Dear @SBF_FTX. This is not a balance sheet. A balance sheet doesn't record "balances", it records assets on one side of the sheet and liabilities plus equity on the other. The "balance" is whether the totals on the two sides agree. #basicaccounting
Dear @SBF_FTX. Since FTX was channelling customer funds to Alameda, we already know FTX was not dependent on Alameda for liquidity. Where is the chart showing Alameda's dependence on FTX?
Dear @SBF_FTX. Valuing assets on your company's balance sheet according to "your model" is known as "mark to model" (or "mark to fantasy"). It is only acceptable if the market for the assets is too small for price discovery.
Dear @SBF_FTX. The problem with marking assets to fantasy is that you end up with wholly unrealistic valuations, and as a result you develop wholly irrational beliefs such as "an $8bn shortfall of liquid assets wasn't risky". (Also this isn't a balance sheet, as previously noted)
And this is what happens when your marks to fantasy unwind.
Switching substack posts. Dear @SBF_FTX, as noted before, this is not a balance sheet. It therefore does not, and cannot, show FTX US "overcapitalised by roughly $350m".
@SBF_FTX Dear @SBF_FTX. Contrary to the claim in your substack post, S&C's presentation does appear to include $428m in FTX US's bank accounts as an asset. It is the cash balance for the WRS silo and is included in the total cash balance of $1.7bn.
I admit I had to do some hunting to find it, as it's not immediately apparent that WRS silo includes FTX US. @SBF_FTX says he only had an hour to write that post, so maybe he didn't have time to look properly?
Alternatively, maybe @SBF_FTX misunderstood the executive summary. Total cash reported in this summary included $428m from WRS silo, which includes FTX US. The summary also reported $181m of digital assets (NOT cash) for FTX US.
The shortfalls are clearly in digital assets, not cash.
The $428m cash in WRS silo does not entirely belong to FTX US. It includes $128m of primarily restricted cash in LedgerX, which wouldn't be available to disburse to FTX US customers (tho @SBF_FTX seems to think it should).
Here's the evidence that @SBF_FTX thinks the restricted cash in LedgerX should be available to disburse to FTX US customers. In this spreadsheet, he's counted it in the $428m cash "in FTX US bank accounts".
In the substack post, @SBF_FTX says he doesn't know what the restricted cash at LedgerX is. Twenty seconds of Googling would have told him. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
@SBF_FTX Dear @SBF_FTX, I'm afraid S&C's data does not confirm your claim that FTX US was solvent at the time of the Ch 11 filing. At that time, $250m of cash in LedgerX was set aside for a CFTC filing and could not be counted as part of FTX US's assets. So FTX US was probably insolvent.
Furthermore, customer balances are unlikely to be the only liabilities. Whether FTX US is solvent depends on whether total assets exceed total liabilities, not whether total assets exceed customer balances.
To be fair to @SBF_FTX, confusion between customer balances and total liabilities seems to be endemic in cryptoland. I do wish crypto people would learn basic accounting.
Related - the fact that total liabilities can be much more than customer balances is the reason why the Merkle tree "proof of reserves" beloved of several crypto exchanges proves absolutely nothing.
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Estimated assets $100 - $500 million. Estimated liabilities in the same range. 1-49 creditors. The list will be interesting.
This action stops the Winklevoss twins' demand for restitution in its tracks. Gemini's claim against Genesis will now be handled by the bankruptcy court, and Gemini might not get all its money back.
Changing someone's sex for legal purposes doesn't confer extra rights. It's nonsensical to say it does. Women do not have more rights than men, nor vice versa. If they did, that would be sex discrimination.
The exceptions in the Equality Act permitting single-sex spaces and services apply to men as much as women. For example, men are entitled to single-sex wards in hospitals. Unfortunately media narrative - and the Govt's explanation for its Section 35 decision - ignores this.
It is particularly unfortunate - and in my view actively discriminatory - that the Government's explanation completely fails to consider the impact of this decision on trans men.
So you added up all your customer wallet balances in a particular asset, and showed that there are least that amount of those assets in on-chain exchange wallets. This does not prove that the assets are unencumbered, and nor does it prove that you are solvent.
This from December is absolutely hilarious. Nexo is leaving the US because regulators not only refused to let it continue selling unregistered securities in the US, but filed lawsuits against it for historic selling of unregistered securities. nexo.io/blog/nexo-anno…
I think Nexo's business model and terms of service might be worth a look...
This diagram shows that assets deposited in the Earn program and collateral pledged against lending are both used as exchange liquidity. So it would seem they lend out assets and rehypothecate collateral. nexo.io/blog/nexo-s-bu…
Good pickup here. The legal test for inclusion within the protected characteristic of gender reassignment has never required medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria. Acquiring a GRC does, but the protected characteristic of gender reassignment doesn't apply only to ppl with GRCs.
This I think is the fundamental error in the Policy Exchange's piece. The author mistakenly thinks the protected characteristic of gender reassignment only applies to people who meet the criteria required to obtain a GRC.
If this were the case, then relaxing the criteria needed for a GRC would indeed change the operation of EA2010. But it's not the case. Relaxing the criteria for a GRC makes no difference to the protected characteristic of gender reassignment and therefore does not affect EA2010.
This interpretation of the law is, to put it mildly, strange. It appears to conflict with EHRC and statutory guidance on the Equality Act. It's written by only one lawyer. I'd be interested to see what other lawyers, esp discrimination and human rights lawyers, have to say.
The first point in the Exec Summary - that the Scottish GRR would change the definition of "sex" in the Equality Act - doesn't make sense. The Haldane judgment defines "sex" as "legal sex" for the purposes of the Equality Act. The GRR doesn't change this. Indeed it relies on it.
Extending the right to change one's legal sex for the purposes of the Equality Act to a wider group of people doesn't change the definition of "sex" in the Equality Act. It's a logical impossibility.