FTX Owes Money to Netflix, Binance, Wall Street Journal, Filing Shows

It's the list everyone has been waiting for, minus 9.7 million redacted customer names. But the 116-page FTX creditor list, which names companies such as Netflix (NFLX) and Apple (AAPL), still paints a comprehensive picture of the now-bankrupt crypto enterprise's reach and the impact of its collapse.

FTX owes money to media companies, universities, airlines and charities, among others, a court filing from Wednesday shows. The document was filed by lawyers for the company as part of the bankruptcy proceedings in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

Judge John Dorsey, who is overseeing the proceedings, allowed the names of individual creditors to remain sealed for three months at a hearing in early January, but requested a list of institutions that invested in the company to be filed by FTX lawyers.

Among those listed are media companies like the Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Fox Broadcasting and CoinDesk as well as big crypto firms such as exchanges Coinbase (COIN) and Binance. CoinDesk isn't materially owed anything and is on the list for "technical reasons" over a podcast sponsorship signed in the fall that was never executed, a spokesperson said.

American Airlines Group (AAL), Spirit Airlines (SAVE) and Southwest Airlines (LUV), as well as Stanford University – where FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's parents work as professors – and the university's credit union were also listed in the document.

The list also names Gisele Bundchen Charitable Giving as a creditor. The Brazilian supermodel and then husband Tom Brady were famously invested in the company, even appearing in its Super Bowl ad.

The document doesn't show the amount each is owed, but the company had previously revealed it owed about $3.1 billion to its top 50 creditors. Of FTX’s previously estimated 1 million creditors, the two-largest single claims were for $226 million and $203 million.

Bankman-Fried has pleaded not guilty to fraud charges levied against him by U.S. regulators in New York. The collapse of FTX has damaged crypto markets, and the industry's reputation, as regulators are now clamoring to set up more guardrails to protect against investor harm and risk of contagion. FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware in November.

Read more: FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried Borrowed From Alameda to Buy Robinhood Shares

UPDATE (Jan. 26, 15:20 UTC): Adds comment from CoinDesk in fourth paragraph.

Advertisement