At the end of September, 15 months after his crypto hedge fund, Three Arrows Capital, collapsed spectacularly with billions of dollars in debts owed, fueling a chain reaction of implosions of other crypto firms around the world, Su Zhu was arrested in departures at Singapore’s Changi Airport. Dressed in a navy-blue T-shirt — sunglasses clipped to his crew neck — over dark-khaki pants and black sneakers, Zhu was headed to Hong Kong, where he’d been working on a couple of new business ventures in an attempt to stage a career comeback. (The first of those companies, OPNX, shut down in early February; more on that later.) Instead of getting on a plane, Zhu was cuffed, charged with contempt of court, and marched next door to the local prison to serve a four-month sentence for failing to cooperate with the liquidators overseeing 3AC’s bankruptcy.

“Su’s prison time certainly caught him by surprise — no one wants to go to jail,” Kyle Davies, Zhu’s business partner and co-founder at 3AC, told me. Davies was also sentenced to four months in prison on the same charges but has so far skirted prison time, largely by refusing to be found. Teneo, the firm still attempting to liquidate 3AC’s remaining assets and pay back at least some of its debts, is still trying to locate Davies. (Unlike Zhu, Davies has not been seen in Singapore since 3AC blew up in June 2022.) In February, Davies told me he was in Portugal. In the year and a half prior, he had bounced around between Bali, Spain, and other parts of Europe (including Lake Como, he has said). But when I pressed him on specific regions — Lisbon? Surf villages? Wine country? — he declined to respond. The liquidators wrote in their most recent report to creditors that “whilst they have a good understanding of where he is currently located, it is noted that he has yet to provide meaningful cooperation.”

For many crypto observers, prison seemed the inevitable destination for the duo behind Three Arrows Capital. As I detailed in a 2022 cover story, they met at an elite Massachusetts prep school, both went to Columbia University and did a stint on Wall Street, and rose to global crypto rock-star status together before blowing up their fund and hiding out in Asia and the Middle East as creditors accused them of fraud and of misrepresenting their finances. At 3AC’s peak, the founders have said, the fund held between $5 billion and $10 billion in crypto assets. Zhu and Davies bought a superyacht and named it Much Wow (after the dogecoin meme) but disappeared before making the final payment. At one point, Teneo was forced to serve Zhu and Davies subpoenas via Twitter — unprecedented at the time — after exhausting all other avenues to reach them in the real world. While Zhu was in prison, many of his fellow fallen crypto kingpins were meeting similar fates: Sam Bankman-Fried was convicted of fraud after his company FTX collapsed months after 3AC did; Do Kwon, the entrepreneur behind the cryptocurrency luna, whose failure contributed to the demise of 3AC and others, was ordered to be extradited to face charges in the U.S. and South Korea; and Changpeng Zhao, the former CEO of Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, pleaded guilty to anti-money-laundering violations in the U.S.

But Zhu’s contempt-of-court conviction was extremely minor by comparison with what those others faced, and he did not remain behind bars for long. In late November, after just two months of incarceration, he was allowed to serve the rest of his sentence under house arrest wearing an ankle bracelet. From the comfort of his own home, he picked up again as a crypto influencer, posting aphorisms, images of bulls (connoting his perennially bullish “supercycle” crypto thesis), and memes on his widely followed X account. Just three weeks later, right before Christmas, Zhu was released early for good behavior.

An aggressive prosecution of Zhu and Davies in the U.S. or elsewhere is still entirely possible. But the pair’s continued jet-setting, social-media influencing, and launching of questionable new crypto ventures have at least created the impression that they are the biggest players in the crypto collapse of 2022 — during which investors lost collectively hundreds of billions of dollars, often in legally questionable projects — to avoid major legal consequences. Far from expressing remorse, the two men seem to be embracing that status as the centerpiece of a new brand.

Zhu emerged from his weeks in prison changed in a couple of important ways. For one, many of his tweets and online appearances were suddenly in Chinese, though in the past he had generally used English. Among them was a poll asking his followers whether they believed he was already out of prison (nearly half of respondents said “no”). “After I experienced liquidation, Chinese friends encouraged me to find ways to rise again, while westerners continued to criticize,” Zhu, who was born in Beijing and moved to the U.S. after kindergarten, said in a Mandarin ask-me-anything livestream on X early this year.

Secondly, Zhu framed his incarceration as an almost Nelson Mandela–like experience of transformation and enlightenment, speaking of how it sharpened his senses and boosted his brainpower. “I think that it’s actually a really enjoyable experience overall — like, I would say not to the point of, like, highly recommending it per se, but I would say that it’s something that if everyone got to experience once, I think it’s definitely good for you,” Zhu said of prison in his first English-language podcast since his release. “After, I felt like my mind was so clean. I got much better at basketball as well. Like, you just — the way you can see the ball. The way you, like, see things — completely different. Like, my eyesight got better as well. It’s honestly insane.” He said he read the Bible (both Testaments) and the Quran in Indonesian “front to back.” There were three meals a day plus “lots of fruits”; a freedom to “do all the push-ups you want”; a mat for sleeping on the floor, instead of a bed, which was “really good” for his back; and a 5:30 a.m. wake-up call. “Actually, like, I had the best sleep of my life in prison,” he said. “And it’s a really magical feeling. Because you feel, like, a kinship with your ancestors.” Zhu and Davies said they were recording a new podcast on MLK Day — “No better way to remember the king,” Zhu posted — though they never released it.

Denying all wrongdoing and acknowledging no fault, Zhu spins his time behind bars as less a punishment than a résumé credential. “I mean, that’s why, like, if you look at rap songs, so much of it is rapping about prison,” he said on a podcast. “It’s because they’re trying to prove their indifference between inside, outside. They’re trying to say, like, ‘I’m harder than you because I’m much more indifferent to it than you are,’ right? ‘Whereas you’re soft because you need the outside comfort.’”

What Zhu did not seem eager to discuss was that, as he walked out of prison, he was served papers notifying him that the liquidators had filed a nearly $1.1 billion claim against him and Davies for trading after 3AC was insolvent. A court had also ordered that all their assets, worldwide, be frozen along with those of Davies’s wife, Kelly Chen, in whose name he’d put much of his wealth. In early December, Zhu was called before a Singapore court to answer questions from Teneo, which had been unable to obtain the information it needed without his cooperation. Zhu and Davies had already been effectively exiled from Dubai, where they’d spent some time following 3AC’s collapse, after the government there levied fines against them. Now, with Singapore appearing willing to enforce the liquidators’ claims against them, that country, too — where both Zhu and Davies are citizens — was looking a lot less hospitable.

Among the most incriminating evidence brought forward against Zhu and Davies is a document they sent to at least one creditor as crypto markets were collapsing in May 2022, claiming 3AC had nearly $2.4 billion under management. Both lenders and people close to the liquidators now believe this number was false, grossly overstating the fund’s assets. “We firmly believe they committed fraud. There’s no other way to state it: That’s fraud — they lied,” Lane Kasselman, chief business officer of blockchain.com, told me after Three Arrows Capital filed for bankruptcy.

Zhu and Davies have presented the lack of serious consequences for their actions as evidence that they did nothing wrong. “We never misrepresented, nor did we borrow from individuals past any point of insolvency. If we did, there would be major repercussions by the way,” Davies said during a panel discussion on X in July when a questioner confronted him with receipts that 3AC was still trying to borrow bitcoin to trade up until the end. “There are not. Why are there not? There are not for a reason: Because we did not.”

Teneo has not ruled out the possibility of further charges, criminal or otherwise, as its investigation continues, though people close to the process note that it’s not the liquidators’ job to file the charges. Rather, that responsibility falls to regulators and prosecutors in the U.S. and other jurisdictions. Bloomberg reported in 2022 that the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission were probing possible rule violations by Three Arrows Capital.

Zhu and Davies have both pushed that perception of vindication in interviews (including with the New York Times), tweets, and appearances on friendly podcasts. In their telling, they were forced into liquidation against their wishes by a creditor (never mind that they filed for it themselves), and it was impossible to do anything but ghost their lenders, who were furiously recalling loans. “But for us, at that time — I don’t know, maybe I’m just too immature — I was not able to have those conversations,” Davies said during the X discussion. While Teneo has estimated that Zhu and Davies’s lack of cooperation has resulted in tens of millions of dollars in additional fees and legal expenses for the 3AC estate as it has tried to locate assets and investigate where the money went, Davies has insisted there was nothing more he could have done besides go “sit on a beach” in Bali while the professionals cleaned up the mess. “You are not in control. You can go on vacation if you want,” he said during the X conversation. “So if you ask me what I could have done in the following three, four months or whatever, there was nothing I could have done. Zero. Absolutely zero. The only thing that I should have done is spend time with family, because ultimately that’s what actually matters.”

Even when sympathetic interviewers have pushed them for signs of remorse, or a hint of how they felt after the damage they caused, Zhu and Davies have steadfastly resisted. “It was difficult. First of all, we lost an enormous amount of our net worth. Vast majority,” Davies offered on the X panel. “And you’re sorry about it? I just want to make sure that I —” asked an unconvinced host of the Analyse Asia podcast when Davies appeared on it last year. “Yeah, I wish things could have happened in a different way,” Davies responded. In the year after 3AC’s collapse, they’ve said they spent time surfing and taking psychedelics and, in Davies’s case, toying with opening a food cart.

Meanwhile, the pair have otherwise mostly avoided answering questions from journalists, including me. When I had asked Zhu for a phone or video call, he said he was too busy, citing the upcoming Chinese New Year. After initially suggesting we just text, he then invited me to Hong Kong for an in-person interview. When neither was feasible, he signaled he might be open to a video call — but not until several weeks after my deadline. Davies texted me several comments even after I told him I was only interested in a live interview, during which I could verify that he was really on the other end of the phone. He then sent me a Google Meet link and, when I joined the session, turned on his camera for exactly 15 seconds: “Hello, Jen! It’s Kyle Davies, formerly of Three Arrows Capital. I’m here to verify myself, um, but I have to continue on the Telegram group, so let’s continue on the chat. Okay?” he said and hopped off before I could say anything.

There is no better place to reinvent yourself than the world of crypto, where trillions of dollars of wealth have been created and destroyed out of thin air, often based solely on belief. “I believe, in reality, a significant portion of the cryptocurrency space operates on meme culture,” Zhu said during the AMA. “We all tend to invest in bitcoin because it represents something everyone believes in, transforming it from a meme into a tangible reality.” If they could create a new story about themselves, perhaps it could become real?

In early 2023, channeling that idea, Zhu and Davies tried to create a new business out of the flaming wreckage of their old one. At the time, they were in Dubai and connected with Mark Lamb, the CEO of CoinFLEX, a crypto exchange that had gone bankrupt in the summer of 2022. The trio came up with a plan: They could essentially repurpose CoinFLEX as an exchange that, instead of trading crypto, would trade bankruptcy claims held by creditors of the many crypto companies that had recently collapsed (including 3AC and Bankman-Fried’s FTX). This could allow creditors to recoup a portion of what they were owed before the larger cases were resolved — a process that often takes years. For all three failed crypto entrepreneurs, it would be lemonade from lemons. They called it OPNX.

With their Wall Street backgrounds, Zhu and Davies speak smoothly and professionally, and they convinced at least some creditors that they were capable entrepreneurs who deserved a second chance. “I got completely scammed by them. I bought into it,” said a person close to CoinFLEX who went along with the deal. “I was thinking, If you have a mad dog and you put a muzzle on him, you can have some control. But we didn’t even get a chance to put a muzzle on them.”

Others were more wary. “Su Zhu is a world class Machiavellian fuckstick,” Travis Kling, a former portfolio manager at Steve Cohen’s Point72 who now runs a crypto hedge fund, posted on X last summer in an attempt to warn his fellow FTX creditors to stay far away from OPNX. Kling has recently been vocal in criticizing the crypto industry’s unwillingness to excise and shun bad actors:

Finally, and this part is really important.

Su Zhu is a world class Machiavellian fuckstick.

Su and Kyle are terrible influences on this ecosystem. They’ve already done a tremendous amount of damage through fraudulent activities and they’re trying to do it again with Opnx.…

One of the first moves Zhu, Davies, and Lamb made was staging a photo shoot of the three of them on the Dubai waterfront, for which the CoinFLEX estate was billed $31,500, according to receipts the CoinFLEX board discovered when it began investigating how its creditor assets had been swept into OPNX last fall. Zhu and Davies had also been paying themselves a salary of $25,000 a month each from the estate — which, again, represented assets owed to people who lost money when the exchange went bust. The paychecks were in spite of the fact that Zhu and Davies had no official roles at OPNX; they called themselves advisers. Plus the company had covered the $2.7 million in fines that Zhu, Davies, Lamb, and OPNX owed in Dubai. “I come to find out these guys are pure sociopaths; they are very comfortable with lying. I’ve never met people so comfortable doing it,” said the person close to CoinFLEX. Their professed motivation to help creditors recover funds may also have been a façade. “‘Don’t be a debt slave to your creditors,’” Zhu repeated to the team, according to the person, adding that Zhu expressed this sentiment often. “Su’s exact words to me were ‘Nobody gives a fuck about the creditors.’”

Still, all of Zhu’s and Davies’s efforts did not yield a thriving business. At the beginning of February, OPNX abruptly announced it was shutting down, urging customers to withdraw their money immediately. FTX had just announced that its creditors would be made whole (thanks in part to rising bitcoin prices) and that the business opportunity in selling claims on the market had evaporated.

But Zhu and Davies had already moved on to a new idea. This was also an exchange — one they were calling OX.Fun. But this time they would not trade creditor claims but rather crypto tokens. So far, the tokens they’ve announced are of the exchange’s own making with names like OX and Milk and Autism. “$OX is an ecosystem, economy, community,” Davies wrote on X after OPNX announced it would shut down. Zhu later elaborated: “Ox.fun is a revolutionary new design for gamified perps trading, collat and profit/loss are entirely in OX, you earn high yields for completing missions, and you earn MILK when you realise losses.” (If this reads like nonsense to you, you are not alone.)

Here is the nub of the idea behind OX.Fun: In crypto, the ultimate power is to invent new assets (or to at least try to), and that’s what OX.Fun has done. Despite being its most public spokesmen, Zhu and Davies both claimed to me to be just “advisers” to a mysterious “team.” But when I asked, multiple times, who the CEO was and who was on the team, Zhu did not respond. Meanwhile, Zhu is at least talking like a leader of the firm. “This New Year, my primary focus has been on reflecting on the development of our new OX,” Zhu said in the AMA on the first business day of January. “Since the end of home detention, I finally had the time to focus on OX matters, and that’s what keeps me occupied.”

Some in the crypto industry seem to have forgiven Zhu and Davies for what happened at Three Arrows — and have even begun backing them again. One prominent example is David Bailey, the CEO of Bitcoin Magazine, which also hosts major industry conferences and runs a crypto investment portfolio. When 3AC blew up, Bailey was one of Zhu and Davies’s most outspoken critics, pointing out that their claims that Three Arrows had no outside investors were a lie because Bailey himself was one of them. “The more I learn about the 3AC situation the more I believe FRAUD was occurring. A lot of deceit,” he wrote on X. “I keep seeing it repeated they had no outside funds … not true. We had money parked with them, not very much but they still took it. I wonder how many other people did the same?” He later predicted Zhu and Bankman-Fried would end up roommates in jail.

In January, though, Zhu announced that Bailey — again, a 3AC creditor — was “one of our significant investors in OX.” Neither Bailey nor his business partner responded to multiple requests for comment. But during the panel with Davies on X in July, Bailey was supportive. “What I think matters is what you do after you get blown up — like, once you have knowledge of what’s happened or what’s gone wrong. What do you do, and how do you act?” he said. “I just want to say to people who are criticizing Kyle and Su for doing something — I think that that’s exactly what they should be doing: They should be doing something.” Of course, that was before OPNX shut down, too.

Even the yacht has become a battleground for 3AC’s founders in their quest to reclaim parts of their past. As the fund went into liquidation, their stake in the yacht was sold for nearly $30 million. Now, though, Zhu is claiming he is entitled to nearly half of that sum — a claim the yacht’s liquidators rejected outright in the fall. Zhu is appealing the decision.

He’s also keeping the big picture in mind. On Presidents’ Day, he reposted the following message on X: “The @zhusu redemption arc is going to be epic and the man has earned every bit of it.”

QOSHE - How Su Zhu and Kyle Davies Are Dodging Jail — and Rebranding - Jen Wieczner
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How Su Zhu and Kyle Davies Are Dodging Jail — and Rebranding

6 1
21.02.2024

At the end of September, 15 months after his crypto hedge fund, Three Arrows Capital, collapsed spectacularly with billions of dollars in debts owed, fueling a chain reaction of implosions of other crypto firms around the world, Su Zhu was arrested in departures at Singapore’s Changi Airport. Dressed in a navy-blue T-shirt — sunglasses clipped to his crew neck — over dark-khaki pants and black sneakers, Zhu was headed to Hong Kong, where he’d been working on a couple of new business ventures in an attempt to stage a career comeback. (The first of those companies, OPNX, shut down in early February; more on that later.) Instead of getting on a plane, Zhu was cuffed, charged with contempt of court, and marched next door to the local prison to serve a four-month sentence for failing to cooperate with the liquidators overseeing 3AC’s bankruptcy.

“Su’s prison time certainly caught him by surprise — no one wants to go to jail,” Kyle Davies, Zhu’s business partner and co-founder at 3AC, told me. Davies was also sentenced to four months in prison on the same charges but has so far skirted prison time, largely by refusing to be found. Teneo, the firm still attempting to liquidate 3AC’s remaining assets and pay back at least some of its debts, is still trying to locate Davies. (Unlike Zhu, Davies has not been seen in Singapore since 3AC blew up in June 2022.) In February, Davies told me he was in Portugal. In the year and a half prior, he had bounced around between Bali, Spain, and other parts of Europe (including Lake Como, he has said). But when I pressed him on specific regions — Lisbon? Surf villages? Wine country? — he declined to respond. The liquidators wrote in their most recent report to creditors that “whilst they have a good understanding of where he is currently located, it is noted that he has yet to provide meaningful cooperation.”

For many crypto observers, prison seemed the inevitable destination for the duo behind Three Arrows Capital. As I detailed in a 2022 cover story, they met at an elite Massachusetts prep school, both went to Columbia University and did a stint on Wall Street, and rose to global crypto rock-star status together before blowing up their fund and hiding out in Asia and the Middle East as creditors accused them of fraud and of misrepresenting their finances. At 3AC’s peak, the founders have said, the fund held between $5 billion and $10 billion in crypto assets. Zhu and Davies bought a superyacht and named it Much Wow (after the dogecoin meme) but disappeared before making the final payment. At one point, Teneo was forced to serve Zhu and Davies subpoenas via Twitter — unprecedented at the time — after exhausting all other avenues to reach them in the real world. While Zhu was in prison, many of his fellow fallen crypto kingpins were meeting similar fates: Sam Bankman-Fried was convicted of fraud after his company FTX collapsed months after 3AC did; Do Kwon, the entrepreneur behind the cryptocurrency luna, whose failure contributed to the demise of 3AC and others, was ordered to be extradited to face charges in the U.S. and South Korea; and Changpeng Zhao, the former CEO of Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, pleaded guilty to anti-money-laundering violations in the U.S.

But Zhu’s contempt-of-court conviction was extremely minor by comparison with what those others faced, and he did not remain behind bars for long. In late November, after just two months of incarceration, he was allowed to serve the rest of his sentence under house arrest wearing an ankle bracelet. From the comfort of his own home, he picked up again as a crypto influencer, posting aphorisms, images of bulls (connoting his perennially bullish “supercycle” crypto thesis), and memes on his widely followed X account. Just three weeks later, right before Christmas, Zhu was released early for good behavior.

An aggressive prosecution of Zhu and Davies in the U.S. or elsewhere is still entirely possible. But the pair’s continued jet-setting, social-media influencing, and launching of questionable new crypto ventures have at least created the impression that they are the biggest players in the crypto collapse of 2022 — during which investors lost collectively hundreds of billions of dollars, often in legally questionable projects — to avoid major legal consequences. Far from expressing remorse, the two men seem to be embracing that status as the centerpiece of a new brand.

Zhu emerged from his weeks in prison changed in a couple of important ways. For one, many of his tweets and online appearances were suddenly in Chinese, though in the past he had generally used English. Among them was a poll asking his followers whether they believed he was already out of prison (nearly half of respondents said “no”). “After I experienced liquidation, Chinese friends encouraged me to find ways to rise again, while westerners continued to criticize,” Zhu, who was born in Beijing and moved to the........

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