On October 30, Sam Bankman-Fried delivered a gripping testimony at his fraud trial in New York City, steadfastly asserting FTX’s stability just before its abrupt bankruptcy in November 2022.
On his second day on the stand, the 31-year-old former billionaire sought to dismantle prosecutors’ allegations that he duped the public to stem a rush of customer withdrawals.
Bankman-Fried painted a vivid picture of the exchange’s frantic final days, maintaining his belief in FTX’s health when he tweeted, “FTX is fine,” on November 7, 2022.
“My view at the time was the exchange was okay,” he affirmed. However, he admitted that his hedge fund, Alameda Research, suffered a 50% loss as cryptocurrency values plunged, impacting his perception of FTX’s solvency.
Facing two counts of fraud and five counts of conspiracy, Bankman-Fried has entered a not-guilty plea. Prosecutors accuse him of looting billions from FTX customer funds to support Alameda, fuel speculative ventures, and fill political campaign coffers. A conviction could result in decades of imprisonment.
In his defense, Bankman-Fried emphasized that margin trading was a common practice among FTX customers, including Alameda. He was surprised at discovering Alameda’s $8 billion debt from customer deposits, but he remained unalarmed. “If it were far larger, I would have been calling a crisis,” he noted.
He also partially blamed Alameda’s CEO, Caroline Ellison, his former partner, for failing to hedge against falling cryptocurrency prices. Yet, he acknowledged that no hedging strategy would have averted the narrow crash in specific cryptocurrencies that led to Alameda’s and, subsequently, FTX’s downfall.
Bankman-Fried’s decision to take the stand is a high-stakes gamble, exposing him to a grueling cross-examination. However, it seems to be a calculated effort to counter damaging testimonies from former associates and executives. As the trial unfolds, the world watches closely, waiting to see if Bankman-Fried’s testimony can sway the jury and salvage his reputation.
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