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FTX Passed on Deal to Purchase Celsius Due to Deficient Balance Sheet: Report

Sam Bankman-Fried's crypto exchange also reportedly found Celsius hard to deal with.

Updated May 11, 2023, 6:50 p.m. Published Jun 30, 2022, 2:23 p.m.
FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (CoinDesk TV screenshot)
FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (CoinDesk TV screenshot)

Cryptocurrency exchange FTX passed on a deal to purchase beleaguered crypto lender Celsius after examining the poor state of its finances, The Block reported Thursday.

  • FTX had talks with Celsius over an acquisition but walked away on account of a "$2 billion hole" in the lender's balance sheet, according to the report, which cited two people with knowledge of the matter.
  • Sam Bankman-Fried's crypto exchange also found Celsius hard to deal with, one of the sources said.
  • Celsius's woes have been among the major touchpoints of the recent troubled conditions in the crypto market. On June 13, the lender paused withdrawals citing "extreme market conditions," raising concerns about its solvency.
  • The lender's CEL token is down over 13% on the day, according to data by CoinMarketCap, having dropped from around 73 cents at 13:00 UTC to under 62 cents less than an hour later.
  • FTX appears to have been in a bullish mood for acquisitions of late, with news emerging last week that it wishes to take a stake in another troubled crypto lender BlockFi. Earlier this week FTX was also reported to be looking into acquiring trading platform Robinhood (HOOD).
  • Celsius could not immediately be reached for comment on the report. FTX declined to comment when contacted by CoinDesk.

Read more: Nexo Hires Citigroup to Advise on Acquisitions

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UPDATE (14:30 UTC June 30): Adds that FTX declined to comment.

Sizin için daha fazlası

Specialized AI detects 92% of real-world DeFi exploits

hackers (Modified by CoinDesk)

New research claims specialized AI dramatically outperforms general-purpose models at detecting exploited DeFi vulnerabilities.

Bilinmesi gerekenler:

  • A purpose-built AI security agent detected vulnerabilities in 92% of 90 exploited DeFi contracts ($96.8 million in exploit value), compared with 34% and $7.5 million for a baseline GPT-5.1-based coding agent running on the same underlying model.
  • The gap came from domain-specific security methodology layered on top of the model, not differences in core AI capability, according to the report.
  • The findings come as prior research from Anthropic and OpenAI shows AI agents can execute end-to-end smart contract exploits at low cost, accelerating concerns that offensive AI capabilities are scaling faster than defensive adoption.