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FTX reboot on the way: CEO holds talks with ‘interested parties’ — Report

FTX is inching closer to a potential reboot, with CEO John Ray reportedly opening up the floor to bidders looking to finance the new venture.

Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX is one step closer to relaunching as an entirely new exchange.

According to a June 28 report from the Wall Street Journal, FTX restructuring chief John Ray said the company had “begun the process of soliciting interested parties to the reboot of the FTX.com exchange.”

Sources familiar with the matter said the firm has been holding talks with investors around financing the potential reboot. Blockchain lending company Figure is among the parties who have displayed interest in the process.

Cointelegraph reached out to Figure but did not receive an immediate response.

Potential bidders reportedly have until the end of the week to lodge Letters of Intent — a document that outlines the terms and conditions of their participation.

Notably, the sources said that current FTX creditors would potentially be offered a stake in the reorganized crypto exchange, among other forms of compensation.

It’s expected that FTX will not be re-named “FTX 2.0” or any other derivative of its original name and will instead choose to rebrand as an entity with a different namesake.

Overall, it appears as though Ray and the rest of the team at FTX see a reboot as the best possible way of ensuring that creditors achieve the best outcome in terms of being repaid.

FTX’s legal team said in April they expect the launch of the new exchange to be completed sometime in the second quarter of 2024.

Related: Mainstream media challenge decision to protect FTX customers: Report

According to a June 26 report on the recovery process, FTX still has a near $2 billion hole in its books. The efforts to reclaim these missing funds have been further complicated by the alleged misuse of customer assets by key leadership at FTX.

Daniel Friedberg, a former regulatory officer at FTX who is understood to have appeared as an unnamed party in many of the legal proceedings, was sued by FTX on June 27 for allegedly paying “hush money” to silence potential whistleblowers as well as approving a series of fraudulent transfers and loans.

The report on the missing funds also detailed a series of alleged investments in venture capital firms, a $243 million Bahamian real estate portfolio as well as numerous donations to non-profit organizations.

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FTX argues that releasing ‘valuable’ customer list will harm its sale value

Releasing the nine million-strong list of customers would “impair” the ability to maximize value for FTX creditors, a banker for the exchange said.

The list of around nine million FTX customers is “extraordinarily valuable” and could harm the crypto exchange’s sale value if released, a member of the FTX restructuring team has argued.

In a court hearing released June 8, Kevin Cofsky, a partner at the investment bank Parella Weinberg on retainer to FTX, said that if competitors were to gain knowledge of FTX’s customers it “would be detrimental” to the exchange’s restructuring efforts.

Cofsky is part of the team aiming to squeeze the maximum amount of value from FTX which could involve a potential sale of the embattled exchange, he said:

“We believe that the existing customer base is extraordinarily valuable and our understanding is based on our research and having looked at the costs incurred by other crypto companies specifically to solicit customers.”

The list of customers is currently under seal, but an objection to the decision was filed by mainstream media outlets, including Bloomberg, the Financial Times, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal's parent firm, Dow Jones & Company.

The media organizations argued the press and public have “a presumptive right of access to bankruptcy filings.”

Related: SEC’s crypto actions surged 183% in 6 months after FTX collapse

According to Cofsky, FTX has begun a “significant” process of soliciting interest from buyers, investors or even a relaunch of the exchange, and the list of customers are “extremely valuable and valued” by those interested in the business.

“I think that releasing that information would impair the debtor's ability to maximize the value that it currently possesses,” he added.

Cofsky believes that even if the exchange isn’t sold or finds investors, a relaunch of the exchange could see creditors collect a portion of the trading fees on what he dubbed a “first-class” and “regulatorily compliant” FTX.

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