Sam Bankman-Fried claimed he didn’t know how a $16.4 million Bahamas mansion got listed under his parents’ names, insisting that it was meant to house staffers at his now-defunct FTX cryptocurrency exchange.
“I don’t know the details of the house for my parents,” Bankman-Fried told the New York Times’ Andrew Ross Sorkin via Zoom at the newspaper’s DealBook summit event in New York City on Wednesday.
“I know it was not intended to be their long-term property. It was intended to be the company’s property. I don’t know how that was papered in.”
Bankman-Fried’s parents, Stanford University law professors Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, were listed as the owners of a home in a gated community on the Bahamas.
Property records described the house as a “vacation home,” according to Reuters, which was the first to report the news.
The home was part of a massive, $121 million spending spree on pricey real estate on the island by Bankman-Fried’s company.
A spokesperson for the couple told Reuters that they had long been in the process of returning the deeds to the home to FTX.
“They may have stayed there while working with the company sometime over the last year,” Bankman-Fried told Ross Sorkin at the DealBook summit.
Bankman-Fried said Wednesday that there were “a lot of property purchases in the Bahamas.”
He said the homes were meant to accommodate scores of Silicon Valley workers who relocated to the Bahamas to work for FTX.
“We were trying to incentivize that and to make sure that they had an easy way to find a comfortable life,” Bankman-Fried said.
He told Ross Sorkin on Wednesday that he no longer lives in a luxury Bahamas penthouse said to be worth $40 million. It had been reported previously that Bankman-Fried was among 10 FTX staffers who cohabitated at the residence.
“I don’t live there now,” Bankman-Fried said Wednesday.
“I have not lived there for most of the time.”
Bankman-Fried, whose net worth was valued as high as $16 billion before FTX filed for bankruptcy, also claimed on Wednesday that he has just $100,000 left in his bank account after the implosion of his cryptocurrency empire.
He attempted to distance himself from suggestions of fraud in his first public appearance since his company’s collapse stunned investors and left creditors facing losses totaling billions of dollars.
Bankman-Fried said he was speaking at the DealBook summit against the advice of his lawyers.