https://wallstreetonparade.com/2022/07/crypto-billionaire-sam-bankman-fried-is-dangling-1-billion-in-political-donations-but-he-wants-dangerous-crypto-derivatives-trading-in-return/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: July 6, 2022 ~

Sam Bankman-Fried
Sam Bankman-Fried, Co-Founder and CEO, FTX

Sam Bankman-Fried is the co-founder and CEO of crypto firm, FTX. He’s also
a man on a mission. The mission is to spend tens of millions of dollars on
political campaigns until he gets his desired outcome in Washington:
permission for FTX to be able to offer highly leveraged derivative
contracts on cryptocurrencies with margin accounts and 24/7 automated
liquidation of defaulting customers, effectively being able to sell out
customer accounts while they’re asleep in their beds. And, by the way, the
pesky detail of a regulated brokerage firm intermediary in the transaction
would become history.

To bring his dream to fruition, Bankman-Fried has been writing out checks
in a wild flurry of activity this year. Between February 4 and April 14 of
this year, Bankman-Fried wrote out three checks totaling $23 million to
Protect Our Future PAC. According to Federal Election Commission (FEC)
records, that PAC spent $10.45 million supporting the candidacy of Carrick
Flynn who was running in a Democratic primary in Oregon for a seat in the
U.S. House of Representatives. The Protect Our Future PAC also spent
$935,705 opposing Andrea Salinas in that same Oregon Democratic Primary
according to FEC records. (Hold onto that thought for a moment more.)

On April 4, 2022, Bankman-Fried also sluiced the astonishing sum of $6
million to the House Majority PAC – whose slogan is “Fighting to protect
and expand the Democratic House Majority.”

But instead of working to unite Democrats, according to a group of
Democratic candidates in that Oregon primary, the House Majority PAC
(enriched with all that money from crypto billionaire Bankman-Fried)
inserted itself into the Oregon primary with a $1 million infusion to help
Bankman-Fried’s preferred candidate, Carrick Flynn, beat out the other
Democratic candidates.

Andrea Salinas (who went on to win the Oregon Democratic primary despite
all of that crypto money sloshing around) released a joint statement with
other Democratic challengers in Oregon, stating this: “We strongly condemn
House Majority PAC’s unprecedented and inappropriate decision to spend
nearly a million dollars in this Democratic primary…This effort by the
political arm of the Democratic establishment to buy this race for one
candidate is a slap in the face to every Democratic voter and volunteer in
Oregon – and is especially concerning in a year when all resources must go
to protecting the Democratic majority.”

Why might Bankman-Fried have been so opposed to Andrea Salinas for a House
seat? Salinas is a strong supporter of saving the planet from climate
change. That’s not a particularly appealing platform for crypto kings since
crypto mining relies heavily on fossil fuels and uses more energy than
numerous countries.

According to FEC records, Protect Our Future PAC spent $250,000 in May on
ad production and an advertisement buy for Senator Robert Menendez of New
Jersey, who just happens to sit on the powerful Senate Banking Committee
which might be inclined to pass crypto regulations to safeguard the U.S.
financial system.

On January 18 of this year, Bankman-Fried also contributed $2 million to
GMI PAC, which says it “supports candidates committed to making way for a
more secure, competitive, and innovative digital marketplace.”

Nothing, absolutely nothing, is going to make crypto secure. It is the
instrument of money launderers, hackers and other assorted criminals. The
Federal Trade Commission reported in June that “since the start of 2021,
more than 46,000 people have reported losing over $1 billion in crypto to
scams. That’s about one out of every four dollars reportedly lost to fraud
during that period.” (For more on this crypto nightmare, see our report on
how customers on the Coinbase crypto exchange are being victimized.)

Since August 2, 2021, Bankman-Fried has also donated $1 million to the
Senate Majority PAC (a PAC to help Democrats); $10,000 each to Democratic
Committees in New York State, New Hampshire and Michigan; $500,000 on May 5
of this year to the Democratic National Committee; and millions of dollars
more to dozens of Congressional candidates from a wide assortment of states.

Now Bankman-Fried is attempting to burnish his image as an altruistic
do-gooder while simultaneously dangling the allure of being the biggest
elephant in the room in the 2024 presidential election. In a podcast
released in May, Bankman-Fried said he expects to spend “north of $100
million” with a “soft ceiling” of $1 billion.

On May 12, the House Agriculture Committee held a specific hearing on
Bankman-Fried’s proposal for FTX to engage in leveraged crypto derivatives
using an unprecedented structure for U.S. markets. Testifying at that
hearing was Walter Lukken, President and CEO of the Futures Industry
Association (FIA). Lukken told House Committee members this:

“Specifically, the FTX direct clearing proposal would, for the first time,
combine margined futures with near real-time margining, 24/7 auto
liquidation of defaulting customers, and a self-funded CCP default fund
without the benefit of FCM’s risk management processes.

“It is important to point out that FTX’s proposal would permit futures
trading in any underlying asset class transacted by any type of customer,
including commercial hedgers. This requires us to view this proposal with
an eye beyond retail cryptocurrencies. We must also consider the core users
of our markets, including farmers, refiners, pension funds, and other main
street businesses that use futures to hedge price risk in the real economy.”

Terrence Duffy, Chairman and CEO of the CME Group which operates registered
futures and commodity exchanges in the U.S., testified at the same hearing,
calling the FTX proposal “glaringly deficient” and posing “significant risk
to market stability and market participants.”

On the subject of counterparty due diligence, Duffy told the Committee
members this:

“Counterparty due diligence is a linchpin of the modern financial system
and a key part of current DCOs’ [Derivatives Clearing Organization] risk
management practices, used to confirm that clearing members are well-placed
to meet the obligations that arise from their risk-taking. FTX would not be
the first party, novice or otherwise, to suggest that financial modeling
and algorithm design could eliminate the need for best practices in risk
management; however, the eventual fate of Long-Term Capital Management and
bespoke financially engineered products, such as mortgage-backed securities
and collateralized debt obligations, suggest that it would be folly to
unwind core risk management practices based on the assurance that ‘this
time it’s different.”

Market veterans will well understand the reference to Long-Term Capital
Management and CDOs. Despite its illustrious roster of Ph.Ds., Long-Term
Capital Management blew itself up in 1998 with insanely leveraged
derivative bets. Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) and their related
derivatives brought much of Wall Street to the edge of bankruptcy in 2008,
resulting in a massive taxpayer bailout and trillions of dollars in secret
loans from the Fed.

Bankman-Fried also testified at the House Agriculture Committee hearing,
focusing heavily in his written remarks on the altruistic nature of FTX and
the $100 million in philanthropy it has sprinkled around.

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