In a bankruptcy court filing, FTX's restructuring team warned that both FTX.com and FTX US were very short of what it owes customers, and suggest big clawback battles may be coming.
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FTX's bankruptcy management has revealed details of the $5.5 billion in liquid assets it has found, and suggested that some big clawbacks may be coming.
While management is "making important progress in our efforts to maximize recoveries" it is still very preliminary and subject to change, warned John Ray III, the chief executive officer and chief restructuring officer of the FTX Debtors. He added:
"It has taken a Herculean investigative effort from our team to uncover this preliminary information."
Crunching the Numbers
The revelation came as part of a presentation filed with the federal bankruptcy court in Delaware outlining the $5.5 billion in liquid assets found by the new management team, which calls itself FTX Debtors in court documents.
Only $1.6 billion in digital assets are connected to FTX.com, and just $181 million at FTX US — half of which was stolen in the post-bankruptcy hack.
Billions in Illiquid Investments
Beyond that $5.5 billion in liquid assets that the FTX Debtors have uncovered, "over 300 prepetition investments with book value of approximately $4.6 billion."
But these are venture capital investments. As a result, it warned in big red letters, the "recoverable value [is] likely to be materially lower than acquisition value."
Nor does it include 36 properties in The Bahamas, purchased for a combined $253 million.
Clawbacks Coming
Beyond that, the presentation revealed that FTX's new management is "reviewing all historical transactions conducted by pre-petition management."
As in, reviewing to see if they will be able to claw it back.
These date to 2020, and include hundreds of mergers and acquisition deals, as well as other transactions. But the petition calls out six in particular.
First of all, there is the $2 billion in loans to company insiders. Then there is the 56 million shares of Robinhood, which is valued at $456 million and has also been claimed by bankrupt crypto lender BlockFi, which says they were pledged as collateral for a loan that was not repaid. In one of his more outrageous moves, Bankman-Fried has also laid claim to them.
Next comes $2.1 billion FTX paid Binance to repurchase in Series A shares acquired when Binance invested in FTX. CoinMarketCap is owned by Binance.
Then there are two transactions made within the 90-day "preference period" in which a debtor can claw back payments made to third parties. One is a $400 million investment in Modulo Capital. The other is the $446 million paid to crypto lender Voyager Digital — which is also in bankruptcy.
Beyond that there's the joker in the pack: $93 million in U.S. political donations made between March 2022 and November 2022. Those were made to some 196 Representatives and Senators, according to CoinDesk.