Binance’s Changpeng Zhao Clings To Multibillion-Dollar Fortune After Guilty Plea

On his way to the heights of crypto, Changpeng Zhao postured as though he couldn’t be bothered with the concept of his wealth. “I don’t really know what my net worth is. I’m not too bothered about it,” he told Forbes in the summer of 2021.

On Tuesday, U.S. prosecutors painted a different portrait of Binance’s chief. Zhao, who goes by CZ, pled guilty to federal money laundering charges, admitting to skirting U.S. regulations and evading sanctions laws on his quest for crypto market dominance, which in turn bolstered his fortune.

“The purpose of the conspiracy was to allow Binance.com… to gain market share and profit as quickly as possible,” the U.S. complaint states. Zhao, in addition to stepping down as CEO, has agreed to pay $50 million in the Department of Justice case, while Binance is on the hook for $4.3 billion–one of the largest ever corporate penalties. Zhao also faces up to ten years in prison. (To resolve a separate case brought earlier this year by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Zhao must also pay a $150 million fine.)

Though Zhao is barred from involvement with Binance for three years, he gets to keep his majority stake in Binance, which means he may emerge from his plea deal as one of the richest convicted felons in the world–and still by far the wealthiest person in crypto.

Zhao’s estimated 90% stake in Binance, which accounts for the vast majority of his fortune, is now worth an estimated $15 billion, Forbes estimates. That’s up from $10.5 billion in April, when Forbes published the 2023 World’s Billionaires list. Binance has generated upward of $3 billion in revenue the last 12 months, Forbes estimates, based on an analysis of the exchange’s spot and derivatives trading volumes (as tracked by CoinGecko), while also accounting for Binance’s alleged spoof or wash trades, which create the appearance of more customer activity than actually exists. (Binance has denied this.)

A recovery in crypto markets has driven up Binance’s valuation. Bitcoin’s price, a barometer of the industry, has more than doubled this year to date to $36,500 as crypto markets rallied in the aftermath of FTX’s implosion. Shares of Coinbase, a Binance competitor, have more than tripled since early January. Collectively, the market value of major cryptocurrencies has grown by $600 billion this year.

Despite the tailwinds in crypto, Binance now faces its own unique reality, one in which an independent compliance monitor will supervise its activity for three years and report its findings to the U.S. government. Those constraints may hamper Binance’s revenues, threatening its position as the leading global crypto exchange.

“Their influence and market share is going to drop precipitously,” says Mike Alfred, a crypto investor and longtime critic of Zhao and Binance. “The world in which Binance was winning and gaining market share was a world in which anything could be done at any time if it suited CZ, [and] if there was a profit in it.”

Whether Binance is able to maintain its market share as a cryptocurrency exchange will determine the direction of Zhao’s fortune. Binance facilitated 32% of spot trades and 50% of derivatives trades in October, according to a report from CCData – though its share in spot markets has declined for eight consecutive months, per the report.

Alternatively, Tuesday’s plea deal could help Binance by removing the cloud that’s been hanging over its head, says Owen Lau, a crypto and financial exchange analyst at Oppenheimer & Co. “People concerned by the prosecutors have left [Binance] already. Today’s announcement gives them some comfort that they can come back,” Lau said on Tuesday. “To me, it could have some positive effect on Binance. The super downside – that Binance becomes a dead business – has not played out. They’re still operational.”

Richard Teng, Binance’s newly appointed CEO, insists the company is positioned for future growth. “The fundamentals of our business are VERY strong,” he said in a tweet.

Since the news of the plea deal came out, Binance has experienced a net outflow of about $956 million on Ethereum, though its total crypto holdings remain above $65 billion, according to tracking site Nansen. “At the time of writing, withdrawals are continuing, and we’re not seeing a mass exodus of funds,” Nansen tweeted this morning.

As part of the settlement with the DOJ, an independent compliance monitor will be surveying Binance. As a result, the exchange will bleed customers as it falls behind more agile competitors, predicts Alfred. “If you went down the list of things that need to be fixed at Binance, it’s literally thousands of bullet points long,” Alfred says. “Other ventures that are coming up that are more growth oriented will take share.”

Zhao, a programmer by training, founded Binance in 2017 with a $15 million crowdsale. From its early days, Binance was favored by crypto traders and developers for its speed of execution and new products. Zhao’s tolerance for risk and brash approach fueled the company’s growth, but also put Binance on the radar of financial cops and regulators. “Wherever I sit, is going to be the Binance office,” he infamously told Coindesk in 2020.

China, Singapore and Malta were all way stations for Zhao and a small group of loyal lieutenants, until regulatory pressures forced them to remain on the move. Binance attempted to set up a European homebase in London, only to be spurned by regulators and accused of fraud by partners. Zhao ultimately moved to the United Arab Emirates; he’s lived in Dubai since 2021.

The company’s growth fueled a lavish lifestyle for Zhao. Using offshore entities controlled by his longtime deputy Heina Chen, Zhao splashed out $55 million for a private jet, spent $11 million on a yacht, distributed $62.5 million to one of his personal bank accounts, and directed another $178 million to two Singapore companies controlled by Zhao and Chen, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission, which filed charges against Zhao and Binance in June. The SEC alleged that Binance sold unregistered securities to U.S. customers. (Zhao and Binance deny the allegations and continue to fight the SEC charges, which are separate from those settled this week.)

Forbes’ $15 billion net worth estimate for Zhao does not include a personal investment portfolio. But he could have one worth several billion dollars, depending on how much of Binance’s profits he squirreled away for himself over the years. He previously told Forbes that he owned about 1,400 Bitcoins – currently worth about $36 million.

Zhao could even stage a return to Binance’s leadership after the company’s three-year period of supervision by an independent compliance monitor, according to the plea agreement.

In the meantime, Zhao plans to “probably do some passive investing” in crypto, AI and biotech, he said in a tweet on Tuesday. Zhao previously told Forbes he intended to donate between 90% and 99% of his wealth to charitable causes. “Hopefully, sooner than later,” Zhao had said. There was no mention of charitable giving in his recent tweet.



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Checks & Imbalances: New York AG ‘Identified Likely Omissions’ In Trump Organization’s Response To Subpoenas

Today we look at the latest news from Donald Trump’s ongoing trial in New York.


This Is The Evidence Forbes Has That Trump’s Former CFO Lied Under Oath

Donald Trump’s former chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, testified last week in a fraud case that the New York attorney general is waging against the former president and his associates, including Weisselberg, reports Dan Alexander. During that testimony, Weisselberg lied about Trump’s penthouse apartment at Trump Tower, saying “That was never a concern of mine. I never even thought about the apartment.”

Forbes published a story last week laying out the truth. “A review of old emails and notes, some of which the attorney general’s office does not possess, show that Weisselberg absolutely thought about Trump’s apartment—and played a key role in trying to convince Forbes over the course of several years that it was worth more than it really was,” the story said.

Weisselberg’s testimony abruptly stopped after the article came out. Citing the story, the attorney general’s office explained to a judge in a letter dated October 18th that it identified “likely omissions from production around inquiries from Forbes in 2016.” The attorney general’s office went on to suggest that a monitor should conduct a forensic examination of Trump Organization data to make sure that the real estate firm produced all required documents.

Forbes does not know whether the Trump Organization produced all of its documents. The evidence that Forbes has that Weisselberg lied, which the attorney general’s office certainly does not have, is a collection of notes taken by Forbes reporters who were in touch with the Trump Organization over the years while estimating the size of Trump’s fortune. It is those notes that show Weisselberg thought about his boss’ penthouse a lot—contrary to his testimony—and that he consistently pushed Forbes to overvalue it.

MORE FROM FORBESThis Is The Evidence Forbes Has That Trump’s Former CFO Lied Under Oath

Tracking Trump

How Trump Fooled Deutsche Bank

The New York attorney general is suing Donald Trump and his associates for allegedly lying about his net worth to financial institutions, something he also did for years when speaking with reporters. Why would someone so rich care so much about what people thought he was worth? “It was good for financing,” Trump said in a 2015 interview with Forbes.

But despite Trump’s bluster, it long remained unclear whether his lies actually were good for financing. After all, banks conduct due diligence on borrowers. But documents submitted into evidence during the trial last week show that Trump’s longtime go-to lender, Deutsche Bank, fell for many of his lies, giving the bank a distorted view of its most famous client, reports Dan Alexander.

MORE FROM FORBESHow Trump Fooled Deutsche Bank

Trump Told CFO He Wanted Net Worth To ‘Go Up’ On Financial Statements, Exec Testifies At Trial

Former President Donald Trump told his ex-CFO Allen Weisselberg he wanted his net worth to “go up” on financial statements, a Trump Organization executive testified in court Monday, reports Alison Durkee. New York Attorney General Letitia James is arguing that the ex-president and his company committed fraud by intentionally inflating the value of their assets.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump Told CFO He Wanted Net Worth To ‘Go Up’ On Financial Statements, Exec Testifies At Trial

Trump’s SPAC Now Says Its 2021 Financial Statements ‘Should No Longer Be Relied Upon’

The company planning to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of the Truth Social platform, has now walked away from two years of financial statements after informing the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday that its audited financials for 2021 “should no longer be relied upon.”

In May, Digital World Acquisition Corp issued a similar notice to the SEC regarding its financial statements for the year ending Dec. 31, 2022.

MORE FROM FORBESTrump’s SPAC Now Says Its 2021 Financial Statements ‘Should No Longer Be Relied Upon’

By The Numbers

$526.08

The amount the campaign of Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) spent at the Amarillo Club in July and August, according to filings made last week. In December 2021, the Office of Congressional Ethics found “substantial reason to believe” that Jackson violated the law by previously spending campaign funds at the club. The investigation moved on to the House Ethics Committee. In May 2022, that panel disclosed that it’s still investigating the matter. It has not provided another update.

Hundreds

The number of NDAs that were scrapped after a federal judge formalized a settlement agreement last week between Trump’s 2016 campaign and staffers.

1

The number of accounts the Biden campaign is following on Truth Social—just Donald Trump’s.


House Democratic Lawmaker Floats George W. Bush For Next Speaker Of The House

On “Forbes Newsroom,” Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) floated the idea of electing former President George W. Bush the next Speaker of the House.


From The News Desk

Here’s How Much Chris Christie Is Worth

Plenty of politicians make big money after leaving office: Just ask Nikki Haley, Mike Pence or Joe Biden, who all tapped into tried-and-true moneymaking methods for political figures—writing books, giving speeches, doing consulting or sitting on boards. But of all the people running for president today, nobody has played the game better than Chris Christie, reports Kyle Mullins.

The former New Jersey governor and his wife, Mary Pat, reported $1 million to $2 million in assets when Christie left office in 2018, plus a $1.3 million house in Morris County, New Jersey. Today, the couple is worth $15 million, according to Forbes’ estimates, meaning their net worth has roughly quadrupled. The Christies now have two homes in the Garden State, worth roughly $6 million total, plus a sizable portfolio of investments, a large pension from Christie’s law firm and two smaller ones from his time in government.

How’d they build such a big fortune in such a short period of time? By doing what Haley, Pence and Biden did, but on a bigger scale. Christie, a lifelong public servant who was among the poorest 2015 presidential hopefuls, is now one of the richest people vying for the Oval Office in 2024.

MORE FROM FORBESHere’s How Much Chris Christie Is Worth

Here’s How Much House Majority Leader Steve Scalise Is Worth

House majority leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) came up short in his battle to secure the 217 votes needed to replace ousted House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). But with the GOP still unable to coalesce behind a colleague, who knows what’s next? The New Orleans native has never run from a fight, rapidly returning to Congress after he was shot by a left-wing extremist in 2017—and again in September, after announcing he was diagnosed with cancer in August.

If Scalise does come back to claim the speakership, he will earn his second pay raise in less than a year, a $30,100 bump from his current $193,400 Congressional salary, reports Matt Durot. That would be substantial for the 58-year-old Scalise, whose nearly 30-year government career has yielded him a net worth of about $350,000, according to Forbes’ estimates.

MORE FROM FORBESHere’s How Much GOP House Speaker Nominee Steve Scalise Is Worth

Quiz

Digital World Acquisition Corp. announced plans to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group in October 2021. In the two years since the intended deal was made public, what has not happened?

a. The SEC charged a former Digital World board member and two others with insider trading of the stock.

b. Digital World settled fraud charges with the commission for “making material misrepresentations” in its pre-IPO filings.

c. Investors backed out of $467 million in commitments.

d. The merger was finalized.

Check if you got it right here.

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