Sam Bankman-Fried’s wild rise and abrupt crash

There comes a moment in the development of a new technology when the hype is so common it passes for common sense. Lawyers,accountants and regulators are nowhere to be found. Investors insist entrepreneurs take their money. The world trembles on the brink of change.

For dotcoms,the moment was 1999. For artificial intelligence,it was just over nine months ago. For cryptocurrency,it was 2017.

Sam Bankman-Fried used the proceeds of his fraud to court celebrities and politicians in Washington.

Sam Bankman-Fried used the proceeds of his fraud to court celebrities and politicians in Washington.AP

Six years ago,Sam Bankman-Fried knew little about alternative currencies. But he correctly bet there were huge opportunities in grabbing a tiny piece of millions of crypto trades. In the blink of an eye,he was lauded as being worth $US23 billion. Only Mark Zuckerberg had accumulated so much wealth so young.

The Facebook co-founder has his critics but he looks like Thomas Edison next to Bankman-Fried. After a speedy trial in Manhattan federal court,the onetime crypto king,now 31,wasconvicted on Thursday of seven counts of fraud and conspiracy involving his companies FTX and Alameda Research.

Bankman-Fried once partied with stars and big shots,doled out fortunes in looted funds to politicians and himself,was acclaimed as the next Warren Buffett,employed his friends and made them rich for a while,and was courted by the news media that printed his most banal comments. For a time,everyone loved Sam Bankman-Fried — with the apparent exception of Sam Bankman-Fried.

“I am,and for most of my adult life have been,sad.” That plaintive statement appears at the end of testimony Bankman-Fried had hoped to give Congress last winter before his arrest scuttled his plans. He was onto something.

In the blink of an eye,Bankman-Fried was lauded as being worth $US23 billion.

In photographs from his heyday,Bankman-Fried always looked awkward,embarrassed and as if he would rather be playing a video game,even when Gisele Bündchen had an arm around him. Everyone kept insisting he was off-the-charts brilliant,the entrepreneur who would create the future. Maybe he knew better.

As journalists — and now prosecutors — have made clear,FTX and Alameda were run by a group of hapless young people who did not have the required skills,maturity or patience. Those who actually had a moral compass and sensed something was wrong soon peeled off,leaving a core crew who drifted — or perhaps dived — into trouble.

“When I started working at Alameda,I don’t think I would have believed you if you told me I would be sending false balance sheets to our lenders or taking customer money,but over time it was something I became more comfortable with,” Caroline Ellison,Bankman-Fried’s colleague and sometime girlfriend,testified during the trial.

Caroline Ellison,former CEO of Alameda Research,leaves the Manhattan federal court after giving evidence.

Caroline Ellison,former CEO of Alameda Research,leaves the Manhattan federal court after giving evidence.AP

When Ellison started working at Alameda,something called the blockchain was going to transform everything,somehow. Silicon Valley poured billions into crypto,seeking out those like Bankman-Fried who got in early and appeared smart.

Sequoia Capital,a top venture firm that has funded Apple,Airbnb,Instagram and WhatsApp,all but begged Bankman-Fried to take its money during the mad rush when crypto was shiny and new. The FTX founder did. Sequoia then commissioned a very long celebration of Bankman-Fried by Adam Fisher,a longtime Silicon Valley writer who fell hard for the man whose fans called him SBF.

“After my interview with SBF,I was convinced:I was talking to a future trillionaire,” Fisher wrote. He added:“The FTX competitive advantage? Ethical behaviour.”

Less than two months after the interview was published,FTX collapsed. Sequoia put a note at the top of the story saying this was an “unexpected turn of events”. It later took the story down and wrote off its $US214 million investment in the exchange. Sequoia and Fisher declined to comment.

The central myth of Silicon Valley is that techies are here to save the world. If they get insanely rich in the process,well,that only proves how great their idea was in the first place.

This was the appeal ofElizabeth Holmes and her blood-testing company,Theranos. She was young,female and attractive,which looked good on the covers of magazines. But the notion that really propelled her to fame and fortune was that she was a sort of high-tech Florence Nightingale,working all night to refine medical technology that would improve people’s health. (The truth was that her technology didn’t work and placed customers at risk by giving them unreliable results.)

FTX allowed people to bet on cryptocurrencies. It was,in essence,a casino. It is difficult for even the most sympathetic journalist to portray a casino as a saviour of humanity,so the focus of the stories was always on Bankman-Fried himself.

He calculated the odds on everything — he thought there was a five per cent chance that he would become president of the United States. He figured he would help humanity by making a fortune and then giving it all away,a philosophy known as effective altruism. The details didn’t matter. As a fawning Forbes profile put it in 2021:“He’s a mercenary,dedicated to making as much money as possible[he doesn’t really care how] solely so that he can give it away[he doesn’t really know to whom,or when].”

Sam Bankman-Fried seemingly delighted in giving his Twitter followers an insight into his lifestyle. He mainly sleeps on a beanbag next to his desk in the office,he said,with a picture of him lying next to his staff at their trading terminals.

Sam Bankman-Fried seemingly delighted in giving his Twitter followers an insight into his lifestyle. He mainly sleeps on a beanbag next to his desk in the office,he said,with a picture of him lying next to his staff at their trading terminals.Twitter

During the trial,it emerged that Bankman-Fried had spent $US15 million on private plane travel. He never did much to disguise the fact that he lived with some of his FTX pals in a $US35 million penthouse. The question of whether these young people should be sleeping on the beach instead of living the high life if they were truly following the doctrine of effective altruism never seemed to get asked.

Bankman-Fried was happiest when playing video games,which he did as often as he could. Even as he talked to Sequoia over Zoom about his grand plans to make a financial super-app inside FTX and therefore obliterate every bank in the world,he was playing League of Legends.

Again and again,he conveyed his contempt for what he was doing,and he seemed to implore the authorities to take a closer look at his companies. Take,for instance,this statement he made in August 2021 in one of his many interviews:“If there’s anything we’re doing that a regulator doesn’t want,you don’t have to sue us. Just reach out and tell us what you want.”

The magic of starting a company just as a boom is beginning is that the bar is low. When Sequoia was looking for a crypto exchange to invest in,FTX was “Goldilocks-perfect”,according to its profile. One big reason:“There was no concerted effort to skirt the law.” Hard to find a bar much lower than that.

Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman,parents of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried,arrive at Manhattan federal court in New York on October 30.

Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman,parents of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried,arrive at Manhattan federal court in New York on October 30.AP

Bankman-Fried tried to warn everyone.

“By number of Ponzi schemes,there are way more in crypto,kinda per capita,than in other places,” he toldThe Financial Times in May 2022.

It didn’t matter. Investors,customers,journalists all saw the genius they were told was there. And if they had the slightest doubt,Bankman-Fried had an ace:His parents were Stanford law professors.

Sam Bankman-Fried on the cover of Young Rich,November 2022.

Sam Bankman-Fried on the cover of Young Rich,November 2022.Mary Beth Koeth

“He has two parents that are compliance lawyers,” saidShark Tank star Kevin O’Leary,who was both a promotional spokesperson for FTX and an investor in it. “If there is ever a place I can be and I am not going to get in trouble,it is going to be at FTX.”

O’Leary may not have known that Joseph Bankman,a tax law specialist and clinical psychologist,and Barbara Fried,a professor emeritus at Stanford Law School,had their attention elsewhere. According to a lawsuit filed by the bankrupt FTX,their son gave them,through FTX,a $US16 million home in the Bahamas,$US10 million in cash and many other things. Lawyers for the couple called the claims “completely false”.

In that glowing Sequoia profile,Bankman-Fried said:“I’m very sceptical of books. I don’t want to say no book is ever worth reading,but I actually do believe something pretty close to that.” He didn’t like movies either.

It’s impossible to read the sad saga of Bankman-Fried without thinking he,and many of those around him,would have been better off if they had spent less time at maths camp and more time in English class. Sometimes in books,the characters find their moral compass;in the best books,the reader does too.

 Sam Bankman-Fried next to supermodel Gisele Bundchen at the Crypto Bahamas conference in Nassau in April 2022.

Sam Bankman-Fried next to supermodel Gisele Bundchen at the Crypto Bahamas conference in Nassau in April 2022.Supplied

As I read about Bankman-Fried,the historical drama A Man for All Seasons,once a staple for high school students,kept coming to mind. It’s about a man who knows right from wrong and a man who doesn’t. Richard Rich is a little like Bankman-Fried:a young man with huge ambitions and no scruples. He begs Thomas More for a place at court. More tells Rich he would be a good teacher.

Who would know if I were a good teacher? Rich asks scornfully.

“You,your pupils,your friends,God,” More replies. “Not a bad public,that.”

Rich rejects the quiet life,betrays More and is rewarded with a post in Wales. Viewers are given to understand that he loses his soul. Bankman-Fried rejected the quiet life,betrayed nearly everyone he knew — and ended up with neither wealth nor Wales.

This article originally appeared inThe New York Times.

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