The financial world is watching with a mixture of cynicism and curiosity as Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder of FTX, now serving a 25-year sentence for fraud, prepares a legal bid for a presidential pardon from Donald Trump. This is not a sign of repentance but a tactical move in a high-stakes gamble that smacks of desperation. Bankman-Fried’s legal team, ever the optimists, believe that Trump’s unpredictable nature and his well-documented disdain for the regulatory establishment might just swing the door open. But let us be clear: this is a long shot, and the markets are not pricing in any probability of success.
The mechanics of this pardon are as murky as the balance sheets of FTX. A presidential pardon is an act of clemency that absolves an individual of federal crimes, but it does not erase the civil liabilities. Bankman-Fried still owes billions to creditors, and a pardon would not restore his reputation. Moreover, Trump’s own legal troubles make him a volatile ally. Why would a man fighting multiple indictments risk political capital for a convicted fraudster? The answer lies in the symbiotic relationship between power and money, but the FTX collapse burned too many investors, including high-profile Republicans.
Market reality: this is a distraction. Bitcoin has not moved on the news, and FTX’s native token, FTT, remains a zombie asset. The real story is the ongoing liquidation of FTX’s assets by the bankruptcy team, which is returning a fraction of the original value. Institutional investors have already written off their losses, and retail investors are left holding the bag. A pardon would not change that.
The broader implications for crypto regulation are more significant. If Trump were to pardon Bankman-Fried, it would be a signal that the US government is not serious about enforcing financial laws in the crypto space. That would be disastrous for market stability, because trust is the only currency that matters in a digital asset ecosystem. Central banks and regulators are already tightening the screws, and a pardon would embolden every cowboy in the industry. Expect more volatility, more scams, and eventually, a brutal reckoning.
In the City of London, we have seen this play before. The 2008 crisis was a lesson in how hubris and regulatory capture lead to disaster. Bankman-Fried is no different from the bankers who were bailed out, except he wore a hoodie and traded in tokens. The system is designed to protect itself, and a pardon would be a bug, not a feature. The gilt market will not tremble, but the crypto market will see a surge in speculative bets that will ultimately end in tears.
For now, the legal battle deepens. Bankman-Fried’s appeal is pending, and the pardon request is a parallel track. The DOJ is likely to oppose it, and the courts will not interfere. Trump, if elected, could issue a pardon on day one, but the political cost is high. The American public has not forgotten the lost billions, and the media will have a field day.
The bottom line: Bankman-Fried is clutching at straws, and the market is wise to it. The only winners here are the lawyers. For the rest of us, this is a cautionary tale about the seduction of easy money and the illusion of redemption. Gilt yields remain elevated, inflation is stickier than a bad debt, and the Bank of England is watching. As always, the markets are the ultimate judge.









