Crypto Billionaires With $96 Billion Loss Add Distance From FTX

As Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire imploded last week, costing him effectively all of his $15.6 billion fortune, other digital-asset billionaires sought to make clear that their steep losses in 2022 wouldn't be similarly fatal.

Cameron Winklevoss, 41, who along with his twin brother Tyler founded cryptocurrency exchange Gemini, posted an 11-part series of tweets emphasizing that Gemini “has no exposure to FTT tokens or Alameda and no material exposure to FTX,” referring to Bankman-Fried’s trading house and crypto exchange.

2/ For the avoidance of doubt, @Gemini has no exposure to FTT tokens or Alameda and no material exposure to FTX.

— Cameron Winklevoss (@cameron) November 9, 2022

Brian Armstrong, 39, chief executive officer of Coinbase Global Inc., reshared a Washington Post article from 2018 that described the publicly traded US company as “one of trust and legitimacy, in contrast to what it says are ‘fly-by-night’ exchanges that freely operate in a legal gray zone in other parts of the world.” Bankman-Fried's FTX.com is based in the Bahamas.

And Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, the Binance billionaire who traded barbs with Bankman-Fried, then extended him a takeover offer only to revoke it, posted a checklist of what to avoid in crypto within two hours of FTX filing for bankruptcy. A few days later, he said his firm planned to launch a crypto recovery fund to help industry players facing a liquidity crunch.