Alan Greenspan blasts FTX downfall as ‘purely fraud’

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan dismissed arguments that FTX’s collapse was the result of simple negligence or bad bookkeeping this week, referring to the cryptocurrency site’s downfall as “purely fraud.”

Greenspan’s remarks cut against the main defense offered so far by disgraced FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who has denied any personal wrongdoing in the shocking bankruptcy despite claims he swindled customers out of billions of dollars.

“Based on the information that has come to light so far, the collapse of FTX was not a result of lax risk management, inadequate accounting procedures, or some feature inherent to crypto — it was purely fraud,” Greenspan said during a year-end interview released by Advisors Capital Management on Tuesday.

Bankman-Fried has repeatedly attributed FTX’s collapse to sloppy accounting practices and other mistakes, even as authorities allege he used customer funds to bankroll a lavish lifestyle and prop up risky bets at his cryptocurrency hedge fund, Alameda Research.


Sam Bankman-Fried
Sam Bankman-Fried faces up to 115 years in prison.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

“SBF” pleaded not guilty to eight federal charges, including fraud and conspiracy, during his arraignment in Manhattan on Tuesday. The ex-billionaire is under house arrest at his parents’ home in California. If convicted on all charges, he faces up to 115 years in prison.

Greenspan, 96, served as Fed chair from 1987 to 2006. His five-term stint as head of the central bank stretched across four presidencies, beginning with Ronald Reagan and concluding with George W. Bush.

Greenspan expressed skepticism about the value of cryptocurrencies as a whole.

“With respect to the wider crypto universe — I view the asset class as too dependent on the ‘greater fool theory’ to be a desirable investment,” Greenspan said.

In investing, the “greater fool theory” refers to the concept that an overpriced asset will continue to rise because other “foolish” investors are willing to pay more to acquire it.

During a TechCrunch event last June, billionaire Bill Gates asserted that the cryptocurrency and NFT markets were “100%” based on the greater fool theory.

Fellow investment luminaries Jamie Dimon, Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett have also been critical of the cryptocurrency sector as a whole.

Greenspan also downplayed concerns that FTX’s bankruptcy would become a “contagion” event that spread to the wider economy. He noted that past collapses in the housing and tech markets were “credit-fueled asset bubbles” — a trend the FTX crisis does not share.

“There does not appear to be a significant amount of leverage dedicated to the cryptocurrency/NFT space at this time, so I do not expect contagion to spread very far beyond this particular asset class,” Greenspan said.