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Binance’s Alleged Crypto Audit Failed, Not Even Its Auditor Would Vouch For It

“CZ” Image likeness courtesy of Coin Telegraph article below

Binance’s Proof of Reserves Statement

When we say Proof of Reserves, we are specifically referring to those assets that we hold in custody for users. This means that we are showing evidence and proof that Binance has funds that cover all of our users assets 1:1, as well as some reserves.

When a user deposits one Bitcoin, Binance’s reserves increase by at least one Bitcoin to ensure client funds are fully backed. It is important to note that this does not include Binance’s corporate holdings, which are kept on a completely separate ledger.

What this means in actual terms is that Binance holds all user assets 1:1 (as well as some reserves), we have zero debt in our capital structure and we have made sure that we have an emergency fund (SAFU fund) for extreme cases.

The above Proof of Reserves Claim is interesting. If you have assets 1:1 then you should not need an emergency fund for extreme cases. 

Audit by Whom?

The pseudo audit was by Mazars, a mid-tier global accounting firm according to the Wall Street Journal.

Its U.S. arm Mazars USA previously worked for former President Donald Trump’s company. Earlier this year Mazars USA said it would withdraw from its work for Mr. Trump’s company and could no longer stand by financial statements it had previously prepared.

Binance didn’t specify which of Mazar’s offices would be doing the verification of the reserves. A Mazars spokesman declined comment.

Mystery Finances

After the collapse of Crypto exchange FTX, Binance Is Trying to Calm Investors, but Its Finances Remain a Mystery

  • Mazars said it performed its work using “agreed-upon procedures” requested by Binance and that “we make no representation regarding the appropriateness” of the procedures. 
  • The report didn’t show total assets or total liabilities. Rather, its scope was limited only to bitcoin assets and bitcoin liabilities. Binance said it would begin releasing information about other crypto tokens in the coming weeks.
  • “It’s important for us to show users that the coffers are not bare, like at FTX,” said Binance’s chief strategy officer, Patrick Hillmann.
  • In an interview, Binance’s Mr. Hillmann said the Mazars letter covered all the bitcoin assets and bitcoin liabilities for the company’s Binance.com exchange—although the Mazars letter itself didn’t say this.
  • During the interview, Mr. Hillmann also at times referred to the work performed by Mazars as an “audit.” Asked about the appropriateness of Binance’s use of the term “audit” in the news release and elsewhere, Mr. Hillmann said: “We’re talking about a review of our assets in custody.” He also said: “I would just say we’re parroting others’ descriptions of this as an independent audit.”
  • Other basic information about Binance is lacking. Mr. Hillmann said he couldn’t provide the name of Binance’s ultimate parent company because Binance over the past year and a half has been in the process of a broad corporate reorganization. 

First Rule in Truth Telling

The first rule in telling the truth is “Don’t lie”. 

The second rule in truth telling is to not sound like you are hiding something. This is especially important when overall trust is in the gutter anyway.

This was not an independent audit. Mazars did not describe it that way and the company would not certify the methodology it used. Heck, neither Mazars nor Binance disclosed the precise methodology.

Who was Hillmann parroting in describing the procedure as a audit? Sadly no one asked, but my bet is Hillman was parroting himself or someone else at Binance. 

Nor would Binance disclose its parent company due to a 1.5 year reorganization. WTF?

Potential Kiting

Binance is receiving flak from the crypto community after moving $2.7 billion out of its proof-of-reserves wallet. The exchange responded, saying the move was to a TRX cold wallet.

The procedure was even more bizarre because it comes on the heels contradictory statements by Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao.

https://twitter.com/cz_binance/status/1591690261029130240

“If an exchange have to move large amounts of crypto before or after they demonstrate their wallet addresses, it is a clear sign of problems. Stay away. Stay #SAFU.”

Binance CEO Explains 127K BTC Transfer

Please consider the Coin Telegraph Binance CEO Explains 127K BTC Transfer.

A few weeks ago, CZ declared that it’s bad news when exchanges move large amounts of crypto to prove their wallet address.

Cryptocurrency exchange Binance is moving large amounts of cryptocurrency as part of its proof-of-reserve (PoR) audits, according to its CEO, Changpeng “CZ” Zhao.

“The auditor requires us to send a specific amount to ourselves to show we control the wallet. And the rest goes to a change address, which is a new address. In this case, the input tx is big, and so is the change.”

Wait! What?

  1. CZ says it’s bad news when exchanges move large amounts of crypto to prove their wallet address.
  2. CZ Moves 127,000 Bitcoins
  3. CZ says the auditor demanded this but Mazars, the alleged auditor, does not call it an audit.
  4. Mazars would make no representation regarding the “appropriateness” of the procedures.
  5. Mazars said the  “agreed-upon procedures” were requested by Binance not by Mazars.

Not to worry

  • 1 BTC = 1 BTC
  • 127,000 BTC = 127,000 BTC (unless they have been counted multiple times)

Meanwhile please note Global Squabbles Erupt Around the World Over the Remaining Crypto Assets of FTX

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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45 Comments
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Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
I love this.
Pseudo audits of pseudo coins for pseudo wealth.
You can’t make this stuff up.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
the web 3, nft, crypto conferences might be almost as fun as the weed conferences for observing humans for fun. and profits, too. amerika is a land of grifters. always has been. donald j. trump was the epitomy of democracy works. people elect who they want to be like. a game show host who fooled the middle brows that he actually was NOT an heir to a great fortune that bankrupted that inherited fortune, twice over. still tickles me. we grew up near the trump’s and have very close family ties back to FRED Trump as a young man pre ww2. i still LOL at the grift.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
For those among us who persist persist in ridiculing ZeroHedge, today’s postings there include:
Binance’s Alleged Crypto Audit Failed, Not Even Its Auditor Would Vouch For It.
It is just one of many MishTalk essays that have appeared on ZeroHedge over the years.
BTW, I much prefer the comments here–less of an echo chamber, and usually more insightful.
Bravo Mish!
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
I used to comment there, read their posts daily back when they often discussed & exposed HFT manipulation, spoofing, TBTF fraud or Whales, but then they started promoting pro-Russian / Anti-American themes, trying to normalize the Putin agenda while at the same time turning Americans against their own country and each other.
When Colin Lokey left Zerohedge, one of his complaints was that they constantly pressured him to write pro-Russian articles.
This is the way intelligence operatives cultivate new assets, lure them with agreeable ideologies, ideas & favors, then gradually turn them, Zerohedge seems to be an experiment of that method en masse.
Back in 2014 I came to the conclusion they were a Russian influencing operation after being overwhelmed in the comments section numerous times for making statements that didn’t favor Russia, the U.S. government finally made the same assertion early this year.
.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
“…This is the way intelligence operatives cultivate new assets, lure them
with agreeable ideologies, ideas & favors, then gradually turn them…”
Something that would NEVER happen in the US??
Twitter, Facebook, and mass media generally are ‘cultivated’ continuously (some might say controlled) by the US government, as the Twitter files are now revealing.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
“Something that would NEVER happen in the US??”
Whether or not, has absolutely zero bearing on Zerohedge – I am NOT going to play dumb if a foreign adversary posing as an American is enlisting aid in U.S. citizens to engage in harm against my country and each other.
The “Twitter files” is separate, Russia, Putin is really pissed off about Twitter shutting down their fake accounts, it’s a given they’ll work this angle to demonize the restriction of “free speech” of a foreign propagandist.
And, yes, it concerns me there are babies in that bath water, Americans have the 1rst amendment, just not Russian intelligence.
There’s a lot of speculation that Zerohedge is funded by the Wagner group, the solution to both is to verify identities and funding sources, allow us to scrutinize a sources agenda and know who they are.
Knowing that Daniel Ivandjiiski is banned from Wall Street for insider trading, and his father is a retired KGB agent, would at least have given me a chance to consider the source bias when I first started reading Zerohedge.
.
SAKMAN
SAKMAN
3 years ago
Now everything moves to cold storage.
Trading plunges. Market interest plunges.
Do you want to buy my electronic gold star on this flash drive?
Huh?
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Scam exchanges holding scam assets. Anyone investing in these things deserves to lose it all. And they will.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
saw wannabe donald trump, “mr wonderful, kevin o’leary”, and the mooch on a stage with small audience last wednesday, play deaf dumb and blind to their pitching and raising funds for FTX. the old greedy boomers got into it neck deep. i’m a boomer and just have to LOL. we sold our bored ape yacht club NFT months ago. talk about fun markets. for punting around money. i personally like FX, equity bonds and real estate and gold for my serious moolah.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Personally I prefer shrunken heads, quality ivory, AK-47s in quantity, and Russian oil.
But I get your drift.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
archaelogical artifacts and art work is also a fun place for me to punt around. been a 2 generational interest, going on 3 generations. quite similar to the quality of gold. but gold is 100x safer.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
FREE JON CORZINE
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Lind-Waldock never dies. It just fades away.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
ha ha. remember all those commercials on radio. my favorite was sonny bloch and his trajectory.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
“Crypto-speak”, the language used by any 20 to 30 tr old crypto owners when asked about crypto valuations.
Usually a sentence formed by using “financial sounding” words in combination with confident facial expressions that neither you nor the speaker really understands what those collective words mean, but somehow proves crypto has value.
.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
If this ever happens to me, I’m going to tell them that they need to clap their hands and believe, or crypto will die, like Tinkerbell.
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
“…using “financial sounding” words in combination with confident facial expressions that neither you nor the speaker really understands what those collective words mean…”
“Ownership-society”-speak. Crypto-speak being merely a tiny, ultimately largely irrelevant corner of this degenerate by-and-for-idiots-and-idiots-only shttshow.
People who can count, keep crypto “reserves” (possibly not funds in active trade) on chain. As in under the mattress. Just as they keep physocal reserves in a vault in a trusted bank in a trusted country; where noone else (at least noone else without lots and lots of nuclear weapons) can get to it.
Crypto arguably makes this cheaper and simpler. Even though the math can be a bit intimidating, you’ll have lots of time to study; before the hours add up to all those return flights back and forth to your trusted Swiss canton.
SAKMAN
SAKMAN
3 years ago
Reply to  StukiMoi
Ahhhh, keeping money under the mattress. . . Where it can do the fundamental job of money (facilitating both trust and trade if you didnt know)!
I guess it works if you are in Amsterdam with a prostitute, the mattress would be at close range for payment perhaps.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  SAKMAN
They prefer credit cards.
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Reply to  SAKMAN
Another, just as fundamental “job” of money, is to facilitate savings/investment. Which means: Withholding from consumption. Which stashing _sound_ money under the mattress accomplishes very effectively.
As very much exactly the opposite of: Instead handing the money over to some braindead conman doing monkey dances on TV; so that he can then consume it instead of you. This being why The West has no savings anymore. Hence no investment. By now, not even close to enough to even match depreciation of existing capital stock. Hence why Western capital stock is dwindling every year. Hence why The West is getting poorer and poorer. Year in, year out.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  StukiMoi
But why should anyone stash “money” when by design and policy 2% is lost each year by simply standing still?
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Gold and Crypto
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Wanna bet a limited audit means Binance is bankrupt?
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
You’re on, I bet a basket full of highly valuable shiny candy coins.
SAKMAN
SAKMAN
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD

Chanukah is getting close! Gelt should be widely available if you lose the bet!

Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
Be advised I’m 95% confident Binance implodes by June 2023, likely sooner. Low hanging fruit moves “$2.7B Out of Proof of Reserves Wallet.”
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Every time I hear crypto, I recall this schmuck I met who had jumped on the bitcoin wagon. Said it was worth 300k. This was near its height. He was trying to convince everyone around him to invest. He informed me I wasn’t as knowledgeable as he, so I would foolishly miss out and not be worth the 30 million dollars he said he would be worth at some point. Haven’t seen him in a while. I wonder if he’s still as smugly arrogant today. First rule of investing is to be competent in your knowledge. He failed.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
I’ve had a few similar experiences with these chuckleheads, see my ‘crypto-speak” comment above.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
The sad thing is, he could have gotten away with it, and become a millionaire as early investor in the Ponzi.
But here come this nuasance called inflation, and the real money counterfeiters reluctantly had to be dragged behind this thing.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Yep, and I think he had claimed it was an initial investment of 30k. Sheep get sheared and hogs get slaughtered. And with all that on the line, he had zero understanding of money. Any money. All he had was the need to believe. A real schmuck.
SAKMAN
SAKMAN
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Unfortunately the behavior is just human. Those that understand and avoid “belief’ while working the system get ahead. LOL, the Bible has not nice things to say about the traders and merchants. Not that I care.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  SAKMAN
I subscribe to the classical definition of being a real human being. It takes work to reveal the magnificence of the statue within the rock. One must work hard to raise yourself beyond our natural state of being nothing other than a mindless beast. However, thinking is very hard work, and most people’s nature is to avoid such a horror. Never mind that this is the attitude that breeds nothing worthwhile, one must avoid abandoning their ignorance. It’s far too comforting for the self-made retard which is your average schmuck. It’s really hard to care about people who care so little about themselves.
jfpersona
jfpersona
3 years ago
“The sad thing is, he could have gotten away with it, and become a millionaire as early investor in the Ponzi” — IF ONLY IT HADN’T BEEN FOR THOSE MEDDLING KIDS!
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
per the great classic book, “intelligent investor”, it’s quite smart to have a small amount of fun money to punt around and do crazy investing in anything that one wants too. gets the ya ya’s out. so the serious investments one manages are done better. i will never hold any investment i consider in my serious pile, to go down more than 10% before tossing it overboard. but every one has their own trading style. seems quite easy for me. i’m suited to the style i employ. but i always do some crazy fun stuff per aforementioned classic.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
True. It’s also a good idea to diversify. And he could’ve taken out his original investment and gambled with his winnings. And a lot of other things as well. But a fool will always make the worst possible decision no matter the strategy. I’m confident that, if he isn’t frozen with panic, that he’s taking advantage of this downturn to buy more. He is definitely a fool who had no business in the market. There’s a reason why Wall Street has the child sacrificing demons engraved on it. Fools are known for their childish minds.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
So, when diversifying given today’s economy, what would be your theoretical optimal allocation: by stock group (industrials/banking), bonds, cash, metals, real estate, other?
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
No different from the “real estate” schmucks. The Hedge fund schmucks. The Stock schmucks. The bond schmucks. The “Betting system” schmucks. The “Lottery numbers” schmucks……
Lesson being: Central banking breeds schmucks.
Duh! How could it not, when its sole and only purpose is to redistribute all wealth, hence ultimately all power and influence, from productive non-schmucks, to exactly the above sort of worthless, genuinely useless, schmucks.
Keep at it for a few generations; and you are left with a society where every penny is “owned” by nothing but the stupidest of schmucks, utterly incapable of doing anything whatsoever of neither any difficulty nor value. Hence every potentially productive resource is also controlled, hence invariably mis-allocated, by exactly such nothings.
Welcome to Dystopia. Where “I’m Retarded. I’m in charge. Of everything!” is the only remaining MO left.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  StukiMoi
Well, I know I shall certainly respect their AUTHORITIIII! That was supposed to be a South Park thing.
SAKMAN
SAKMAN
3 years ago
Reply to  StukiMoi
Oh, you mean the society based on merit that built Rome didn’t exist when it fell?
Shocker!
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  StukiMoi
Remember that the stock market provides the highest returns over time.
So give us your money right now!!!
FlyNavy1
FlyNavy1
3 years ago
When will CZ get his sit-down for a paid interview with Andrew Ross-Sorkin, to the gushing applause of the elite liberals, like Bankman-Fried got?
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Let’s say you spent 50k of fiat to deposit with Binance, and Binance created one bitcoin as backing.
The price of bitcoin drops to 10k, you get your bitcoin, but not the 50k.
If this is what they mean, they are true to their word.
PreCambrian
PreCambrian
3 years ago
No that is not what they mean. They claim to hold your account in the form that you either deposited or traded for. Except that Binance is ending support for USDC (United States Dollar Coin) and converting all of those to BUSD (Binance United States Dollar) automatically. They also claim not to hypothecate (or encumber) your deposits. Whether that is true or not remains to be seen but any company that would call what Mazars did an “audit” really doesn’t know what finance and customer segregation of funds is.
ipso_facto
ipso_facto
3 years ago
‘Trust me; I am not like the others.’
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
I don’t know enough about kleptocurrency to participate in it, but I am seeing “audit” shenanigans. The person being audited doesn’t get to determine what questions get asked. It’s no different as if a student wrote his own final exam and the teacher grade it an A+. I had a downside range of $1K – $3K for Bitcoin, but I need to lower it to $0.

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