FTX publishes list of creditors, owes millions of well -known institutions and government agencies -

FTX publishes list of creditors, owes millions of well -known institutions and government agencies -

The now dissolved crypto exchange FTX has published its list of creditors, whose names are not edited. The comprehensive list, which is over 100 pages long, shows that FTX well -known institutions such as Binance, Airbnb, Apple, Amazon, LinkedIn, Coindesk, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) and others owes a lot of money. US government authorities such as the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen) of the Ministry of Finance are also included.

The FTX list of creditor shows a wide range of companies that are owed in money

on January 24, 2023, ftx published the believer book of the bankrupt company, which contains more than 100 pages by name. The list of creditors includes state bodies from Switzerland, Hong Kong, the USA and Japan. In addition, the majority contains a large number of well-known companies, including Alibaba, Allied Sports, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Twitter, Google, Blue Bottle Coffee, Bonham Capital, Bitgo, Bitgo, Infura, Inca Digital, LightSpeed ​​Strategic Partners, Long Watch Security, Mercedes-Benz, Messari, Nomura and O’Leary Productions. The bankruptcy documents submitted last year show that the 50 largest FTX globes are owed estimated $ 3 billion .

The list of FTX believers includes US government authorities such as IRS, finces and various state tax drivers from a number of different states. The list contains three large airlines, hotels, apartments, non-profit organizations and software companies that offer cloud services. However, around 9.69 million FTX customers are blackened from the creditor book. The list also emphasizes many companies that come from the Bahamas, where the inner circle of FTX worked. The creditors also include banks, Stanford University, Fox News, Coindesk and the Wall Street Journal.

The court file shows funds that are due to a large number of creditors, but it does not mean that the company or the individual levers the FTX exchange to act crypto. For example a spokesman for the Swiss supervisory authority FINMA said Reuters that it didn't understand why it is on the list. The Finma "was not a customer of FTX and hadn't acted on their platforms," ​​said the spokesman for the news agency. The Reuters reporter Noele Illien also asked Airbnb for a comment, but the company did not answer.

What do you think about the list of creditors published by FTX and the amount of the liabilities towards well -known institutions and government agencies? Share your comments below.

Jamie Redman

Jamie Redman is the news manager at Bitcoin.com News and a Journalist for Financial Technology living in Florida. Redman has been an active member of the cryptocurrency community since 2011. He has a passion for Bitcoin, open source code and decentralized applications. Since September 2015, Redman has written more than 6,000 articles for Bitcoin.com news about the disruptive protocols that arise today.


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