FTX’s liquidators have filed a strong objection to a multi-billion-dollar claim by failed hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC), arguing the request is based on exaggerated and misleading figures.
The dispute, now playing out in Delaware bankruptcy court, centers on digital asset values 3AC says it held on FTX before the exchange’s collapse.
According to FTX’s court filing, the true value of 3AC’s account was just $284 million in mid-2022, burdened by over $700 million in margin debt. The estate claims 3AC ignored this liability, painting a distorted picture of its holdings.
The filing also reveals that nearly all assets in the account vanished within days—$222 million lost to the market crash and $60 million withdrawn by 3AC. Only one position worth $82 million was force-liquidated, which FTX says was in line with platform rules to avoid a negative balance.
In its statement, FTX argues that creditors should not be responsible for covering 3AC’s overleveraged bets. If the court agrees, 3AC could lose the bulk of its claim or be downgraded to a general creditor status, greatly reducing its potential payout.
Investor and entrepreneur Anthony Pompliano is rolling his private outfit, ProCap BTC LLC, into blank-check firm Columbus Circle Capital to form ProCap Financial, a new Nasdaq-listed business built around Bitcoin.
FTX’s legal team has moved to dismiss a $1.53 billion claim filed by Three Arrows Capital (3AC), calling it an exaggerated and baseless attempt to recover losses from risky trading.
Veteran investor Jeffrey Gundlach is signaling a major turning point in global capital flows, suggesting that the era of U.S. market dominance may be drawing to a close.
Crypto markets saw a sharp decline over the weekend after the US launched its first military intervention in the conflict between Iran and Israel late on Saturday night.