Saturday, June 13, 2026

Creating liberating content

Tech Fest 2026 to...

On June 12, 2026, Silicon Valley will welcome an exclusive gathering of over...

Serena Saggini received Prestigious...

The Pharma X Next Conference 2026 is proud to welcome Serena Saggini, Director...

PLUS-Forum Digital Uzbekistan 2026...

Tashkent, May 21, 2026 – The 6th International PLUS-Forum Digital Uzbekistan, a key event...

NFC Summit returns to...

Lisbon, Portugal — June 4–6, 2026 NFC Summit 2026 returns to Lisbon from June...
HomeFTX missed out...

FTX missed out on $500 million after selling Anysphere’s Cursor AI stake for just $200K

Bankrupt FTX has missed out on nearly half a billion dollars in potential profit after liquidating its early stake in Anysphere, the company behind the fast-rising AI code editor Cursor.

The now-defunct crypto exchange, through its trading arm Alameda Research, had invested $200,000 in Anysphere during its 2022 seed round.

However, bankruptcy managers sold the stake for the same amount in 2023, long before the company’s value surged.

FTX's Cursor AI Investment
FTX’s Anysphere (Cursor AI) Investment Sales. (Source: Gautham Elango)

On April 5, Anysphere completed a funding round that pushed its valuation to $9 billion. The round brought in $900 million and included major investors like Thrive Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, and Accel.

In January this year, the company raised $150 million at a $2.5 billion valuation. Since then, Cursor’s user base and revenue have grown rapidly, with the firm reportedly pulling in around $200 million in April alone.

Based on Anysphere’s current valuation, Alameda’s original $200,000 investment would now be worth close to $500 million.

That unrealized gain could have been used to compensate FTX creditors, many of whom are still waiting to recover their lost assets.

FTX’s undervalued sales

Meanwhile, this isn’t the only instance of undervalued sales during FTX’s asset liquidation process.

For context, the bankrupt exchange management had parted with token contracts linked to the SUI blockchain, which could have yielded nearly $3 billion in returns.

Instead of holding the contracts, FTX sold them in March 2024 for just $1 million, well below their current value of around $3 billion. The failed exchange also sold $95 million of Mysten Labs shares alongside its SUI contracts.

Despite these missteps, FTX’s estate has seen better outcomes elsewhere. One example is the $1.4 billion sale of its $500 million stake in AI firm Anthropic Holdings, which brought in significant liquidity.

The proceeds from these asset sales are being used to reimburse creditors. The failed firm completed the first round of repayments in February. The second round, targeting customers with claims over $50,000, is expected to begin later this month.

The post FTX missed out on $500 million after selling Anysphere’s Cursor AI stake for just $200K appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Continue reading

Polymarket data shows low chances of impeachment for President Donald Trump

Crypto-based prediction markets are signaling that impeachment odds for US President Donald Trump remain low, despite a formal push in Congress. According to data from Polymarket, crypto bettors estimate that there is just a 6% chance that Trump will face...

US lawmakers push COIN Act to block officials from profiting from crypto

A group of US lawmakers, led by Senator Adam Schiff, introduced a new bill on June 23 to stop public officials, including the president, from using digital assets for personal gain. The Curbing Officials’ Income and Nondisclosure bill, also known...

Ethereum developers issue proposal to halve block slot time to boost transaction speed

Ethereum’s core developers are pushing for a major technical change that could reshape how quickly the network processes transactions. On June 21, Barnabé Monnot, one of Ethereum’s core contributors, suggested a new proposal, EIP-7782, which would halve the block slot...