FTX
Brett Harrison: Rebrand Would Be 'Necessary' for FTX 2.0
FTX is in talks to reboot its international crypto exchange, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report. Former president of FTX U.S. and current CEO of Architect Brett Harrison weighs in on the possibility of a FTX starting up again and whether the exchange needs to rebrand after its collapse.

How Much Is Too Much to Spend on FTX's Bankruptcy?
Are Sam Bankman-Fried’s victims being ripped off a second time?

Could FTX 2.0 Happen Soon?
FTX CEO John J. Ray III told The Wall Street Journal that the company “has begun the process of soliciting interested parties" to reboot its international crypto exchange. "The Hash" panel discusses the possibility of an FTX rebrand as former customers of the crypto exchange have until Sept. 29 to submit claims against the bankruptcy estate.

FTX Customers Have Until End-September to Submit Bankruptcy Claims
Former customers will receive an email containing a link to the Customer Claims Portal.

TrueUSD’s Reserves Were Attested by Former FTX.US Accounting Team
Armanino’s digital asset team rebranded itself to The Network Firm, as CoinDesk reported, to continue performing audits and attestations after the collapse of FTX.

FTX Pauses Sale of $500M Stake in AI Firm Anthropic: Bloomberg
The move followed months of due diligence on the stake being done by the bidders, according to Bloomberg’s sources.

SBF's Motions to Dismiss Criminal Charges Rejected; What TradFi Giant Could Apply for Spot Bitcoin ETF Next?
"CoinDesk Daily" host Jennifer Sanasie breaks down the top crypto stories making headlines, including a federal judge denying FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's pretrial motions to dismiss criminal charges. Fidelity is reportedly expected to submit a spot bitcoin ETF filing. And, Robinhood is ending support for three tokens on Tuesday.

Judge Rejects FTX Founder Sam Bankman-Fried's Motions to Dismiss Criminal Charges
The judge had already denied some of the motions.

FTX Bankruptcy Team Says the Exchange Owed Customers $8.7B
A new report from the FTX team that’s digging through the financial guts of the failed exchange said the company owed its customers $8.7 billion after commingling and misusing their deposits, and senior executives started hiding that trouble as early as August 2022. About $7 billion in liquid assets have been recovered so far, and those searching the company’s assets "anticipate additional recoveries." Wilk Auslander LLP Partner Eric Snyder discusses the latest developments in FTX's bankruptcy case.


