Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao reportedly declined to pay $40 million to former FTX CEO Sam Bankman Fried for a futures crypto exchange in March 2019, according to an excerpt from Michael Lewis’ book “Going Infinite.”
According to the book, SBF proposed a futures exchange with “zero risk” for the exchange in case of bad trades with high leverage. Traditionally, a futures exchange allows traders to leverage funds against a small collateral, and the exchange often asks traders to increase collateral in case the trade starts to go bad.
However, in crypto, the price swings could be fast and significant which could leave exchanges with bad debts due to lack of collateral. However, FTX wanted to create a futures exchange that would monitor the trader’s activity and, as soon as the trade surmounted the collateral, would liquidate the user’s positions, thus limiting any potential losses to the exchange.
The book suggests that at the time of Sam’s proposal in 2019, Binance and FTX had different goals. FTX wanted to cater to institutional investors while Binance was all about retail customers. After pondering the proposal for a few weeks. CZ reportedly denied the request for funding by Sam and went on to create an in-house futures platform.
The author of the book claims that CZ’s decision didn’t go down well with SBF who reportedly called the Binance CEO a “douche” for his decision. After the denial from Binance, FTX went on to create its own FTX futures exchange in 2019 but wasn’t really sure about its success. An excerpt from the book read:
This was not the only incident when SBF and CZ crossed paths over a combined business decision. In 2021, when the FTX liquidity crisis came to light, FTX reached out to Binance again for an
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