Financial group CEO claims he tried to warn Bankman-Fried about insolvency in July

Share This Post

Richard Handler alleged that he offered restructuring services to FTX that might have saved it, but exchange reps refused to meet with him.

Richard Handler, CEO of Jefferies Financial Group, seemingly alleged on Nov. 10 that he knew about FTX’s liquidity problems back in July. In a Twitter thread, Jeffries revealed screenshots of emails that he claimed were sent to associates of Sam Bankman-Fried, also known as SBF.

The images Handler provided do not show the names or email addresses of the other parties to the conversation, but the bodies of the messages imply that Handler was trying to warn SBF about a potential financial problem at FTX and offer Jefferies’ restructuring services as a solution.

The first email is dated July 7, 2022. In it, Handler asks the recipient if they know Bankman-Fried. Handler states that he is concerned that SBF “seems in over his head, and could quickly be in a precarious position.”

The recipient of the first email responds by saying that they spoke to SBF once and have exchanged emails with him, “including recently.” They tell Handler that they will send SBF a note.

In the following email, Handler responds:

“We should get together for a meeting or dinner. What he is going through is not going to pass as quickly as he might wish and you can quickly become the rescuee versus the rescuer if you are not careful.”

According to Handler, the other party to this conversation did reach out to SBF, but “he never responded nor took a meeting.”

Handler said that he tried once again to contact SBF on Sept. 16, less than two months before the present liquidity crisis started, but the FTX CEO once again did not respond.

On Nov. 7, FTX customers started facing slow withdrawals as the exchange suffered a liquidity crisis. The exchange’s CEO admitted on Nov. 10 that it needed an $8 billion bailout to deal with the crisis. The crisis quickly spread throughout the crypto economy, at one point causing Bitcoin (BTC) to fall below $16,000 for the first time since 2020.

The first emails from Handler are dated July 7, over four months before the beginning of the company’s public crisis. It is unclear why if Handler knew about the issues he did not alert others in the industry, instead choosing to allow the crisis to unfold.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

FTX Bankruptcy Plan Approved: $16 Billion In Assets To Be Repaid, FTT Price Soars 20%

A US bankruptcy court has officially approved crypto exchange FTX liquidation plan, paving the way for it to repay customers using $16 billion in recovered assets, according to Reuters, which reports

Bitcoin News: Fewer And Fewer People Willing To Sell BTC

Bitcoin is a deflationary asset with a fixed supply, unlike Ethereum, whose supply increases or decreases yearly depending on network use There will be only 21 million BTC in circulation, and a

AI Cryptos Spike as Broader Market Stays Flat, Sector Nears $30B Milestone

While the crypto market’s overall capitalization has only ticked up by 028% over the past day, reaching $219 trillion, the artificial intelligence (AI) crypto economy has made more noticeable

Trump pulls ahead in betting markets, Musk calls it a more accurate forecast

Former President Donald Trump has gained a slight edge over Vice President Kamala Harris in betting markets for the 2024 presidential election, with Polymarket showing him ahead 537% to 456% The

Dogecoin Analyst Expects A ‘Multi-Year Bullish Breakout’ – 200% Surge Potential

Dogecoin is trading critically, and investors are paying attention as this could shape next week’s price action After several weeks of volatile market movements marked by sharp ups and downs,

Dogecoin Millionaire Bets That This $0.03846 Crypto Token Will Surge 3,555% In Just 24 Days

Some investors have perfected the skill of early identifying tokens that can enjoy a massive price surge in every market cycle This is the case of the Dogecoin millionaire who invested in the meme