Tl;dr:
- The purpose of the document is to add clarity. It was written quickly and is being updated
- Binance, a competitor sold a large stake of FTT, FTX’s native token and implied that FTX was at risk by mentioning a recent crash (LUNA). This looks bad, but given what follows, the accusation was probably legitimate
- This started a run on the bank (FTX.com) where depositors attempted to get their money out.
- SBF tweeted that FTX.com (not FTX US or Alameda) was beginning the process of being sold to Binance in order to safeguard depositor assets. Binance have since backed out of this and there are credible claims that funds customers deposited for safekeeping were being invested without their consent
- FTX.com comprises ~39% of SBF's assets and will likely be worthless (80%), probably FTX US (60%) will be too and probably Alameda also (85%).
- SBF is attempting to raise funds to cover deposits. He will almost certainly fail. ( ~90%)
- It is therefore very likely to lead to the loss of deposits which will hurt the lives of 10,000s of people eg here
- Regardless, this likely means there will be a lot fewer assets for effective causes
- There are some prediction markets below for things that are less clear
- We should wait and see what happens
- Please flag any issues and we'll try and correct them
- Use your time judiciously but also give yourself space. This probably isn't worth most people following closely. But equally, this is a significant change to resources and expectations are going to shift a lot. Pressing problems aside, it's okay to grieve.
Longer version
There are three key entities here (prices according to Bloomberg, so probably wrong):
- FTX (The worldwide business) that composes about 39%
- FTX.US (FTX’s US arm) a crypto exchange that composes about 13% of SBF’s wealth
- Alameda, a hedge fund which composes 46%
Alameda was SBF’s original hedge fund and made markets for FTX. The behaviour of the two was correlated, and Alameda held large positions in FTT, FTX’s token. It seems likely there were deep irregularities in FTX.com's finances also. Coindesk reported Alameda were in trouble, and some internal documents were leaked. Alameda CEO, Caroline Ellison rebutted.
Binance left/was pushed out of an early funding round of FTX and were paid in FTT, FTX’s native token. It seems like there was bad blood. This week Binance said they were selling their FTT and referenced LUNA a coin that recently crashed. It is common for projects in crypto to fail, so when there is a sense they will, people withdraw their money rapidly. This started a run on FTX. As above, given what follows their accusation was not without merit.
SBF announced that FTX.com, the non-US business, had been agreed in principle to be sold. SBF talks about that here. Binance have now backed out of the deal citing "news reports regarding mishandled customer funds". SBF is currently trying to raise money to cover these deposits. If he doesn't many depositors will likely lose their money, which will ruin 1000s of lives. This will also likely lead to fewer resources for effective causes which may ruin far more lives, now and in the future. Both of these outcomes are terrible.
This is hard to hear. It is 95% at this point that there was serious unethical behaviour. I can't comment on crime because I don't understand the law, but my (Nathan's) sense is that these will turn out to be things we think ought to be crimes. This is likely to be really bad for depositors. Many of these are covered in more detail in prediction markets below which will stay accurate (whereas this text will be updated more slowly).
Twitter threads
The thread announcing serious issues.

The most recent thread from Binance.

Claims of immoral activity (transferring users funds to risky assets without their consent) - the Reuters report is here.

SBF's latest thread (ht Greg Colbourn)

Relevant forecasts
Here is a section of relevant forecasts to try and give people a picture of what might happen.
The other key question is what happens to the FTX Foundation. How much will it spend next year? 66%
Will the FTX Future Fund spend more than $300mn in 2023? 15%
Will the FTX Future Fund spend more than $600mn in 2023? If this is high, then individuals may have more job security.
What will Forbes estimate SBF's wealth at?
Thoughts on financial details (suggest in comments)
- OpenPhil
- $3 - 6 Bn 80% CI
- Dustin/Cari
- $6 - 10 Bn 80% CI
- FTX Foundation & Future Fund
- Founders Pledge
Final comments
- This is gonna get worse before it gets better
- In general, it's probably good to wait before making judgements, but also to seek to have clarity where it affects decisions.
It's hard to say, 4B is the ask but 8B was mentioned as a figure too. They could mean the ability to deploy some latent funds in some complex way. Honestly, this doesn't seem that meaningful.
The crux here is what "collateralization" or "gambling".
Boiled down, I believe that you can't absolutely prevent all failures, not even real brokerages can.
Instead, you have a sliding scale of risk that has probabilities of failure, and none of these are truly zero risk unless you basically not have a business at all. Given this, it's not clear to me that a failure indicates "gambling".
A major consideration is that the norms of crypto are insane—like actually hard to communicate to normal people and sound normal. FTX's main business is basically clients trading leveraged sh*t coins, which is absolutely crazy for 99.9% of people. Collateralizing with FTT was the issue, but it's unclear if the current exchanges would survive a similar run on their tokens—should they shut down now? Are their CEOs guilty now?
People literally believed Tether might unpeg several in the last year, which is crazy, like thinking the USD might crash. It's still a mystery how the main fiat instrument in crypto has value.
As I type this, I think people think USDD is literally unpegging?
So hanging this on one person's neck is pretty unfair if he just pushed the "risk slider" a bit farther than other people, in this surreal space, where "NFTs" were a primary product. There's other issues that undermined him that aren't his fault, but explaining this to EAs would just make everyone sad.
If that sounds like mumbo jumbo and insanity with extra steps, well it might be, but is actually how sort of how capitalism and finance actually work. This literally happened with Bear Sterns and caused the 2008 crash.
To "resolve" the above, and what is "true", I think what is used here is "social constructionism", like Foucault, as opposed to the "rationalist" "positivist" view.
Relevant to our bet, as I mentioned, I'm not sure how this is resolved or communicated by me or you winning money in a bet. Also, I'm pretty sure that the social/political/legal things are going to drive this far more than the actual "crime" or "not crime". I'm sort of worried but I'll go through with it.