Former U.S Secretary of Treasury Lawrence Summers Compares FTX Collapse to Enron Fraud – In an interview with Bloomberg Television on Friday, former Secretary of the Treasury Lawrence Summers discussed his opinion on the necessity of cryptocurrency regulation in light of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX crypto empire’s collapse. From 1999 to 2001, Summers headed the Treasury Department of the United States. He is currently the Charles W. Eliot Professor at Harvard University. “A lot of people have compared this to Lehman. I would compare it to Enron,” he began, elaborating: “The smartest guys in the room. Not just financial error but whiffs of fraud. Stadium namings very early in a company’s history. Vast explosion of wealth that nobody quite understands where it comes from.”
Houston, Texas-based Enron was a company that provided energy. Its executives used numerous illegal accounting techniques to hide billions of dollars in debt from shareholders. In December 2001, the company declared chapter 11 bankruptcy, which revealed extensive accounting and corporate fraud. “I think the regulatory community ought to draw two lessons from this. One, if we had a few fewer economists and quants and a few more forensic accountants running around, I think it would help us detect what was going on in countries and in companies. The more I watch, the more forensic accounting seems to be important,” he detailed.
“The other is, I think, we ought to have a rule in everything that touches finance that everyone who has anything to do with it in a position of responsibility has to be entirely away from the office, away from their phone, away from any device and connection to the system for a week or two continuously each year. I suspect that would be very helpful in causing some of these problems to come to light sooner,” Summers further opined.
The former treasury secretary stressed: “This is probably less about the complexities of the nuances of the rules of crypto regulation and more about some very basic financial principles that go back to financial scandals that took place in ancient Rome.” FTX announced Friday that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as users raced to withdraw their assets following the plunge of the FTX token (FTT). As part of the bankruptcy filings, John J. Ray III was appointed the new chief executive of FTX Group after Bankman-Fried stepped down. Ray was the lawyer brought on to clean up Enron.
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