1. Home
  2. ftx creditors

ftx creditors

FTX to begin distributing $1.2B to creditors after Trump inauguration

A significant portion of FTX repayments will likely be reinvested into cryptocurrencies, thanks to the promising growth prospect of the crypto market for 2025, industry insiders told Cointelegraph.

Update 11:00 am UTC: This article has been updated to include quotes from Philipp Zentner.

FTX is preparing to distribute more than $1.2 billion in repayments to the bankrupt former cryptocurrency exchange’s users.

FTX, once the world’s second-largest centralized cryptocurrency exchange (CEX), is set to begin repaying users who have been unable to access their funds for over two years.

Read more

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

US trustee challenges FTX reorganization plan, citing legal concerns

The objections raised by the US trustee and the creditor group are likely to play a significant role in the court’s deliberations.

The ongoing FTX reorganization proceedings have taken a new turn as the United States trustee overseeing the case has raised significant objections to the crypto exchange’s amended reorganization plan. 

The trustee, Andrew Vara, along with a group of creditors, has filed complaints highlighting multiple flaws in the proposed plan, which the FTX estate has touted as having widespread creditor support.

This follows a claim by the bankrupt crypto trading platform FTX that its amended reorganization plan gained overwhelming preliminary support from creditors entitled to vote. 

Read more

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

FTX plans full pay back of all creditors ‘plus billions in compensation’

Under the yet-to-be-approved plan, 98% of FTX creditors will get overpaid on their claims and the bankrupt exchange has more money than it needs to repay customers.

FTX plans to fully repay all its creditor’s claims plus “billions in compensation for the time value of their investments” with 98% slated to get up to 118% back — only for those claiming $50,000 or under.

In a May 7 statement, the bankrupt crypto exchange said the plan was “subject to being finalized and approved” by a Delaware Bankruptcy Court.

Only creditors holding claims in an allowed amount below $50,000 will be eligible for the 118% recovery, which FTX anticipated was “98% of the creditors of FTX by number.”

Read more

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

Crypto exchange FTX gets nod to sell $873M of assets to repay creditors

Nearly $700 million of the $873 million trust assets allowed to be sold by FTX comes from Grayscale’s flagship product, the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, or GBTC.

Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX has been given the green light to sell around $873 million of trust assets, with proceeds used to repay creditors impacted by the exchange’s collapse in 2022, according to a Nov. 29 filing in a Delaware bankruptcy court.

The $873 million in assets will be sourced from FTX’s stakes in various trusts issued by crypto asset manager Grayscale Investments, valued at $807 million, and custody service provider Bitwise — valued at $66 million.

While the court document references a total of $744 million in assets — this is due to the valuation figure being as of Oct. 25, 2023. The assets have increased in value since. 

Order authorizing FTX Trading to sell trust assets. Source: Kroll

The approval comes nearly four weeks after FTX debtors filed a motion to Judge John Dorsey on Nov. 3 requesting the sale of the six cryptocurrency trusts — including the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE), and Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund (BITW).

FTX currently owns over 22 million units of GBTC, Grayscale’s flagship Bitcoin product, now worth $691 million, while its 6.3 million shares of ETHE are now worth around $106 million.

Grayscale’s Ethereum Classic Trust (ETCG), Litecoin Trust (LTCN) and Digital Large Cap Trust (GDLC) are the three other trusts that FTX can now sell to recoup funds for impacted FTX customers.

FTX's shares in Grayscale and Bitwise were worth $744 million as of Oct. 25, but the valued has increased since. Source: Kroll

FTX’s administrators, headed by John. J Ray III, has been working to recover assets since Sam Bankman-Fried’s former empire collapsed in November 2022.

So far, around $7 billion in assets has been recovered, with nearly half of that coming in the form of cryptocurrencies ($3.4 billion).

In June, FTX’s debtors estimated the total amount of customer assets misappropriated was $8.7 billion.

Related: FTX Foundation staffer fights for $275K bonus promised by SBF

Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried was convicted on seven fraud-related charges on Nov. 2 and is set to be sentenced on March 28.

He remains in Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center for the time being, where he recently paid four mackerels in exchange for a haircut.

Magazine: Deposit risk: What do crypto exchanges really do with your money?

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

Google to invest another $2B in AI firm Anthropic: Report

Google has already invested $500 million as part of the deal, while the outstanding $1.5 billion will be paid over time, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Google has doubled down on its artificial intelligence bets by investing another $2 billion into AI startup Anthropic, according to a new report.

Google has already invested $500 million upfront to Anthropic — a rival to ChatGPT creators OpenAI — and will pay off the remaining $1.5 billion over time, according to an Oct. 27 report by the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), which cited people familiar.

The mega-deal adds to Google’s $550 million investment into Anthropic earlier in the year.

Google Cloud also striked a multi-year deal with Anthropic a few months ago worth over $3 billion, WSJ revealed, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The news follows Amazon’s massive $4 billion investment into Anthropic late last month.

Anthropic is using much of these investments to train its AI systems, such as AI assistant Claude, in hopes that the firm can achieve the next big breakthrough in the AI industry.

On the other side of the fence is OpenAI, who have received more than $13 billion in funding from Microsoft alone since 2019 and continue to build more advanced versions of its own AI chat bot, ChatGPT. The popular chat bot amassed over 100 million users within the first two months of launching in November, which caught the attention of many venture capital firms around the world looking to invest in the space.

The co-founders of Anthropic, siblings Dario and Daniela Amodei, previously worked at OpenAI but left in 2021 following disputes with OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman over safety implications associated with building AI systems.

Related: Universal Music Group sues Anthropic AI over copyright infringement

Prior to Google and Amazon, Anthropic was largely bankrolled by former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, who invested about $530 million in Anthropic's in April 2022 — about seven months before FTX collapsed.

Anthropic’s surge in valuation has been viewed as a positive sign for FTX creditors in hopes that they will be compensated fully from FTX’s bankruptcy case.

Magazine: AI Eye: Real uses for AI in crypto, Google’s GPT-4 rival, AI edge for bad employees

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

FTX customers could get $9B shortfall claim payout by mid-2024

A proposed settlement could see creditors receive a shortfall claim of $8.9 billion for FTX.com and $166 million for FTX US.

Customers of bankrupt crypto exchange FTX and FTX US could see over 90% of assets returned to them by the end of the second quarter of 2024 after a proposed settlement was reached between FTX creditors and debtors.

On Oct. 17, FTX debtors said they reached a “major milestone” in their Chapter 11 case after “extensive discussions” with the unsecured creditors' committee, a committee of non-US customers, and class action plaintiffs regarding customer property disputes.

FTX ebtors filed a notice of the proposed settlement to a Delaware-based United States Bankruptcy Court on Oct. 16 (for information purposes). However, they need to submit an official filing by Dec. 16 seeking the court’s approval.

Part of the amended plan consists of the “Shortfall Claim,” in which FTX debtors estimates that customers of FTX.com and FTX US would collectively receive 90% of assets available for distribution.

The Shortfall Claim is estimated to be approximately $8.9 billion for FTX.com and $166 million for FTX US. If approved by the Bankruptcy Court, FTX expects these funds to be disbursed by the end of the second quarter of 2024.

John. J. Ray III, CEO and chief restructuring officer of the FTX, was pleased with the terms of the settlement:

"Together, starting in the most challenging financial disaster I have seen, the debtors and their creditors have created enormous value from a situation that easily could have been a near-total loss for customers.”

The amended plan involves FTX dividing the assets into three pools — assets segregated for the benefit of FTX.com customers, U.S. customers and a general pool of other assets. However, only the first two groups are included in the Shortfall Claim.

FTX debtors however anticipate that customers of both exchanges will not be paid in full and that FTX.com would likely see a greater percentage of losses.

FTX customer clawbacks

Meanwhile, observers noted a part of the proposed plan sees to it that customers that withdrew over $250,000 from the exchange within nine days of bankruptcy would have their claim reduced by 15% of the amount.

However, claims under $250,000 wouldn't be subject to a reduction, FTX debtors explained:

"Eligible customers that have a preference settlement amount of less than $250,000 during the nine-day period would be able to accept the settlement without any reduction of claim or payment."

Related: Caroline Ellison wanted to step down but feared a bank run on FTX

However, as part of the amended plan, FTX may exclude from the settlement any insiders, affiliates and customers who may have had knowledge of the commingling and misuse of customer deposits and corporate funds, it said.

Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is two weeks into his fraud trial on matters relating to his involvement in FTX’s collapse to bankruptcy last November.

Magazine: Deposit risk: What do crypto exchanges really do with your money?

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token

FTX creditors unimpressed with exchange’s bankruptcy exit plan

FTX’s official creditor committee said the current plan would add costs and delays to what’s already on track to be a historically expensive bankruptcy.

A body representing FTX customers said it is “extremely disappointed” by the exchange’s draft bankruptcy exit plan and claims it was ignored by FTX’s restructuring team.

In a July 31 court filing, FTX’s Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (UCC) said despite its repeated requests and previous promises from the team, it “did not have a single call or meeting” with FTX to discuss its draft Chapter 11 plan.

The plan outlines and categorizes customer claims into classes and creates a path forward for FTX to re-launch as an offshore exchange. The UCC warned it would put forward its own plan for FTX customers to vote on if it continued to be ignored.

Excerpt of the UCC's filing claiming FTX's restructuring team did not properly consult it. Source: Kroll

The UCC took issue with what it considered to be a late filing of the plan that created "the appearance of progress.” It explained the plan was one-sided and largely ignored suggestions the UCC raised during discussions.

“Put simply, the Debtors chose to publicly file their ideas for a plan.”

Another concern was the plan does not appoint someone with relevant crypto experience to run a potentially-rebooted FTX.

The plan should also create a regulatory-compliant recovery token and allocate value to customers most affected by FTX’s collapse in order to gain support from the “millions of customers and creditors whose votes are necessary to confirm a plan,” it said.

Additionally, the UCC claimed the current plan will cause more costs and delays. Ultimately, it asserted that it would have no choice but to put forward its own plan “for which customers and creditors will actually vote in favor.”

Related: Judge allows Terraform Labs to subpoena FTX

It was, however, appreciative that the restructuring team signaled a willingness to amend the plan to include the UCC’s recommendations, saying that negotiations will start “very soon.”

“This will take willingness on the part of the Debtors to listen and engage and not attempt to substitute their judgment for that of the parties who truly know and understand the cryptocurrency markets,” it added.

Magazine: Whatever happened to EOS? Community shoots for unlikely comeback

Crypto firm pleads guilty to wash trading FBI-made token