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Nansen Blockchain Analysis: FTX Catastrophe Likely Triggered by Terra Collapse

Validated Project

By Yong Li KhooSandra LeowLouisa ChoeNiklas PolkDouglas Chia

Key Takeaways

  • FTX and Alameda have had close (on-chain) ties since the very beginning.
  • FTX created FTX Token (FTT), a token for their platform, involving Alameda since day one. The two of them shared the majority of the total FTT supply which did not really enter into circulation.
  • The initial success of Alameda, FTX, and the meteoric rise of FTT most likely led to a rise in the value of Alameda’s balance sheet. This high balance sheet value of the FTT positions was likely used as collateral by Alameda to borrow against. If the borrowed funds were used to make illiquid investments, FTT would become a central weakness for Alameda.
  • With the collapse of Terra/UST in May, a liquidity crunch ensued as many creditors started to call back loans following the 3AC and Celsius crashes. Alameda would have needed liquidity from a source that would still be willing to give out a loan against their existing collateral
  • Alameda deposited around ~$3b worth of FTT on FTX of which most remained there until the end
  • Evidence of the actual loan from FTX to Alameda is not directly visible on-chain, possibly due to the inherent nature of CEXs which may have obfuscated clear on-chain traces
  • Based on the data, the total $4b FTT outflows from Alameda to FTX in June and July could possibly have been the provision of parts of the collateral that was used to secure the loans (worth at least $4b) in May / June that was revealed by several people close to Bankman-Fried in a Reuters interview. 
  • While it was known that Alameda and FTX were both founded by SBF & Co., the Coindesk report had exposed concerns regarding Alameda’s balance sheet. The majority of net equity in Alameda’s business had consisted of FTX’s own centrally controlled token, FTT
  • The back-and-forth battle between the CEOs of Binance and FTX caused a ripple effect on market participants, Binance owned a large FTT position.

Introduction

It started with CoinDesk reporting that “There are more FTX tokens among its $8 billion of liabilities: $292 million of “locked FTT.” (The liabilities are dominated by $7.4 billion of loans.).” Next, Alameda Research’s CEO, Caroline Ellison, offered to buy up Binance’s FTX Tokens (FTT) at $22 per token. What followed was undoubtedly one of crypto’s craziest events – the collapse of FTX and Alameda. 

So how did this happen? Did the de-pegging of TerraUSD, Luna’s failure, and the bankruptcy of 3AC all lead to FTX and Alameda’s fall from grace? 

Or was it mismanagement of risk and misuse of customers’ funds all along? 

Nansen has compiled an in-depth analysis using on-chain data to piece together the fallen dominos of FTX and Alameda. Where possible, we aspire to give an objective account backed by on-chain evidence. Our study does not cover potential off-chain events. This research leverages Nansen’s labeling heuristics to track known wallets of the involved entities and verify their actions on-chain, to make sense of what actually happened during the FTX-Alameda debacle. 

Methodology

To put it simply, our on-chain analysis uses information from a blockchain ledger to determine the series of events and fund balances related to the fall of FTX and Alameda. Research Analysts examine the transaction data and crypto wallet activities of the involved entities, two primary data sources useful when trying to piece together what had happened.

Using a proven methodology that we had previously used for other on-chain analyses (TerraUSD de-pegstETH de-peg), we framed our study using a grounded theory approach where a list of wallet balances and transaction volumes processed through these wallets are at the core of this study. Through a review of grey literature such as social media forum threads, media coverage, and podcasts, we narrowed the scope of our study to focus on transactional data in the following timeframes:

  • Until May 2019: Early on-chain Alameda involvement in FTX
  • August 2019 - January 2020: FTT as FTX-Alameda’s love child
  • May 2022 - July 2022: Studying Alameda’s reaction to the UST collapse and its fallout, as well as a potential loan given by FTX with FTT as collateral
  • September 2022 - Now: Recent events and fall of FTX and Alameda

We also paid close attention to a set of wallet addresses which we have identified as either FTX’s or Alameda’s, you can see the list of addresses and labels in the Appendix Section. 

The report is formatted in three distinct sections. Part 1 acts as a prologue, providing the context to navigate the relationship between FTX, Alameda, and their interactions with the FTX Token (FTT). Part 2 details the interaction and entanglement between FTX and Alameda through some of the significant events in the recent market cycle. Lastly, Part 3 zooms in on the on-chain data, mainly between 2 November and 9 November. We attempt to triangulate popular (online) narratives with the variable on-chain footprints to make sense of FTX’s and Alameda’s positions and holdings during this period. 

Original Sin?

It is no secret that Alameda and FTX were both founded by SBF, and had ongoing partnerships. However, it is rumored that FTX was only really started to raise funds for Alameda and the two colluded from the very beginning.

We leveraged on-chain evidence to draw possible interpretations.

May 2019: Early on-chain Alameda involvement in FTX

It is no secret that Alameda was one of, if not the earliest, liquidity providers on FTX. However, this poses a question of how involved the two entities were. ‍

What was observed:

‍Alameda’s wallet interacted with FTX before it had even launched in May 2019; apart from other CEX addresses, it was the only clearly identifiable counterparty. 

What it could mean:Although relatively low in volume (~$160k), this strongly suggests that either Alameda was heavily involved in FTX’s inception or there was no clear separation between Alameda and FTX then - and perhaps, even both.

July 2019 - Jan 2021: Launch of FTT and early distribution

FTT is a utility token for the FTX platform, it does not entitle users to a part of the platform revenue or represent a share in FTX. It is not backed nor does it give control over governance decisions or FTX’s treasury.

Given the ties between Alameda and FTX, it comes as no surprise that Alameda was in FTT’s seed round, but were they more than just regular investors?

The FTT listing

What we observed:‍

Two days before the official listing on FTX on 29 July 2019, Alameda received 5m FTT in three transactions directly from the FTX Deployer (who minted the FTT) to their FTX account. Additionally, 20m FTT were deposited by the FTX Deployer to an FTX-related FTX deposit wallet on the day of the listing. Those were the entirety of FTT in circulation at the time.

Roughly a week after the listing, 5m FTT was sent back to the FTX Deployer on 5 August 2019.

  Source: Nansen, Wallet: FTX Deployer  

What it could mean:

The 5m FTT returned to the FTX Deployer are likely to be the same ones deposited into the Alameda FTX account. 

  • The amounts matched perfectly
  • Highly unlikely that any other party except FTX itself had this many tokens at the time (25% of the circulating supply)
  • As a seed investor, Alameda technically should not have fully transferable tokens at the time in the first place

An optimistic interpretation would be that Alameda was involved in the market-making of FTT tokens. This theory, however, does not explain why the funds were sent back only after a few days.

A pessimistic interpretation would be that Alameda profited off the ICO participants by selling the tokens before other investors’ tokens were unlocked and buying them back cheaper later on  to return to FTX.

Following the FTT ICO trail

What we observed:

Using the official token distribution from the FTX docs and comparing it to on-chain movements starting from the first token movements after minting in late July 2019 until December 2020, a likely scenario can be devised for the early distribution of FTT:

Observing the above parameters, we noted some key observations: 

  • Out of the 350m total supply of FTT, 280m of it was controlled by FTX (~80%).
  • Out of the 59.3m tokens for seed and private rounds, presumably in the 3-month vesting contract, around 27m (or roughly 46%) ended up on Alameda’s FTX deposit wallet (see Appendix for details), which is a considerable concentration.
  • All of the company tokens (FTT), as well as most unsold non-company tokens, were deposited into a 3-year vesting contract, with an Alameda address as the sole beneficiary.
  • 10.7m FTT are unaccounted for, and 10m FTT remain untouched at address 0x4aa

What it could mean:Our observations raised further questions: Why was there a need for FTX to have such a concentrated supply of tokens? Why would they choose a wallet (Alameda’s) as the beneficiary for the FTT company tokens, that is not directly controlled by FTX themselves? 

There was, however, a limitation in the use of on-chain data to surface answers to these questions. Therefore, we focused on what can be answered through on-chain data instead.

Early transaction activity of FTT suggested that: 

  • Alameda was involved in FTT from day one, and might have even had a significant role in its development
  • Almost all the total FTT token supply has to go through Alameda’s hands at some point, due to an Alameda address being the sole and unchangeable beneficiary of the company’s token-vesting contract - this does not mean that Alameda necessarily “owns” the tokens (255m thereof are likely the FTX company tokens) but still is peculiar
  • Alameda may have received preferential treatment from FTX
  • Alameda and FTX owned the vast majority of the total FTT supply from the very beginning, meaning:
  • The actual circulating supply (and liquidity depth) is low when compared to the total supply (i.e. low float)
  • Prices can be easily influenced to move up (or down) with relatively small amounts when compared to the resulting increase (or decrease) in valuation
  • Since both Alameda and FTX held the majority of FTT supply, if one entity is forced to sell its FTT holdings, then the other entity may consequently take a huge hit to its balance sheet

The Good, The Bad, The Bailout

Jan 2021 - December 2021: Shared success in the bull market

Fast forward to the bull market of 2021, the FTT token saw a meteoric rise, roughly 800x from the seed price of $0.10 to $84 at ATH in summer 2021.

  Source: CoinGecko


The rise in the price of FTT saw the fully diluted valuation of FTT reached almost $30b at the all-time highs - most of which were owned by Alameda and FTX. 

Even though the tokens are technically liquid, these quantities would have been impossible to liquidate for Alameda in the open market. Alameda selling could cause wide downward swings in price, and in turn devalue their own remaining positions as well as those of the other holders, with FTX being by far the largest. This was a gordian knot for Alameda’s FTT holdings and created a further co-dependency between Alameda and FTX.

With Alameda not being able to sell its FTT holdings in large quantities, and FTT not generating enough liquid revenue, the potential options for them to obtain liquidity using FTT were:

  1. OTC: Selling FTT outside the market without impacting the price either by using FTT to make investments (e.g. in venture deals or via an incubator) or sell FTT OTC (e.g. via a market-maker like Genesis).
  2. LP: Earning by providing liquidity for FTT markets or derivatives (e.g. on FTX).
  3. Borrow: Using FTT as collateral to borrow against it (e.g. on FTX or Genesis).

Note that many of the ways to access liquidity using FTT were already implemented by FTX from the start, with FTX users as the counterparty. 

While OTC selling and liquidity provision are relatively less risky, borrowing against FTT is considered risky as a liquidation event would have a large negative impact on both FTX and Alameda.

So the question remains, did Alameda use the unrealizable book value of their FTT to borrow funds?

What we observed:

There were large FTT transactions between FTX, Alameda, and Genesis Trading:

In September 2021, there were regular inflows and outflows from FTX and Alameda into Genesis Trading. First, we saw an increase in sizable deposits from FTX to Genesis, followed by a significant transfer of FTT tokens from Genesis to Alameda’s FTX address. 

It could be possible that FTX sent FTT to Genesis with the intention for the FTT to be used as collateral for a loan to Alameda. However, if this assumption was true then why did Genesis send Alameda the 20m FTT ($1.6b) instead of other, more liquid tokens? Such an occurrence contradicts the logic that FTT was intended as collateral due to its low liquidity.

Then, in December 2021, Alameda sent a large FTT deposit to Genesis Trading wallet, totaling approximately 38m FTT or $1.7b at the time:

‍What this could mean:

Alameda could have either tried to sell some FTT OTC to Genesis, or tried to use the transferred FTT as collateral for a loan from Genesis. However, as Genesis is a centralized platform, we are unable to determine this primarily using our on-chain data sources. 

Additionally, specific outflows from centralized platforms such as Genesis are hard to trace on-chain, hence, it is challenging to pinpoint exactly how much Alameda had potentially borrowed. 

Alameda was also observed to be using FTT as collateral to borrow funds on DeFi platforms such as Abracadabra Money (MIM), though possibly on a much smaller scale compared to their interactions with CeFi lenders such as Genesis. 

Source: Nansen


The on-chain data for FTT so far hints at the following strategy:

However, by utilizing this strategy - taking out loans with FTT as collateral and using the loan to make further investments - would have put them effectively in a leveraged long position.

FTT would have been a central weakness for Alameda and FTX, with price drops posing a very real threat. The rather thin liquidity compared to total supply would have made large market sales very dangerous (e.g. through liquidation of Alameda’s borrowing positions, the bankruptcy of companies that own a lot of FTT, or “dumping” by other large holders like Binance). 

May 2022 - June 2022: Potential crisis

Whilst this strategy may have worked well in the bull market of 2021, it may have turned sour when markets started to go against their favor, especially during the May/June 2022 crash: 

  1. OTC: Demand to buy OTC decreases
  2. LP: Volume, fees and especially buy-side demand for FTT dry up
  3. Borrow: With FTT prices falling, FTT collateralized loans become riskier. Furthermore borrowing liquidity is drying up, borrowing rates increase (& margin calls), and creditors recall their loans due to general market conditions worsening.

Given that significant portions of Alameda’s balance sheet had consisted of illiquid assets,  Alameda may have faced serious liquidity challenges during the May/June 2022 period. 

With the UST de-peg and how the situation had unfolded, many entities were adversely impacted then. For full coverage of how the UST de-peg unfolded and the entities involved, our team had covered the situation in-depth here.

The ensuing contagion took down 3AC and Celsius in mid-June 2022 which we had covered in this report; both were debtors to Genesis (who may potentially have had exposure to Alameda based on their on-chain interactions involving the FTT token). 

So did Alameda face a liquidity crunch in June, following the 3AC and Celsius collapse? Was there an increase in FTT token activity by Alameda and its counterparts?

What we observed:

Breaking down the chain of events, this is a short run-down of what we had observed on-chain: 

Between June 9-23, Alameda received a large inflow of FTT from five various entities: Fund:0xf155HuobiGenesis Trading OTCHigh Balance, and Found on Avalanche

June 9‍

High Balance received 2.7m FTT ($78m) from Celsius: Wallet, which was sent to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 10‍

High Balance received another 1.6m FTT ($45.6m) from Celsius: Wallet, which was also sent to Alameda’s FTX deposit. The spike of FTT inflow to High Balance wallet was evident on both June 9 and June 10 (as seen in the screenshot below). 

  Source: Wallet Profiler for Token - High Balance (FTT) 


June 13

‍High Balance received another 600k FTT ($14.6m) which was sent to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 14

Fund:0xf155 generally receives their FTT tokens from FTX and BlockFi which is sent out to Alameda’s wallet, including 27.5m ($631m) FTT from FTX which was then immediately sent back to FTX.

Genesis Trading: OTC desk sent 3.7m FTT ($89m) to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 15

Huobi sent a total of 788k FTT ($18.9m) to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 16

Fund: 0xf155 received 14m FTT ($326m) and it was sent directly to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 17

Alameda FTX deposit received 6.2m FTT ($151m) from Genesis Trading: OTC desk and 18m FTT ($450m) from Fund: 0xf155, which they had received earlier that day.

June 18

Fund: 0xf155 sent 27m FTT ($631m) to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 20

Genesis Trading: OTC desk sent a total of 13.6m FTT ($364m) to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 21

Found on Avalanche sent 2.3m FTT ($63m) to Alameda FTX deposit. 

June 22

Alameda FTX deposit received 408k FTT ($11m) from High Balance and 249k FTT ($6m) from Found on Avalanche.

‍June 23

Genesis Trading: OTC desk sent 14.5m FTT ($381m) to  Alameda FTX deposit.

June 29

  Source: Nansen


Huobi sends the largest number of FTT to Alameda FTX deposits since the Terra / UST crisis. A total of 18.4m FTT ($47.2m) was transferred.

June 14 - July 1

  Source: Nansen


Between June 14 and July 1, Genesis sent a total of 56.6m FTT ($1.4b) to Alameda’s FTX Deposit. The significant on-chain transfer volumes may suggest that Genesis was potentially a key lender to Alameda.

June 2022: Saving Alameda through an FTT-backed loan?

Indeed, if Alameda had liquidity issues, they could have been in a very tight spot with limited options for orderly liquidating its assets to meet capital requirements. 

With lenders generally being cautious after the 3AC crisis, borrowing directly from FTX may have seemed like the only straightforward lifeline to avoid bankruptcy:

  • Alameda and FTX have a very close relationship and possibly blurred lines between the organizational structure
  • FTX has vested interest in Alameda surviving
  • Alameda as a large market-maker on its platform
  • Bankruptcy of Alameda would have meant the eventual liquidation of FTT and other token holdings, spelling the de-facto death of FTX’s FTT holdings (~$20b at peak)
  • FTX had access to large reserves of liquid assets (i.e. user funds)

According to the latest report by New York Times on How Sam Bankman-Fried’s Crypto Empire collapsed, Alameda’s CEO confirmed that “over the recent months, Alameda had taken out loans and used the money to make VC investments, among other expenditures.” Alameda CEO also confirmed that “around the time the crypto markets crashed this spring, lenders moved to recall those loans but the funds that Alameda spent was no longer easily available.” As a result, Alameda resorted to FTX’s customer funds to make the payments. 

Did Alameda really receive an FTT-backed loan from FTX?‍

We looked at FTT deposits from Alameda onto FTX which could have been posted as collateral, as well as non-FTT outflows from FTX to Alameda.

Posting FTT as collateral

What we saw:

There were massive net FTT inflows from Alameda to FTX during mid-June, coinciding with the 3AC collapse, totaling 163m FTT, worth around $4b at the time.

Source: Nansen Query

It is difficult to correctly attribute outflows from centralized platforms into entities on-chain, and some of these funds might have circled back to Alameda directly or via a third party and back to FTX again. Therefore, the net values displayed in the chart may likely be higher than the actual net inflow.

A look at FTX’s user fund wallet reveals, however, that the balance on FTX rose from 14m FTT to 54m FTT, an increase of 40m FTT, ~$1.2b from mid-June to mid-July, most of which can be attributed to Alameda.

  Source: Nansen


What this could mean:

Alameda deposited as much as ~$4b (based on mapped net inflows) worth of FTT tokens on FTX between early June and July, with the peak being during the 3AC collapse in the week of 12 June 2022.

This is in line with the interview from Reuters with several people close to Bankman-Fried, revealing a $4b loan from FTX to Alameda backed by FTT tokens, Robinhood shares, and other assets.

Loans from FTX

The question of whether FTX provided funds to Alameda, cannot be conclusively answered by on-chain data alone.

FTX could have sent the funds to any recipient, including the creditor directly, in any token, on (almost) any chain as well as provided the funds completely off-chain. 

Furthermore, looking at wallet balance changes is inconclusive as well. 

As for the FTX wallet balances, many withdrew funds from the exchange during these turbulent times, leading to high fluctuations in the total balance. Additionally, it is unclear what the actual balance of funds should have been, so determining a potential delta is also not an option.

What could be seen were various token flows between FTX and Alameda with values ranging from tens of thousands to tens of millions in USD value. While we did observe a few unusually large transactions with transaction values in the hundreds of millions in USD value, we did not have sufficient evidence to triangulate and deem these transactions to be “suspicious” or to fully back the theory.

However, it remains a mystery as to what was the purpose of these following large transactions.

  1. On 12 May 2022, FTX transferred 90k ETH ($211m) + 6.8m FTT ($224.7m) to Alameda: 0x780 and transferred them to Genesis. The 6.8m FTT was received from the High Balance wallet, funded by Celsius.  
  Source: Nansen Portfolio


  1. On 12 May 2022, FTX sent another 155,443 ETH ($323.4m) to Alameda 0x780 which was eventually transferred to Genesis once more.
  Source: Nansen Portfolio


  1. On 26 May 2022, FTX sent 3.5m FTT ($103m) to Alameda Research: 0x780, which was eventually transferred to Genesis once more. 
  Source: Nansen


All withdrawals from the FTT company tokens vesting contract have to go through this Alameda wallet as it is declared the only beneficiary from the start (see Appendix). Still, them withdrawing all of the remaining tokens and sending them to FTX Deployer leaves a sour taste in light of the loan agreement.

To Fall, Falter, and Fail: SBF’s Crypto Empire Collapses

We summarized the events that caused the “death-spiral” of both FTX and Alameda: 

Sept 28

Alameda received 174m FTT ($4.1b) from the FTT ICO Contract and sent it to the FTX Deployer. This could either have been related to the “FTX loan in May / June” or FTX having to claim FTT tokens through Alameda’s wallet due to the inter-linked relationship between FTX and Alameda. All withdrawals from the FTT company tokens vesting contract have to go through this Alameda wallet as it is declared the only beneficiary from the start (see Appendix). Still, them withdrawing all of the remaining tokens and sending them to FTX Deployer leaves a sour taste in light of the loan agreement.

  Source: Nansen


Oct 31- 1 Nov

An unusual list of continuous stablecoin transfers from FTX International and FTX US to Alameda’s Circle, Binance and FTX wallet was spotted. These stablecoins included USDC, BUSD, TUSD,PAX,TUSD and amounted to a total of $388m USD.

‍Nov 2 

CoinDesk releases a report on Alameda’s balance sheet. It revealed that $5.8b of the $14.6b assets on Alameda’s balance sheet were reportedly in FTT and other Solana ecosystem tokens. The majority of net equity in Alameda’s business was actually FTX’s own centrally-controlled token, FTT.

Nov 6 

Alameda CEO makes a statement on the balance sheet report from Coindesk and clarifies that Alameda had >$10b of assets that were not reflected in the piece. She does not shed light on liabilities that were not listed in the report. The Tweet has since been deleted, and we were not able to fully verify her claim on-chain.

Binance CEO announces that they have decided to liquidate the remaining FTT on their books, worth ~$584m in FTT. 

Alameda CEO offers to OTC buy all of Binance’s FTT holdings for $22 per token, leading to speculation that Alameda may have had loans that would have otherwise been liquidated if the price of FTT falls below $22. This Tweet has since been deleted.

The review of identified Alameda wallets on the Ethereum chain suggested that Alameda’s holdings on the Ethereum chain were approximately valued at $21m on 6 Nov 2022 (based on available Nansen data) . Scrutiny of the on-chain data revealed that it was highly unlikely that Alameda had the liquidity to purchase Binance’s FTT when Caroline tweeted publicly on 2 Nov 2022. So then, what was the motivation behind Caroline's public offer to purchase Binance’s FTTs?

Wallet balances obtained are based on available Nansen data. Actual wallet balances may be higher (e.g. does not take into account LP tokens and/or Alameda’s balances on CEXs)

Binance CEO reinforces a statement on liquidating their FTT holdings. There was no on-chain activity to support this move at the time at which the statement was made.

FTX CEO responded by clarifying that FTX is solvent, stating that “FTX is fine, assets are fine.” This Tweet has now been deleted.

Nov 7 

Markets resort to panic mode. Nansen’s tracking of the 7-day stablecoin flows showed a net inflow of $411.5m deposited into Binance, with a net outflow of $451.1m in withdrawals from FTX in that period. 

Additionally, our on-chain examination brought to attention a list of (unusually) large withdrawals prior to FTX’s collapse. 

Entities who withdrew significant amounts 24 hours before withdrawals were halted: 

The immense sell-pressure of FTT meant that the token eventually broke lower than $22 per token.

Nov 8

FTX appeared to have paused withdrawals as reported by The Block. During this period, FTX sent 92m ($37m) of BIT to 🤓 Alameda Research: 0x84d.

FTX CEO shared that Binance would enter into a strategic transaction with FTX, of which Binance CEO announced a non-binding Letter of Intent to fully acquire FTX and help cover its liquidity crunch. 

It appeared that Binance was leaning towards scrapping FTX rescue takeover after taking first glance at books. At this point in the timeline, FTX US had sent $10m USDT to Alameda. Alameda Research then sent 130k FTT (~$715k) to 🏦 Binance: Alameda Deposit. Lastly, FTX US sent 2,262 WBTC ($41m) to 🤓 Alameda Research: WBTC which was later sent to WBTC: Controller. It is interesting to note that while FTX International had halted withdrawals, FTX US still managed to transfer a sizable amount of WBTC to Alameda. Alameda CEO also implied that only the FTX International entity was facing liquidity issues and that FTX US was unaffected. 

Nov 9

The Wall Street Journal reported that Binance had walked away from the FTX deal.

Nov 11

FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, with the FTX CEO resigning

Conclusion

According to an unverified insider source that was leaked on Twitter as of 16 Nov, “Caroline painted Alameda and FTX getting liquidated as a likely event rather than a tail event.” Moreover, FTX’s native token FTT was also a focal point contributing to the fallout. The low float and constant buy pressure from FTX implied that the only thing that could potentially trigger the FTT price to go down was a massive sell pressure for the token. While the Coindesk report first garnered the public’s attention to the relationship between Alameda & FTX, the “bank-run” on FTX had also coincided with the announcement that Binance was looking to liquidate the remaining FTT on their books.

Piecing together the pieces from our on-chain investigation, it was evident that the Luna/Terra collapse revealed a deep flaw between Alameda and FTX’s muddled relationship. There were significant FTT outflows from Alameda to FTX around the Terra-Luna/ 3AC situation. Based on the data, the total $4b FTT outflows from Alameda to FTX in June and July could possibly have been the provision of collateral that was used to secure the loans (worth at least $4b) in May / June that was revealed by several people close to Bankman-Fried in a Reuters interview. 

We also observed slightly unusual large continuous outflows of stablecoin tokens from FTX to Alameda’s wallets during that time period. Given the cascading effect of the Luna collapse, many firms like 3AC were liquidated causing a contagion across the crypto lending market. While our on-chain investigation did not directly verify that user funds were being siphoned from FTX to Alameda in attempts to “save” them from liquidation, the unusually large FTT inflows from FTX post-Luna/ 3AC hint at a plausible case. 

From this point on, the intermingled relationship between Alameda and FTX became more troubling, given that customer funds were also in the equation. Alameda was at the stage where survival was its chosen priority, and if one entity collapses, more trouble could start brewing for FTX. Given how intertwined these entities were set up to operate, along with the over-leverage of collateral, our post-mortem on-chain analysis hints that the eventual collapse of Alameda (and the resulting impact on FTX) was, perhaps, inevitable.

The sudden fallout of FTX had induced a growing fear within the crypto market participants - both investors and traders alike. If anything, this situation only strengthens the need for more transparency in crypto. Our team at Nansen Portfolio have compiled real-time dashboards that showcase crypto exchanges’ proof-of-reserves. Whilst the list of asset holdings is non-exhaustive, this is the first step to holding crypto participants more accountable. Link to proof-of-reserves per entity by Nansen can be found here.

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     Binance has announced that deposits for Gifto (GFT) have been suspended as of November 29, 2024 due to potential security issues with the GFT smart contract. Binance may reopen GFT deposits if they deem it safe to do so, but will not issue any further announcements. Binance has decided to delist and cease trading for all Gifto (GFT) spot trading pairs on December 3, 2024 at 08:00 (UTC).

  • Japan's Financial Services Agency warns 5 unregistered overseas cryptocurrency exchanges

    On November 29th, according to CoinPost, the Japanese Financial Services Agency issued warning letters to five unregistered overseas cryptocurrency exchanges. These exchanges include KuCoin, bitcastle LLC, Bybit Fintech Limited, MEXC Global, and Bitget Limited.

  • Stablecoin issuance protocol usdx.money completes $45 million in financing

    On November 29th, stablecoin issuance protocol usdx.money completed a $45 million financing round, bringing the project's valuation to $275 million. NGC, BAI Capital, Generative Ventures, UOB Venture Management, and others participated in the funding, with some investors contributing through warrants. Existing supporters of the project include Dragonfly Capital and Jeneration Capital.

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin officially signs digital currency tax law

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a law regulating the taxation of digital currencies. According to the law, digital currencies are recognized as property. This also applies to currencies used for foreign trade payments within the experimental legal framework (EPR) in the field of digital innovation. Mining and sales of digital currencies are exempt from value-added tax. Operators of mining infrastructure must report to the tax authorities issuing cryptocurrencies for using their services. Failure to submit such information on time may result in a fine of 40,000 rubles. In terms of personal income tax, digital currencies obtained through mining will be classified as physical income (usually used when goods or services are paid for instead of currency). The value of the income currency will be determined based on market quotes. Such income will be subject to progressive taxation, taking into account tax deductions for mining costs. At the same time, the acquisition, sale or other circulation of digital currencies will be subject to two-stage personal income tax rates (13% for income up to 2.4 million rubles, and 15% for income exceeding this amount). They will be included in the same tax base as securities, bank deposits, and other sources of transaction income. As for corporate income tax, digital currency mining will be subject to the standard tax rate (25% from 2025 onwards).

  • Taiwan forces cryptocurrency providers to register for anti-money laundering

    after authorities imposed fines on two cryptocurrency exchanges for related violations, Taiwan, China has advanced new anti-money laundering (AML) regulations for cryptocurrency businesses. On November 27, the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) announced that the upcoming registration requirements for anti-money laundering for cryptocurrency exchanges would be postponed from the previous deadline of January 1, 2025 to November 30. According to previous notices, virtual asset service providers (VASPs) that have not registered with the government may face up to two years imprisonment or a maximum fine of NT$5 million (US$155,900).

  • Supreme People's Procuratorate: Enhance the ability to combat money laundering crimes using new technologies and products such as virtual currency

    newly revised "Anti-Money Laundering Law of the People's Republic of China" will come into effect on January 1, 2025. The Secretary of the Party Group and Procurator-General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate, Ying Yong, emphasized the need to strengthen cooperation to combat money laundering crimes, accurately grasp the provisions of the revised anti-money laundering law on improving the scope of upstream money laundering crimes, and implement the anti-money laundering law and the criminal law's provisions on "money laundering" in a comprehensive manner. Accurately apply the "Interpretation of the Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in Handling Criminal Cases of Money Laundering," deepen the three-year action to combat and govern illegal money laundering crimes, punish money laundering and related crimes in accordance with the law, enhance the ability to combat money laundering crimes using new technologies, products, and businesses such as virtual currencies, and form a joint force to combat money laundering.

  • Hong Kong Central Bank to Subsidize Companies Issuing Tokenized Bonds

    Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), Hong Kong's central bank, has launched a program to subsidize part of the cost of issuing tokenized bonds in order to encourage more tokenization in its capital markets.

  • Gitfo: GFT token contract has been leaked and investigation is ongoing

    Gitfo posted on X platform stating that the GFT token contract has been leaked and more GFT tokens have been issued, reminding the community to be aware of the serious security incident involving the GFT contract. Currently, investigations are ongoing and the severity of the situation is being understood, with necessary measures being taken. It is reported that Gitfo has requested all exchanges listing GFT to stop trading the token and is working to resolve the issue.