Sequoia Capital marks down entire $214M FTX stake to zero

Cryptocurrency

Venture capital firm Sequoia Capital tweeted out a letter sent to its partners on Nov. 10 revealing the firm had marked its $213.5 million investments in FTX and FTX US down to $0, claiming them as a complete loss.

The letter said that the crisis facing FTX has “created a solvency risk” but claimed its exposure to the exchange is “limited” in its Global Growth Fund III, where its cost basis for the FTX portion of the fund totaled $150 million.

Sequoia also reassured its partners that the writing off of FTX wouldn’t have a detrimental impact on the fund, saying it accounted for less than 3% of the capital committed to it, adding:

“The $150M loss is offset by ~$7.5B in realized and unrealized gains in the same fund, so the fund remains in good shape.”

The venture capital firm also reported to have invested $63.5 million into FTX and FTX US from its Sequoia Capital Global Equities Fund, however, the holdings represented less than 1% of the entire portfolio.

Sequoia’s investments into the now cash-strapped cryptocurrency exchange came as part of FTX’s $900 million Series B investment round in July 2021 — which was the largest crypto investment ever recorded at the time.

As for the investment decision, Sequoia reassured its partners that it extensively researches each and every investment with thorough diligence, and FTX was no different:

“At the time of our investment in FTX, we ran a rigorous due diligence process. In 2021, the year of our investment, FTX generated approximately $1B in revenue and more than $250M in operating income.”

“We are in the business of taking risk. Some investments will surprise to the upside, and some will surprise to the downside,” the letter explained.

Related: Breaking: FTX’s Binance rescue deal falls apart in less than 48 hours

Sequoia added that it would communicate its next movements to its partners when more information becomes available.

Sequoia Capital currently has about $85 billion of assets under management, and has previously made early investments in tech giants Apple and Google and more recently Airbnb.

Articles You May Like

Bank of England holds interest rates at 4.75%
Nick Candy vows to help Reform disrupt British politics ‘like we have never seen’
Hospitals could be hurting if Trump, GOP slash Medicaid
Municipals close tumultuous week steadier, but damage done to returns
Matt Gaetz accused of paying for sex and using drugs by US congressional panel