https://wallstreetonparade.com/2022/12/a-sam-bankman-fried-company-that-was-not-in-bankruptcy-has-gone-poof-regulators-are-drawing-a-dark-curtain/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: December 16, 2022 ~

James L Bromley, Partner at Sullivan & Cromwell
James Bromley, One of the Partners at Sullivan & Cromwell Overseeing FTX
Bankruptcy

Over the past week Wall Street On Parade has reached out to a number of
individuals connected to FTX Capital Markets, the stock trading platform
and SEC-registered brokerage firm that was majority owned by the indicted
crypto kingpin, Sam Bankman-Fried. We’ve received two answers to our
questions: Either, “I can’t talk about it” or “no comment.” Regulators have
been just as tight-lipped. When we emailed one of the lawyers handling the
bankruptcy process for FTX, James Bromley of Sullivan & Cromwell, the
response came back from a crisis management/public relations firm, Joelle
Frank. Their response was “decline to comment.”

Bankman-Fried’s ability to enter the regulated world of stock trading in
the U.S. while, according to Justice Department prosecutors, he was
operating a vast fraud, raises red flags about what other crypto firms may
be doing or contemplating.

Despite all of the stonewalling, Wall Street On Parade has been able to
significantly pull back the curtain at FTX Capital Markets. Here’s what
we’ve discovered thus far.

The Wall Street self-regulator, FINRA, has documents on file showing that
Sam Bankman-Fried is the indirect owner of 50 to 74 percent of FTX Capital
Markets, which was purchased outright by an FTX related firm, West Realm
Shires.

Despite the fact that the bankruptcy handlers for FTX are supposed to be
maximizing value for the defrauded customers and investors, this brokerage
firm has “ceased doing business” as of November 30 according to FINRA, just
19 days after the bankruptcy filing, and despite the fact that it was not
part of the bankruptcy filing.

FINRA states that FTX Capital Markets had two primary business lines:
“retailing corporate equity securities over-the-counter” and “arranging for
transactions in listed securities by exchange member.” Bankman-Fried bought
this brokerage firm, previously called RJL Capital, in August of last year.
It had been in operation since 2011. The price he paid is unknown at this
time.

In the declaration that the newly appointed FTX CEO, John Ray, filed with
the bankruptcy court on November 17, he stated that “Based on the
information that I have reviewed at this time” both FTX Capital Markets and
an affiliated company, Embed Clearing LLC, are “solvent.” Neither firm was
part of the bankruptcy petition.

If FTX Capital Markets was solvent, why wasn’t it sold quickly so that
customer accounts could move easily to another SEC-registered brokerage
firm, as is typically the case? If FTX Capital Markets was insolvent and
Bankman-Fried used it also as his personal piggy bank, why wasn’t this
mentioned in the SEC complaint filed against Bankman-Fried or the
indictment filed by the Justice Department?

According to the FTX Capital Markets customer agreement, Embed Clearing was
the entity that would execute the stock trades for customers; clear the
trades; and custody the securities for the customers. Embed Clearing and
its parent, Embed Financial Technologies, Inc., were also not part of the
bankruptcy filing. According to a motion filed just yesterday in bankruptcy
court, the court is being asked to authorize a quick sale of Embed Clearing
and its parent. Notably, those in charge of the bankruptcy want to offer
Embed for sale “free and clear of liens, claims, interests and
encumbrances.”

A notice has been posted on the Embed Clearing website advising FTX Capital
Markets’ customers as to how they can gain access to their account records.
It reads in part:

“The Account Recovery Portal will let you:

“View current stock and cash balances

“Enter sell orders during market hours to dispose of current holdings at
market prices

“Create a funding source to securely disburse funds to your requested bank
account

“Retrieve account document such as statements, trade confirmations, and tax
forms

“View transaction history*

“We appreciate your prompt action.

“The Embed Clearing Team

*For FTXCM customers: Your transaction history will include the deposits
and withdrawals of cash that were settled automatically between your FTX US
fiat balance and your brokerage account. Note that portfolio values are
calculated using the prior trading day closing price.”

Based on this language, it suggests that only closing “sell” orders are
being allowed and continued trading in the account is not being allowed.

Embed Clearing is also an SEC-registered broker-dealer and a member of the
Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), the organization that in
case of a brokerage firm failure protects securities in the account up to
$500,000, including up to $250,000 protection for cash that is held in the
account for the purpose of trading securities. If these Embed Clearing/FTX
Capital Markets customer accounts are being processed as a SIPC
liquidation, no regulator is willing to discuss it.

According to the FTX Capital Markets customer agreement, cash in the
account was to be held by an unnamed, federally-insured bank. The most
recent audited financial statement for the period ending March 31 for FTX
Capital Markets states this:

“The Company’s cash is held at one financial institution which is insured
by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and at times may exceed
federally insured limits. The Company has not experienced losses in such
accounts and believes it is not subject to any significant credit risk on
cash.”

FTX Capital Markets does not appear to have employed many licensed brokers
or staff. The audited financial statement shows that the lease on its
headquarters was only costing “$722 per month.” That will get you the
office space the size of a large closet in lower Manhattan. (At the time of
the audit the firm was located on Broad Street in the financial district in
lower Manhattan.)

We called the current phone number listed by FINRA for FTX Capital Markets
on multiple occasions this week. No one answers the phone and there is no
voice message regarding whom to call to retrieve the assets in your
account. Even more bizarre, the phone number that FINRA lists for the firm
is the same phone number for a cricket company called DreamCricket. The man
FINRA lists as the President of FTX Capital Markets, Venu Palaparthi, has a
Twitter page listing himself as “Opening Batsman for DreamCricket.com.”
Palaparthi’s LinkedIn profile shows him as Founder of DreamCricket.

Palaparthi’s LinkedIn profile indicates that he is a Fellow at the Center
for Financial Markets and Policy at Georgetown University McDonough School
of Business. We attempted to reach him there via email yesterday. The
Center advised he is no longer affiliated with the Center.

While Palaparthi’s LinkedIn page does not show him employed at FTX Capital
Markets, FINRA shows him registered at FTX Capital Markets since May 18,
2022 through the present. FINRA files are typically kept up-to-date with
little more than a few days lag. We attempted to reach Palaparthi through
multiple channels but have yet to receive a return email or phone call.

Adding to the bizarre nature of this firm, one licensed broker who FINRA
lists as currently employed at FTX Capital Markets is Stacey Lynn Lavender
(a/k/a Stacey Lynn Lavender-Mayes; a/k/a Stacey Lynn Mayes). FINRA shows
Lavender simultaneously working at seven different firms. This includes
serving as Chief Compliance Officer simultaneously at two firms: Sequence
Financial Specialists LLC in Florence, South Carolina and Level Four
Financial LLC in Dallas, Texas. Lavender is also listed as a Director of
Compliance at Dalmore in New York City; as the CEO at a firm called
SLLM-Inc./CCS in Los Angeles; as a Registered Principal at Cherry Trading
in Los Angeles; and as an Options Principal at FTX Capital Markets.

FINRA records indicate that both Cherry Trading and FTX Capital Markets
show recent requests to have SEC terminate their registration as a broker
dealer as well as requests to terminate their state licenses. FINRA also
shows that Cherry Trading is majority owned by an individual named Seiji
Kawajiri through a company called SK World Group 1.

Anyone who has ever held a securities license through a major retail
brokerage firm, such as Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley or Wells Fargo, knows
that one has to get special permission to engage in any employment outside
of your brokerage firm. It is highly discouraged because it can lead to
conflicts of interest and an inability for your firm to monitor these
outside activities. The possibility that someone would be allowed to work
in the critical position of Chief Compliance Officer and Director of
Compliance simultaneously at three firms while functioning as a CEO of
another company, while finding time to be an options principal at a Sam
Bankman-Fried operation, is beyond bizarre.

Lavender’s LinkedIn profile shows her working “full time” at Level Four
Financial. Attempts to reach her by phone, in order to clarify the
situation, failed. An email to her superior at Level Four Financial,
inquiring if she is still employed there as Chief Compliance Officer, has
yet to elicit a response.

Stacey Lynn Lavender Current Employment History at FINRA's BrokerCheck
Stacey Lynn Lavender’s Present Employers Listed at FINRA

Clearly, the American people still have very limited visibility on what Sam
Bankman-Fried was up to in U.S. markets.

Related Articles:

No One Trusts the FTX Bankruptcy Case: News Outlets Intervene; Justice
Department Trustee Demands Independent Examiner; SEC Orders Disclosures

Big Law Firm, Sullivan & Cromwell, Did Significant Legal Work for Bankrupt
Crypto Exchange, FTX

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