Ex-CTO calls FTX’s ‘Backstop Fund’ claim false, a significant deception in crypto exchange history. According to reports, FTX’s co-founder, Gary Wang, testified that concealed Python code distorted their insurance fund valuation. This fund is designed to safeguard users from significant liquidation events and potential losses.
Furthermore, On October 6th, Gary Wang, ex-CTO of FTX, exposed the 2021 $100M insurance fund as a fabricated deception. Contrary to claims made by FTX, this fund never held any of its own FTX tokens (FTT).
The 5.25 million FTT we put in our insurance fund in 2019 now makes the fund worth over 100 million USDhttps://t.co/tMYgJOAdqI pic.twitter.com/vQDkmkufD2
— FTX (@FTX_Official) February 14, 2021
The public was presented with a calculated figure instead. This figure resulted from multiplying the daily trading volume of the FTX Token by a closely related random number hovering around 7,500.
When the prosecution surfaced the above tweet — among other public statements of its value — and asked Wang whether this amount was accurate, he replied with a single word: “No.”
Firstly, the insurance fund does not include any FTT. It solely consists of a USD number. Furthermore, the number provided here does not correspond with the data found in the database.
In the October 6 trial, an exhibit presents the alleged code utilized to calculate the magnitude of the “Backstop Fund,” also known as the public insurance fund.
From yesterday's exhibits in US v. Sam Bankman-Fried:
The prosecution shows that the "insurance fund" that FTX bragged about was fake, and just calculated by multiplying daily trading volume by a random number around 7500 pic.twitter.com/EDiVPOHODP
— Molly White (@molly0xFFF) October 7, 2023
FTX’s Flawed Insurance Fund & Crypto Scandal
FTX created the insurance fund to safeguard users against significant market fluctuations. The website and social media platforms often highlight its value. Nevertheless, Wang’s testimony reveals that the fund was frequently fell short in covering these losses adequately.
In 2021, a trader identified and exploited a bug in FTX’s margin system. This allowed them to take a disproportionately large position in MobileCoin. As a result, FTX suffered massive losses of hundreds of millions of dollars, based on Wang.
Bankman-Fried discovered the depleted insurance fund, and Wang indicated he received instructions to shift the burden onto Alameda. This maneuver allegedly aimed to conceal the loss because Alameda’s financial records were more discreet than FTX’s.
Wang exposed alleged FTX insurance fund fraudulence. He claimed Bankman-Fried influenced “allow_negative” balance feature incorporation. This enabled Alameda Research to engage in trading with virtually limitless liquidity on the cryptocurrency exchange.
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On October 5th, Wang pleaded guilty to all charges against him. He acknowledged involvement in wire, commodities, and securities fraud. This was alongside Bankman-Fried, Caroline Ellison, and Nishad Singh.