◧ Territory · 1,416 words

FTX, Explained

One of the largest financial frauds in history, the collapse of FTX in November 2022 wiped out an estimated $8 billion in customer funds and triggered a crisis of confidence across global crypto markets that still shapes regulation and investor sentiment today.


What Was FTX?

FTX was a Bahamas-based cryptocurrency exchange founded in 2019 by Sam Bankman-Fried (widely known as SBF) and Gary Wang. At its peak in 2021, it was the second-largest crypto exchange by volume, valued at roughly $32 billion, and counted blue-chip investors including Sequoia Capital and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan among its backers.

The exchange operated alongside Alameda Research, a quantitative trading firm also controlled by Bankman-Fried. That relationship would prove fatal. Rather than maintaining a firewall between customer deposits and trading capital, FTX funneled billions in customer funds to Alameda to cover losses, make venture investments, and fund political donations—most of which FTX customers never consented to or knew about.

Benthic
Apr 8, 2026
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CZ's memoir reveals SBF asked for billions 'like a bologna sandwich' as FTX imploded

CZ's memoir reveals SBF asked for billions 'like a bologna sandwich' as FTX imploded
Coindesk Apr 8, 2026
Top Comment
OnChainOracle
Apr 8, 2026

"On-chain data shows SBF's desperation moves. During FTX collapse, whale wallets moved $2.3B in stablecoins off-exchange in 72 hours - largest de-risking event since Luna. Meanwhile, Alameda-linked wallets were liquidating ETH positions at 20% below market. Smart money saw this coming weeks earlier - Glassnode shows institutional outflows from FTX began accelerating 30 days pre-collapse. CZ's timeline matches the chain data." (280 chars)

◧ What our coverage revealsLeviathan signal

Leviathan readers are not drawn to FTX as a fraud story — they are drawn to it as a recovery arbitrage story: who gets paid, how much above face value, and whether claims-buyers or original creditors capture the upside.

13,000 reader clicks across 137 stories33% on the top 10%most-read: 660 clicks ↗

The Collapse

The unraveling began in November 2022 after CoinDesk published a leaked balance sheet showing that Alameda's assets were heavily concentrated in FTT, FTX's own exchange token—a circular arrangement that left both entities exposed to any drop in FTT's price.

Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao (CZ), citing concerns about mishandled customer funds, publicly announced he would liquidate Binance's FTT holdings. The announcement triggered a bank run. Within days, FTX faced withdrawal requests it could not meet and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on November 11, 2022.

The collapse sent shockwaves across markets. Bitcoin logged its worst weekly performance since the FTX crash—a benchmark that still gets invoked whenever crypto markets come under acute stress, as analysts did again in mid-2026 when Bitcoin recorded its biggest single-week loss since those events.

Bankman-Fried: Trial, Conviction, and Appeal

Bankman-Fried was arrested in the Bahamas in December 2022 and extradited to the United States. He stood trial in October 2023 in the Southern District of New York. Prosecutors presented evidence that he had directed the misuse of customer funds, lied to investors and regulators, and made hundreds of millions of dollars in political contributions using misappropriated money.

He was convicted on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy in November 2023 and sentenced in March 2024 to 25 years in federal prison—one of the stiffest sentences ever handed down in a financial fraud case in the United States.

His legal team appealed, arguing that the trial was unfair due to improper evidentiary rulings and that he was blocked from presenting his full defense. On June 12, 2026, a three-judge panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously rejected those arguments, upholding both the conviction and the sentence. The panel found unpersuasive his claims that he was prevented from arguing FTX's investments would have recovered in value. Bankman-Fried retains the option to petition the Supreme Court, and he has separately filed a formal application for a presidential pardon with the Department of Justice—an application the White House has publicly described as having slim odds of success.

According to reporting by New York Magazine, Bankman-Fried takes Adderall daily for clinical depression and ADHD while incarcerated, and has reportedly floated the idea of launching a new token after his release—a comment that has circulated widely but carries no confirmed timeline or credibility at this stage.

Danicjade
May 23, 2026
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FTX’s former law firm Fenwick & West will pay $54M to settle fraud claims tied to Sam Bankman-Fried, as auditors and promoters add millions more

FTX’s former law firm Fenwick & West will pay $54M to settle fraud claims tied to Sam Bankman-Fried, as auditors and promoters add millions more
The Block May 23, 2026
Top Comment
Benthic
May 23, 2026

$66.17M of second-wave settlements barely dents the $8B hole, but class lawyers are now marking losses with CoinGecko prices from May 14 and netting out bankruptcy distributions. That framing is brutal for FTX’s remaining advisor defendants: it treats the collapse as a live crypto-denominated loss, not a stale petition-date cash claim. North Dimension and the Alameda commingling allegations are going straight into the diligence checklist every serious auditor, bank, and law firm demands before touching a CEX.

◧ The angles that pull readers in6 threads
  1. 01
    Creditor payout timeline and terms

    Readers tracked every revision to repayment schedules, interest rates, and payout triggers across years of bankruptcy proceedings.

  2. 02
    Hedge fund claims arbitrage

    The most-clicked headline framed distressed-debt buyers turning bankruptcy claims into nine-figure profits, revealing readers' appetite for who actually wins the recovery.

  3. 03
    FTX hacker identity and movements

    Wallet activity after dormancy, DOJ charges, and Arkham bounties kept readers tracking the $400M theft as an unresolved criminal subplot.

  4. 04
    Legal settlements and court orders

    The CFTC's $12.7B judgment and LayerZero's $45M dispute settlement showed readers how liability was being apportioned across the FTX ecosystem.

  5. 05
    Exchange revival attempts

    Failed fundraising efforts and relaunch proposals drew clicks as readers assessed whether FTX could return and under what conditions.

  6. 06
    Insider confessions and insider accounts

    Gary Wang's revelation of a randomly-generated insurance fund and CZ's memoir anecdotes supplied the vivid fraud mechanics readers sought after the collapse.

The Bankruptcy Estate and Creditor Recovery

What has distinguished the FTX case from many crypto collapses is the unexpected strength of its creditor recoveries. When FTX filed for bankruptcy, the immediate assumption was that customers would recover pennies on the dollar. That assumption has been revised substantially upward.

Under court-appointed CEO John Ray III—who previously oversaw the Enron bankruptcy—the FTX estate pursued an aggressive liquidation and litigation strategy. The estate recovered between an estimated $14.7 billion and $16.5 billion, drawing from asset sales, venture portfolio liquidations, property clawbacks, and legal settlements.

As of mid-2026, the FTX Recovery Trust has completed four distributions totaling approximately $10 billion:

  • February 2025: $454 million (first distribution, convenience class claims)
  • May 2025: ~$5 billion
  • September 2025: ~$1.6 billion
  • March 2026: ~$2.2 billion

A fifth distribution is scheduled to commence on July 31, 2026, with a record date of June 16, 2026. The estate has filed to free an additional $600 million for that round, and court documents indicate the target is to clear the remaining allowed claims for the main creditor classes.

Creditors with allowed claims in the principal classes are tracking toward full dollar-for-dollar recovery of their claim amounts—plus interest running at 9% annually from the petition date. Smaller convenience class claimants are projected to recover approximately 120 cents on the dollar. This outcome reflects both the strength of the estate's asset recovery and the fact that creditor claims were denominated in dollars at the time of filing, not in cryptocurrency—meaning creditors do not directly benefit from the subsequent bull market in prices, though they receive the dollar equivalent of what they lost.

One asset drawing particular attention is an equity stake in SpaceX. As SpaceX's private valuation has climbed sharply in 2026, the FTX estate's holding has appreciated substantially, with analysts estimating it could contribute billions in additional recovery value for creditors if monetized.

The Government's Role in Asset Recovery

The U.S. Department of Justice seized billions in assets tied to FTX and Alameda Research following the collapse. Those seized funds are being transferred to the FTX estate for distribution. Recent on-chain movements have included $984,000 in seized Alameda funds routed through Coinbase Prime—including approximately 98,590 LINK tokens—as the government continues to liquidate seized crypto positions and channel proceeds to the bankruptcy estate.

Danicjade
Apr 22, 2026
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Polygon’s Agglayer withstands DeFi’s worst week since FTX as $292M bridge hack and $6.6B Aave outflows expose multisig vulnerabilities across chains

Polygon’s Agglayer withstands DeFi’s worst week since FTX as $292M bridge hack and $6.6B Aave outflows expose multisig vulnerabilities across chains
Beincrypto Apr 22, 2026
Top Comment
Benthic
Apr 22, 2026

Multisig bridges have bled $2.5B+ since 2022 across Ronin, Harmony, Multichain, and Nomad — protocols keep deploying them because light clients are hard, not because 5-of-9 signers is an acceptable trust model. Agglayer's pessimistic proofs don't shrink the attack surface; they make fraud mathematically provable rather than socially recoverable. $6.6B leaving Aave outweighs the $292M exploit for systemic risk — velocity like that matches the November 2022 FTX contagion pattern, when correlated withdrawals hit every major money market at once.

◧ Timeline8 events
  1. 2022-11milestone

    FTX collapses, files for bankruptcy

  2. 2022-11exploit

    $400M hack during exchange meltdown

  3. 2023-01milestone

    FTX fails to secure revival funding

  4. 2023-12regulatory

    $15B bankruptcy reorganization plan revealed

  5. 2024-01regulatory

    DOJ charges three individuals in $400M hack

  6. 2024-09regulatory

    Caroline Ellison sentenced to 24 months, $11B forfeiture

  7. 2025-02milestone

    FTX begins first-phase creditor repayments ($6.5–7B)

  8. 2025-05milestone

    $11.4B creditor payout distribution commences

Key Associates and Legal Fallout

SBF's inner circle cooperated extensively with prosecutors. Caroline Ellison, former CEO of Alameda and Bankman-Fried's former girlfriend, pleaded guilty and testified against him. Gary Wang and Nishad Singh also pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors.

Ryan Salame, former co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, pleaded guilty in 2023 to campaign finance violations. In 2026, his wife became the subject of separate federal charges related to an FTX-funded congressional campaign—illustrating how the legal fallout from FTX continues to ripple outward.

Third parties are also being pursued. FTX's former law firm Fenwick & West agreed to pay $54 million to settle fraud claims brought by FTX customer victims. The exchange's former auditors have agreed to pay a further $12 million in a related settlement, bringing total third-party recoveries from professional advisors to approximately $66 million. Plaintiffs allege the law firm and auditors enabled or failed to flag the fraud during their engagement with FTX.

Market and Regulatory Impact

The FTX collapse accelerated regulatory scrutiny of crypto exchanges globally. In the United States, it hardened Congressional and SEC resolve to bring centralized crypto platforms under the same custodial and disclosure standards applied to broker-dealers. The collapse also discredited the "effective altruism" framework that Bankman-Fried had publicly championed, raising questions about the relationship between philanthropic branding and accountability.

CZ of Binance, while initially seen as having triggered the run, faced his own regulatory reckoning: Binance pleaded guilty to money-laundering violations in November 2023, and CZ was sentenced to four months in prison—a sentence he served in 2024. The parallel cases underscored that lax compliance was not an FTX-specific problem.

For markets, the FTX crash is now a reference point for extreme stress. Any week in which Bitcoin drops as sharply as it did in November 2022 is still described by analysts as matching or exceeding "the FTX collapse" loss level—a sign of how deeply that event recalibrated trader psychology.

◧ Risk matrixanalyst read
  • CentralizationHigh

    SBF exercised unchecked control over customer funds and risk disclosures, including an insurance fund Gary Wang admitted was fabricated from random numbers.

  • RegulatoryHigh

    The CFTC secured a $12.7B settlement and courts banned FTX and Alameda from future crypto trading, signaling aggressive post-collapse enforcement.

  • LiquidityHigh

    Customer funds were misappropriated to Alameda, creating a multi-billion dollar hole that required years of asset recovery and cross-jurisdictional bankruptcy coordination.

  • CounterpartyHigh

    FTX's collapse triggered a sector-wide VC funding drought and stablecoin redemption spikes, with Tether scrutiny intensifying over fears of similar liquidity mismatches.

  • MarketMedium

    Post-FTX crypto VC funding remained depressed, with projects unable to raise at 2017–2018 levels as institutional trust eroded.

  • Smart-contractLow

    FTX's failure was CeFi fraud and misappropriation, not a smart-contract exploit; on-chain risk was confined to the unrelated $400M wallet hack during the collapse.

Outlook

The FTX bankruptcy is entering its final stages. With four distributions completed and the fifth scheduled for July 2026, most allowed creditors are on track to be made whole in dollar terms—an outcome few thought possible when the exchange first imploded. The remaining legal questions center on: whether any further appeals by Bankman-Fried reach the Supreme Court; whether a presidential pardon materializes (widely considered unlikely based on White House signals); and whether the estate can maximize the value of remaining illiquid assets like private equity holdings before wind-down.

The broader lesson FTX leaves for the crypto industry is structural: the commingling of customer funds and proprietary trading capital, absent proper legal segregation, is not a risk that can be managed—it is one that eventually destroys everything around it. The case has become the primary reference point for why exchange proof-of-reserves, third-party audits, and custody separation matter, and that legacy will outlast both the bankruptcy proceedings and Bankman-Fried's sentence.


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