Here's the Apology Letter from SBF

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by Baron, Nov 30, 2022.

  1. Baron

    Baron ET Founder

    “Hi all—

    I feel deeply sorry about what happened. I regret what happened to all of you. And I regret what happened to customers. You gave everything you could for FTX, and stood by the company—and me.

    I didn’t mean for any of this to happen, and I would give anything to be able to go back and do things over again. You were my family. I’ve lost that, and our old home is an empty warehouse of monitors. When I turn around, there’s no one left to talk to. I disappointed all of you, and when things broke down I failed to communicate. I froze up in the face of pressure and leaks and the Binance LOI and said nothing. I lost track of the most important things in the commotion of company growth. I care deeply about you all, and you were my family, and I’m sorry.

    I was CEO, and so it was my duty to make sure that, ultimately, the right things happened at FTX. I wish that I had been more careful.

    I want to give you a better description of what happened—one I should have written out as best I understood it much earlier.

    Piecing things together recently, making approximations—I don’t have full data access right now to get precise answers—and marking everything to market, regardless of liquidity, I believe that the events that led to the breakdown this month included:

    1) A crash in markets this spring that led to a roughly 50% reduction in the value of collateral;

    a. ~$60b collateral, ~$2b liabilities -> ~$30b collateral, ~$2b liabilities

    2) Most of the credit in the industry drying up at once;

    a. ~$25b collateral, ~$8b liabilities

    3) A concentrated, hyper-correlated crash in November that led to another roughly 50% reduction in the value of collateral over a very short period of time, during which there was very little market bid-side liquidity;

    a. ~$17b collateral, ~8b liabilities

    4) A run on the bank triggered by the same attacks in November;

    a. ~$9b collateral

    5) As we frantically put everything together, it became clear that the position was larger than its display on admin/users, because of old fiat deposits before FTX had bank accounts:

    a. ~$9b collateral, ~$8b liabilities

    I never intended this to happen. I did not realize the full extent of the margin position, nor did I realize the magnitude of the risk posed by a hyper-correlated crash. The loans and secondary sales were generally used to reinvest in the business—including buying out Binance—and not for large amounts of personal consumption.

    I deeply regret my oversight failure. In retrospect, I wish that we had done many many things differently. To name a few:

    a) being substantially more skeptical of large margin positions

    b) examining stress test scenarios involving hyper-correlated crashes and simultaneous runs on the bank

    c) being more careful about the fiat processes on FTX

    d) having a continuous monitor of total deliverable assets, total customer positions, and other core risk metrics

    e) Putting in more controls around margin management.

    And none of this changes the fact that this all sucks for you guys, and it’s not your fault, and I’m really sorry about that. I’m going to do what I can to make it up to you guys—and to the customers—even if that takes the rest of my life. But I’m worried that even then I won’t be able to.

    I also want to acknowledge those of you who gave me what I now believe to be the right advice about pathways forward for FTX following the crash. You were right, of course: I believe that a month earlier FTX had been a thriving, profitable, innovative business. Which means that FTX still had value, and that value could have gone towards helping to make everyone more whole. We likely could have raised significant funding; potential interest in billions of dollars of funding came in roughly eight minutes after I signed the Chapter 11 docs. Between those funds, the billions of dollars of collateral the company still held, and the interest we’d received from other parties, I think that we probably could have returned large value to customers and saved the business.

    There would have had to be changes, of course: way more transparency, and way more controls in place, including oversight of myself. But FTX was something really special, and you all helped make it that. Nothing that happened was your fault. We had to make very hard calls very quickly. I have been in that position before, and should have known that when shitty things happen to us, we all tend to make irrational decisions. An extreme amount of coordinated pressure came, out of desperation, to file for bankruptcy for all of FTX—even entities that were solvent—and despite other jurisdictions’ claims. I understand that pressure and empathize with it; a lot of people had been thrust into challenging circumstances that generally were not their fault. I reluctantly gave in to that pressure, even though I should have known better; I wish I had listened to those of you who saw and still see value in the platform, which was and is my belief as well.

    Maybe there still is a chance to save the company. I believe that there are billions of dollars of genuine interest from new investors that could go to making customers whole. But I can’t promise you that anything will happen, because it’s not my choice. In the meantime, I’m excited to see some positive steps being taken, like LedgerX being turned back on.

    I’m incredibly thankful for all that you guys have done for FTX over the years, and I’ll never forget that.

    —SBF”
     
    fullautotrading likes this.
  2. Makes me feel a lot better about losing all my money haha...
     
    volente_00, Pekelo and hilmy83 like this.
  3. Buy1Sell2

    Buy1Sell2

    It seems to me that it was the same old scam and it really didn't matter whether it was crypto or other assets. It looks like they used customer funds for their own purposes and then got caught when the curtain was pulled back. Crypto itself had nothing to do with it. Same Same Old Old.
     
  4. hilmy83

    hilmy83

    That's what happened to MF Global too right? Those guys using customer funds for their losing trades?
     
    Buy1Sell2 and countryBoy641 like this.
  5. When VC Chamath Palihapitiya suggested this to them, he said FTX told him to "go fuck yourself".
     
  6. Pekelo

    Pekelo

    And Jon Corzine never went to prison.

    The good, ol' Enron defense: I am stupid, not a criminal. Anyway, the moron doesn't realize it, but there is no future for FTX.
     
  7. Arnie

    Arnie

    What, exactly, was their "collateral"?
    The spreadsheet going around last week didn't show any bitcoin. Was it all in shitcoins?
     
  8. tango29

    tango29

    Holy crap the really smart guy claims he didn't realize how big a scam he was pulling and that it might fall apart. If not now it was a matter of time as they would have just kept levering up and an even smaller pull back would have caved the scam hidden behind the curtain.
     
  9. Buy1Sell2

    Buy1Sell2

    I think it was their own coins. --Cookin' books a different way, but it's always the same scheme.
     
    formikatrading likes this.
  10. ktm

    ktm

    Jay Powell made a comment today that seems continuously appropriate - and I'm reminded of it here.

    "Humans are notoriously bad at predicting, properly assessing and preparing for tail risk".
     
    #10     Nov 30, 2022
    beginner66 and Van_der_Voort_4 like this.