The FTX Group’s largest creditor is now the IRS, which is claiming upwards of $40 billion in unpaid taxes.
In a stunning development in the FTX Group’s drawn-out bankruptcy case, the IRS has recently filed claims against the default entity that dwarf any prior ones and cast doubt on its prior idea of re-opening for business.
Over $40 Billion in Unpaid Taxes
However, this all went out the window just recently, when the IRS filed 45 claims against entities of the FTX Group, cumulatively worth around $44 billion.
Unpaid Employment Taxes
Although the exact breakdown of the tax filings is unavailable for most of these claims, a leaked document showcasing the biggest one has been circulating online and seems to target unpaid employer-side employment taxes.
The insane Alameda Research LLC tax bill circulating is real. The major balances don’t have detail, but in part it appears the IRS went back and reclassified ALL employees from contractors to employees and hit them for unpaid employer-side employment taxes. pic.twitter.com/GuY6czcgMn
It seems that following an investigation, the IRS reclassified FTX Group personnel as employees, not contractors, resulting in a massive tax bill.
“The problem with this annoying tax bill isn’t just the fact that there is now another massive creditor of Alameda (which would reduce FTX’s pro rata share of Alameda’s estate).
The problem is that this tax claim would have priority over FTX’s claim. under the US bankruptcy code, Uncle Sam has priority over unsecured creditors, which means this massive 20bn tax bill needs to be paid off before any money can even flow from Alameda to FTX Intl.”
For the moment, these claims have not been discussed in court, at least not publicly. It remains to be seen how lawyers for the IRS will choose to pursue these claims, given the highly publicized nature of the court case.