfer.

It wasn't a secret transfer, Bankman-Fried alleged. "We had confusing internal labeling and misread it," he said.

One source indicated that the amount unaccounted for among Alameda's assets was approximately $1.7 billion. The whereabouts of those funds were reportedly not immediately clear from the documents.

Backdoor

The FTX legal and finance teams also learned of another troubling matter that may be taken up by the SEC and DOJ in their investigations. Bankman-Fried allegedly implemented a "backdoor" in FTX's book-keeping system.

Reuters reported that the alleged backdoor enabled Bankman-Fried to "execute commands that could alter the company's financial records without alerting other people, including external auditors."

The sources indicated that by using the backdoor, Bankman-Fried would have been able to transfer the $10 billion in customer funds to his other company without triggering internal compliance or accounting red flags at FTX.

Bankman-Fried told Reuters that he hadn't implemented a backdoor.

Investigations

NBC News indicated that the SEC and DOJ are now investigating FTX.

The SEC reportedly opened a probe months ago into whether Bankman-Fried's exchange was following securities laws concerning segregation of customer assets and trading against customers.

According to NPR, the DOJ is looking into whether any criminal activities were committed. Its investigation is allegedly centered on the possibility that FTX had used customer's deposits to fund bets at Alameda Research.

Titan fall

The crypto giant FTX, FTX US, Alameda Research Ltd., and 130 additional affiliated companies — once valued at a combined $40 billion — have begun the process of filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

In a press release, FTX announced that its founder, once touted as the "next Warren Buffett," has stepped down as CEO and has been replaced by restructuring specialist John J. Ray III.

\u201cPress Release\u201d
— FTX (@FTX) 1668176060

On Tuesday, there appeared to be hope of a rescue deal for FTX with rival exchange Binance, whose CEO Changpeng Zhao played a peripheral role in Bankman-Fried's downfall. However, on Wednesday that prospective deal fell through.

CoinDesk reported that when Binance confirmed the deal was off, crypto markets took another plunge, sending bitcoin below $16,000 for the first time in two years.

Dan Edlebeck, head of ecosystem at Sei Network, told CoinDesk that FTX's collapse "sets back our industry as far as growth and trust across other industries that are looking to support and get involved with crypto and it will also affect other players in the crypto space that have assets tied and connected to FTX."

According to Jay Jog, co-founder of Layer 1 blockchain Sei Network, the deal's termination means a "lot of normal users will lose their money ... this will be catastrophic for the ecosystem in the short-term."

Bankman-Fried tweeted, "I'm really sorry, again, that we ended up here."

"I'm piecing together all of the details, but I was shocked to see things unravel the way they did earlier this week," he added.

While FTX's customers may ultimately end up with catastrophic losses, according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index, the "trading wunderkind whose ambition knows no limits" now has no material wealth.

This past year, Bankman-Fried hired a network of "political operatives" and spent at least $39,826,856 in an effort to help Democrats win their House races.

The 30-year-old told Jacob Goldstein of "What's Your Problem?" that he might donate "north of $100 million" and up to $1 billion to Democrats in the 2024 presidential elections.

It is unlikely that he will soon be able to follow through on past promises to keep floating Democrat boats.