How Sam Bankman Went From 0 To $27 Billion In 4 Years - YouTube

Channel: unknown

[0]
I’m sure you’ve all heard about random college students and young adults turning
[3]
a couple hundred or thousand dollars into hundreds of thousand or even millions by investing
[8]
into momentum cryptos.
[10]
There was even some guy who turned $8000 into $5.7 billion by investing into Shiba Inu.
[16]
If you’ve made life changing amounts of money with these altcoins congratulations,
[19]
that’s really quite awesome.
[21]
But, there’s someone who’s making a lot more than all of these guys while taking on
[25]
far less risk, and that’s of course the crypto brokerages.
[28]
You know what they say, when there’s a gold rush, you don’t wanna be digging for gold,
[32]
you wanna be selling the shovels, and that’s exactly what Sam Bankman did.
[36]
In May of 2019, Sam launched his crypto trading platform FTX, and now he’s worth $26.5 billion.
[42]
And did I mention that he's only 29 years old.
[46]
Forbes claims that Sam is actually the richest person in crypto.
[50]
Satoshi Nakamoto is of course richer, but if we just look at known figures, Forbes is
[54]
probably right.
[56]
So, here’s the story of Sam Bankman, and how he became the richest known crypto figure.
[63]
Taking a look back, Sam was born on March 6, 1992 in Stanford, California.
[67]
Both of his parents were law professors at Stanford, so I think it’s safe to assume
[71]
that Sam had a well off childhood.
[73]
He spent a lot of his free time reading Harry Potter and watching the San Francisco giants.
[77]
As for school, he attended a small private school in the bay before scoring a spot at
[82]
MIT where he majored in physics.
[84]
Physics is one of the hardest majors to complete if not the hardest, and Sam was doing it at
[89]
MIT, so you would think that college consumed all of his time.
[92]
But, Sam says that he was able to half ass his way through it.
[95]
Apparently, he spent most of his time playing video games including Starcraft and League
[99]
of Legends as opposed to studying.
[101]
So, we’re probably looking at a child prodigy.
[104]
Initially, Sam was looking to become a physics professor similar to his parents, but as he
[109]
developed a strong interest in ethics and morality, he slowly strayed away from this
[112]
path.
[113]
Sam was especially interested in effective altruism and utilitarianism.
[117]
Instead of donating money to trendy causes, Sam believes that one should donate money
[121]
to causes that will objectively do the most good.
[124]
For example, causes that save the most amount of lives or create the most amount of income
[127]
per dollar donated.
[129]
In order to make such an impact though, Sam knew that he needed big money and he simply
[133]
wasn’t going to get there by being a professor.
[136]
So, instead of pursuing higher level degrees, Sam took on a lucrative finance job at a quantitative
[140]
firm called Jane Street Capital.
[142]
Unlike other crypto billionaires, Sam never really cared about crypto and he wasn't an
[146]
early adopter by any means.
[148]
In fact, crypto didn’t catch his attention till 2017 when Bitcoin was running from a
[153]
few thousand dollars to $20 thousand.
[155]
Even then, he didn’t really care about the fundamentals of Bitcoin or what it stood for.
[160]
He wasn’t interested in Bitcoin’s promise of being an inflation hedge or it’s decentralized
[164]
nature.
[165]
What he was interested in though was Bitcoin’s inefficient markets.
[168]
One day, Sam noticed that you could buy bitcoin in the US and sell it on secondary markets
[172]
for a substantially larger amount.
[174]
And that’s how it all started.
[176]
Sam says quote, “I got involved in crypto without any idea what crypto was.
[180]
It just seemed like there was a lot of good trading to do.”
[183]
Something else that attracted Sam to crypto was the lack of regulation.
[187]
Opening up a traditional trading firm requires a lot of licenses and help from lawyers which
[190]
is not cheap.
[192]
But, with crypto, basically anyone could open a trading firm especially if it wasn’t based
[196]
in the US.
[198]
Sam wasn’t the only one trying to leverage this opportunity though.
[201]
Exploiting this price difference to make profits is actually an established form of trading
[204]
called arbitrage trading.
[206]
Anyway, Sam would end up quitting his job and he would start an arbitrage crypto trading
[210]
firm called Alameda research in October of 2017.
[213]
Initially, it was just him and a couple of recent college graduates, but despite the
[217]
rookie nature of their startup, it didn’t take long for them to raise a lot of money.
[221]
Given Sam’s experience working on Wall Street, he was able to brand himself as the wall street
[225]
professional that was offering crypto trading services.
[228]
Combine this with the fact that the rest of wall street didn’t want to associate with
[231]
crypto at least not publicly, and the extreme fomo associated with the 2017 bull run, and
[236]
Sam was able to raise millions within a few months.
[238]
By January of 2018, Sam was trading $25 million worth of Bitcoin per day, but this was the
[244]
peak of the Bitcoin bull run and things only went downhill from there.
[248]
Sam wasn’t worried about the hype dying off though as he had sensed a much larger
[252]
opportunity.
[253]
As he was trading millions of dollars per day, he noticed that existing crypto brokerages
[256]
were trash when it came to trading.
[258]
The popular crypto brokerages like Coinbase had spent all of their effort on making crypto
[262]
purchases as seamless as possible for individual investors.
[266]
And while they were phenomenal at this, they weren’t very good at handling high speed
[269]
trade volume from traders.
[271]
So, Sam decided to create his own crypto brokerage that would be tailored towards crypto traders.
[276]
Over the next several months, Sam became more involved with the crypto community by attending
[279]
various crypto conferences and meeting with various crypto investors and traders from
[283]
around the world.
[284]
After attending a crypto conference in Macau China, Sam would actually choose to move to
[287]
Hong Kong, and this is where he would launch FTX.
[291]
Sam took profits from Alameda and worked with a couple of venture capital firms to raise
[294]
a total of $8 million which he would use to develop FTX throughout the beginning of 2019.
[300]
With $8 million and all of his experience, Sam was able to develop the perfect platform
[304]
for traders, and he eagerly launched FTX in May of 2019.
[308]
But to Sam’s disappointment the launch of FTX was nothing like the launch of Alameda.
[312]
Alameda was launched during the peak of the bull run when many investors were desperate
[316]
to get into crypto.
[317]
But by may of 2019, Bitcoin had crashed 80%, Ethereum had crashed 94% and there was little
[323]
to no hype left.
[325]
It was basically just the hodlers and bag holders left and these guys had no interest
[330]
in trading.
[331]
Sam even hired a dozen salesmen to stand around at WeWork locations to try to convince traders
[336]
to give FTX a shot, but still no one was interested.
[339]
So, Sam started to think outside of the box.
[341]
Bitcoin no longer had hype, so he couldn’t rely on momentum traders who rode the wave
[345]
up and down.
[346]
But, something that Bitcoin still very much had was volatility.
[349]
So, Sam decided to lean in on the volatility by introducing crypto derivatives.
[353]
If you’re not familiar with derivatives, it’s basically just leveraged trading through
[357]
the use of options, futures, and margin.
[360]
Now, I cannot understate how dangerous these are.
[363]
Trading derivatives on stocks itself is super dangerous.
[366]
And you could argue that crypto itself is more dangerous than stock derivatives.
[370]
So, when you're trading derivatives on crypto, you’re basically trading derivatives of
[374]
derivatives.
[376]
To make things even worse, there’s very little regulation in crypto trading, so the
[379]
leverage you can take is sky high.
[381]
On stocks, you’d be hard pressed to find 1x leverage without using options.
[385]
Meanwhile, FTX offers up to 20x leverage.
[389]
This means that with $10,000 in cash, you can control $200,000 worth of Bitcoin.
[393]
If Bitcoin rises just 5% you double your money, but the thing that people forget is that if
[399]
bitcoin just drops 5%, you lose everything.
[402]
I don’t think I need to explain why this is extremely dangerous.
[405]
Ideally, Sam was looking to attract professional traders who knew the risk and had experience
[410]
with leverage.
[411]
But naturally, he ended up attracting a large number of retail gamblers looking for a moonshot
[416]
opportunity.
[417]
Nonetheless, this was extremely lucrative.
[418]
By May of 2020, FTX had grown to 200,000 users with daily trading volume of $1 billion.
[425]
And since then, things have just gone to the moon.
[427]
As of October, FTX boasted a total of 2 million users with daily trading volume of $11.5 billion.
[433]
Now, to put that in perspective, Coinbase has 68 million users or 34 times FTX.
[438]
Yet, they only average about $5 billion per day in volume which works out to about $74
[443]
per person per day.
[445]
Meanwhile, FTX averages $5,750 per day per person.
[449]
Now, FTX only charges a fee of 0.005% to 0.07% per transaction, but with $11.5 billion per
[457]
day, we’re talking about somewhere between half a million per day to 8 million per day.
[462]
If we estimate in the middle and call it $4 million, we’re looking at about $1.5 billion
[467]
in revenue per year.
[468]
And given that the business has very little overhead, Forbes estimates that their profit
[472]
margin is about 50%.
[474]
Aside from crypto derivatives, FTX has also introduced tokens of popular stocks like Apple.
[478]
This allows investors from underprivileged areas to safely participate in the American
[482]
stock market.
[483]
FTX also introduced their own token which now accounts for a large part of Sam’s wealth.
[488]
Given all of this exposure to crypto, you would think that Sam is a massive believer
[491]
in crypto, but this is actually not the case.
[495]
Now, it’s not like Sam is calling for Bitcoin to go to 0, but he’s also not calling for
[499]
it to go to the moon.
[501]
He didn’t enter the crypto markets based on conviction, he entered based on opportunity
[505]
and that’s the only reason he’s still there.
[507]
At this point, he’s just hoping that crypto survives long enough for him to give away
[511]
his wealth as the only thing Sam has conviction in is giving away all his money.
[515]
If that’s through crypto and FTX, great, but if crypto goes down and something else
[519]
emerges, he’s just as fine with switching to that instead.
[523]
Right now, he’s reinvesting all of his profits back into the business given that the company
[527]
is only 2.5 years old.
[529]
But even through that, he’s managed to donate $25 million.
[532]
Sam hopes that by riding out the crypto wave and holding off to sell, he can donate over
[536]
900 times that or about $22.5 billion.
[539]
Now, I don’t want to take away from his generosity, but I do think it should be noted
[544]
that Sam’s donations so far haven’t necessarily been as altruistic as he originally proposed.
[549]
Last year, Sam donated $5.2 million to Joe Biden’s campaign which made him the second
[554]
largest individual donor only beaten out by Michael Bloomberg.
[557]
And I think we can all agree that political donations are some of the least effective
[561]
donations when it comes to altruistic motives.
[563]
So, hopefully, Sam does eventually focus on the altruistic avenues that he originally
[567]
described, but only time will tell.
[569]
In the meantime, that’s how Sam Bankman went from 0 to $26.5 billion in just four
[574]
years.
[575]
Do you guys believe that Sam will actually follow through and donate all his money.
[578]
And if so, do you think his donations will actually be as altruistic as he describes?
[582]
Comment that down below.
[584]
Also, drop a like if you wish you could make $26.5 billion in 4 years.
[588]
And of course, consider joining our discord community to suggest future video ideas and
[592]
consider subscribing to see more questions logically answered.