Special
Report: Backroom battle imperils $230 million cryptocurrency venture
ZUG,
Switzerland/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Just three months ago, a tech project called
Tezos raised $232 million online in a wildly successful “initial coin
offering,” in which new digital currency is parceled out to buyers. At the
time, it was the most money ever raised from the public in the white-hot
cryptocurrency sector.
But the
venture is now in danger of falling apart because of a battle for control
playing out behind the scenes, Reuters has learned.
The
acrimonious dispute pits Tezos’ two young founders – Arthur and Kathleen
Breitman – against Johann Gevers, the president of a Swiss foundation the couple
helped establish to handle the coin offering and promote and develop the Tezos
computer network.
Under Swiss
law, the foundation is supposed to be independent. It holds all of the funds
raised, which have mushroomed to more than $400 million in value because the
contributions were made in two cryptocurrencies – bitcoin and ether – that have
appreciated sharply. But the Breitmans, who still control the Tezos source code
through a Delaware company, are seeking to oust the head of the foundation.
An attorney
for the Breitmans sent a 46-page letter on Sunday to the two other members of
the foundation’s three-person board, calling for Gevers’ prompt removal and
seeking to give the couple a “substantial role” in a new structure that would
limit the foundation’s responsibilities. The document accuses Gevers of
“self-dealing, self-promotion and conflicts of interest.” According to Gevers,
the two board members later suggested via email that he step aside for a month
while they investigate.
Gevers told
Reuters he is not stepping down. “As Arthur has done to others before me,”
Gevers said, “this is attempted character assassination. It’s a long laundry
list of misleading statements and outright lies.” He said the other two board
members “are attempting an illegal coup.”
The
Breitmans have been trying to control the foundation as if it were their own
private entity, Gevers said, by bypassing the foundation’s legal structure and
interfering with management and operations. This has resulted in costly delays
in developing and launching the Tezos network and new currency, he said.
“They’re
unnecessarily putting the project at risk,” he said.
In a written
statement sent to Reuters, the Breitmans reiterated their accusations against
Gevers and said they acted “in accordance with all applicable laws and
regulations.” They said their priority “remains the successful launch of the
Tezos network.”
Hundreds of
millions of dollars are at stake: The Tezos digital coins, called “Tezzies,”
are already priced at a hefty premium in futures trading even though they don’t
yet exist. The launching of the Tezos network, which will trigger the coins’
release, has been delayed. Until the network launches – and no date is set –
contributors to the fundraiser will receive nothing.
Under the
terms of the Tezos coin offering, there’s no guarantee participants will ever
receive a single Tez. Participants agreed to accept the risk that the project
“may be abandoned.” Despite the feud, Gevers said he remains committed to
resolving the feud so that “this project succeeds.”
The tale of
how two young entrepreneurs raised a fortune for a project barely out of the
starting blocks is reported here in detail for the first time. It highlights
the risks inherent in the current frenzy for ICOs, in which tech startups issue
new cryptocurrencies to raise capital.
Reuters
reported last month that cryptocurrency exchanges – where virtual currencies
are bought, sold and stored – have become magnets for fraud and deception. More
than 980,000 bitcoins – the most popular virtual currency – have been stolen
since 2011. Today they would be worth about $5 billion.
Similar large
sums are pouring into initial coin offerings. From January through September,
ICOs generated $2.2 billion, more than three times the amount invested in
similar startups by traditional venture capital firms, according to Novum
Insights, a data provider.
ICOs can be
a way for technology projects to raise money online to finance the development
of new, open-source computer networks that aren’t necessarily looking to make a
profit. Contributors receive new digital coins, or tokens, which they typically
need to “pay” to access the new networks.
But the
recent flurry of ICOs raising millions of dollars has attracted some dubious
business propositions and outright scams, as well as speculators looking to
trade the coins for swift gains. Authorities in the United States, Switzerland,
China, Singapore and other nations have begun scrutinizing the sector closely
for potentially tougher regulation.
“Most ICOs
are bought by people looking to ‘flip’ their tokens to a greater fool for a
quick profit,” said Alistair Milne, a co-founder of the London-based Altana
Digital Currency Fund, which so far has avoided ICOs. More than “90 percent
will fall to have a near-zero value in time,” he predicted.
The new
cryptocurrencies function through a technology called blockchain, essentially a
public ledger maintained by a network of computers. Blockchain applications are
being tested by financial services firms, food suppliers, retailers and other
businesses as a way to make record-keeping simpler and cheaper. Tezos aims to
be a blockchain that’s more reliable than the ones behind bitcoin and ether.
Several entrepreneurs and investors in the blockchain industry said the Tezos
technology has potential because it would be easier to upgrade and may be more
secure than other blockchains.
ANARCHO-CAPITALISM
The son of
Jean-Claude Deret, a French playwright and actor, Arthur Breitman studied
applied mathematics, computer science and physics in France, before moving to
the United States and studying financial mathematics at New York University. He
went on to work for the investment banks Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
He is still
listed as a co-organizer and “dear leader” for the New York Anarcho-Capitalist
Meetup in New York, which describes its philosophy as “a type of radical
libertarianism that favors the abundant wealth production, rapid technological
development, and high standards of living produced by capitalism.” Its website
adds, “We are also fairly lazy about fighting the state.”
It was at a
crypto-anarchist lunch in 2010 that Breitman first met Kathleen McCaffrey, an
American college student from New Jersey. She is described on a political blog
called The Politicizer as a libertarian Republican who first became interested
in politics after listening to the provocative radio personality Rush Limbaugh
at the age of five. She married Breitman in 2013.
Kathleen
Breitman, now 27, later worked at the hedge fund Bridgewater Associates and at
R3, a blockchain company. In a July post on the conservative website
legalinsurrection.com, she said she “didn’t get along” at the hedge fund but
had “a great time” at R3.
Bridgewater
didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Arthur
Breitman, 35, was an early fan of bitcoin, which first appeared around 2009.
But he came to believe there were flaws in the blockchains behind bitcoin and
other cryptocurrencies, finding them hard to upgrade and not secure. He tried
to come up with something better.
In the
summer of 2014, while working at Morgan Stanley in quantitative finance,
Breitman released two papers online that presented his concept for a new type
of blockchain. He called it Tezos, a name his wife has said he coined after
creating an algorithm that searched for the names of unclaimed websites
pronounceable in English.
The papers
were published under a pseudonym, “L. M Goodman,” but emails and messages from
Arthur Breitman reviewed by Reuters make it clear he was the author.
In an email
Breitman sent to an acquaintance in early 2015, he said he was seeking to
create a business based on Tezos but was trying not to be associated publicly
with the project at the time. He expressed worry that his activities might
conflict with his employment at Morgan Stanley, messages show.
Reuters
reviewed a copy of a “Tezos Business Plan” from early 2015, which listed
Breitman as chief executive. The plan projected that if the company survived 15
years, it would be worth between $2 billion and $20 billion. The budget called
for paying Breitman $212,180 in salary by year three. In August 2015, Breitman,
who was still working at Morgan Stanley, set up a company in Delaware called
Dynamic Ledger Solutions Inc, or DLS, to develop Tezos. He listed himself as
chief executive.
The U.S.
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) requires registered securities
professionals to provide prior written notice to their employer to conduct
outside business activities if there is “reasonable expectation of
compensation.” According to FINRA records, Breitman was registered and did not
report any “other business activities.” Morgan Stanley and FINRA declined to
comment.
“We made all
the proper disclosures,” Kathleen Breitman told Reuters in June. “It was a
hobby, you know. And like there was never any intention to really commercialize
any of the software.” She added: “We had some meetings with like C-suite
executives at banks ... but honestly nothing serious.”
“A TERRIBLE
SALESMAN”
In 2015,
Arthur Breitman was pitching “Tezos Inc.” in the hope of creating a consortium
of four to five banks to adopt the technology and fund the operation. The
business plan reviewed by Reuters called for raising $5 million to $10 million
over two to three years.
By then,
blockchain was beginning to pique the interest of large financial institutions
for its potential to help cut costs of cumbersome back-office processes, such
as the clearing and settlement of securities trades. Tezos’ 37-page business
plan called it “an Internet for financial transactions” and said the technology
could be used to automate the over-the-counter derivatives trading market.
But Breitman
failed to attract backers. He told Reuters in June that he blamed his fundraising
failures on the decision to develop the technology first, rather than just
selling “a dream” as other blockchain startups were doing.
“I guess I
was a terrible salesman as well,” he said.
“I can speak
to that,” his wife said.
Kathleen
Breitman, co-founder & CEO of Tezos, participates in the panel discussion
"Creating $200 Million Out of the Ether" at the 2017 Forbes Under 30
Summit in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., October 2, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
In April
2016, Arthur left Morgan Stanley, and by that September, the Breitmans had
started working on a new strategy for Tezos – to conduct an online fundraiser
to distribute digital tokens, whose holders would maintain the Tezos
blockchain. But the couple needed funds to keep the project going.
Over the
next six months, they received $612,000 from 10 early backers, including
several cryptocurrency hedge funds, according to the Tezos.com website.
To conduct
the ICO, the Breitmans chose a complex structure. Earlier this year, they
helped to create a foundation based in Zug, Switzerland – dubbed “Crypto
Valley” because of its many blockchain startups – that is seeking
not-for-profit status, emails show. The idea, according to documents on the
Tezos website, was that the foundation would raise money via the ICO, then
acquire DLS, the Breitman-controlled company that has been developing Tezos.
Working
through a Swiss foundation, the Breitmans thought, would provide regulatory
oversight but not too much. Kathleen Breitman told Reuters in June that she and
her husband opted to use a foundation based in Zug because Switzerland has “a
regulatory authority that had a sufficient amount of oversight but not like
anything too crazy.”
Georg von
Schnurbein, co-author of a book on Swiss foundation governance, expressed
surprise over cryptocurrency ventures like Tezos setting up not-for-profit
foundations in Switzerland. “For me, the public interest is not clear,” he
said. While not illegal, he said, creating a foundation with the aim of
allowing inventors to profit from a sale conflicted with its status as a
not-for-profit, which is supposed to benefit the public. He said federal
regulators eventually might prohibit it.
“The issue
that there is some kind of for-profit entity and there are transfers right at
the beginning is something that is working at the moment, but won’t be
sustainable,” he said.
“EXAGGERATED,
TO SAY THE LEAST”
As work
continued for the ICO, which was originally scheduled to be held in May, the
project started running out of cash, Kathleen Breitman told Reuters. She spoke
with Tim Draper, the well-known founding partner of Silicon Valley venture
capital firm DFJ and a staunch bitcoin supporter. He invested $1.5 million
through his firm, Draper Associates, which included taking a minority stake in
DLS, the company that controls the Tezos source code.
The
Breitmans had also hired Strange Brew Strategies, a U.S. communications
company, to promote their project, and Reuters wrote a news story on May 5
about Draper’s involvement.
In pitching
the story to Reuters, John O‘Brien, a principal of Strange Brew, had made
claims about Tezos’ progress. He wrote: “The applications of Tezos, ranging
from derivatives settlement to micro-insurance, are real and recognized by
industry giants. Ernst & Young, Deloitte, LexiFi, etc. have adopted Tezos
in their development environments and labs.”
On Oct. 3, a
spokeswoman for the accounting firm Ernst & Young told Reuters: “The
statement is not correct. EY has not adopted Tezos.” A spokesman for Deloitte
said Tezos’ code is “one of many technologies we’re considering” with
blockchain, but it’s “still early stage and we haven’t used the technology for
a client project.”
Jean-Marc
Eber, CEO of the French software company LexiFi, said, “The sentence, as
stated, isn’t accurate and unfortunately exaggerated, to say the least.” While
there had been “informal contacts,” he said, “at this stage, LexiFi has not adopted
Tezos’ technology in its development environment or labs.”
Strange Brew
declined to answer questions about the statement.
Slideshow (9
Images)
INVESTMENT
OR DONATION?
The Tezos
fundraiser began on July 1. The Breitmans had wide-ranging expectations about
how much they might raise. A document on Tezos.com suggested that if they
received more than $20 million, they might use it to “negotiate with a small
nation-state” to adopt Tezzies, or acquire mainstream print and TV media
outlets to promote the technology. In June, Kathleen Breitman told Reuters that
about a year ago, when the price of bitcoin was lower, “we were like, ‘Hey, we
would be lucky if we get 20 million.'”
When it
ended after 13 days, the project received about 66,000 bitcoins and 361,000
ethers, worth about $232 million at the time. The hoard is now worth about
twice that.
Kathleen
Breitman told Reuters that participating in the Tezos fundraiser was like contributing
to a public television station and receiving “a tote bag” in return. “That’s
kind of the same thing here,” she said.
The
fundraiser’s terms called the contributions “a non-refundable donation” and not
a “speculative investment.”
If deemed a
donation, and not a security, the funds raised might not fall under the remit
of financial regulators in the United States. In the U.S., investments in
assets such as company shares and other securities are regulated by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC has been studying ICOs, and in July
issued an investor bulletin that warned: “Depending on the facts and
circumstances of each individual ICO, the virtual coins or tokens that are
offered or sold may be securities.”
Part of the
SEC’s assessment is to examine the reasonable expectations of participants in
the ICO. Some participants in the Tezos fundraiser told Reuters they viewed the
coins at least partly as an investment.
Kevin Zhou,
co-founder of the cryptocurrency trading fund Galois Capital, said he invested
about five bitcoins in Tezos, which he considers overall one of the better
ICOs.
“For me and
for a lot of people this is an investment. We are looking for a return,” Zhou
said. “I don’t really care about” using the Tezos technology, he added.
Draper told
Reuters that cryptocurrencies are commodities like pork bellies, and
characterized acquiring Tezzies as a purchase rather than a donation. Asked
this month how much he donated during the Tezos fundraiser, he replied via
email, “You mean how much I bought? A lot.”
“TOTAL
MENSCH”
At the
moment, the Tezos Foundation holds all of the fundraising proceeds, while the
Breitmans, through their Delaware company, control much of Tezos’ intellectual
property. The plan is for the foundation to acquire the Breitmans’ company and
release the technology under a free software license, according a “Transparency
Memo” on the Tezos website.
Gevers, who
founded the Tezos Foundation, said it has a contract that stipulates the
Breitmans will either sell the Delaware company to the foundation “within a
reasonable point of time” or, if they don‘t, “the foundation can take it.” He
declined to provide a copy of the contract.
When the
foundation will acquire the Breitmans’ company remains unclear. Kathleen
Breitman told Reuters in June, “Essentially, you know, they’re going to buy out
the company in like July or so, I guess.”
The
Breitmans stand to receive millions of dollars if the deal goes through.
According to the “Transparency Memo,” the new blockchain “must launch and operate
successfully” for three months, then DLS’s shareholders – the Breitmans and
Draper – are entitled to receive 8.5 percent of the fundraiser proceeds in
cash. That amount, according to Gevers, is about $19.7 million. The
shareholders also are slated to receive another 10 percent of the Tezzies
issued, with the coin distribution spread out over four years. Those coins
currently are worth about $140 million in futures trading.
Prior to the
fundraiser, Kathleen Breitman effused about Gevers, 52, a Zug-based South
African entrepreneur who has never before run a foundation. During an “Ask Me
Anything” session in May on an online chat channel, she posted: “He’s awesome.
Total mensch and very philosophically committed to our project.”
Relations
later soured. The Breitmans objected to people the foundation suggested it
wanted to hire, Gevers said. Another sticking point: The couple’s company
hasn’t relinquished control over the foundation’s own website, www.tezos.ch.
“They
control the foundation’s domains, websites and email servers, so the foundation
has no control or confidentiality in its own communications,” Gevers said.
The
Breitmans officially have no role at the Tezos Foundation. The letter from
their lawyer this week proposed the creation of two foundation subsidiaries –
Tezos AG and Tezos France SA – to develop and support Tezos, with the Breitmans
serving as chief executive and chief technology officer of Tezos AG. The couple
also would be given “observer status” on the foundation board. The foundation
would then “limit” its activities to supervising and supporting the
subsidiaries, “rather than conducting any direct operations.”
According to
von Schnurbein, under Swiss law “the foundation is completely independent and
the foundation board is completely independent.” Gevers said the foundation
wants the couple to continue playing a leading advisory role. “They are both
very competent people and obviously they started this whole thing. And it would
be stupid to exclude them.”
But he
added: “You can rest assured as long as I have anything to do with this, the
foundation will be independent.”
Gevers said
he has filed a complaint with Swiss regulators about the request he received
via email this week from the foundation’s two other board members that he step
down from the board for a month. A spokesman for Switzerland’s Federal
Department of Home Affairs, which oversees the agency that supervises
foundations, told Reuters that asking a board member to step aside must be done
at a board meeting, not via email. The two board members who emailed Gevers
didn’t respond to a request for comment.
As for the
hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of cryptocurrencies raised in the ICO,
Gevers said the foundation has slowly begun selling the virtual currencies –
lately about $10.2 million worth a week – and plans to invest the proceeds in a
diverse portfolio. The funds are intended to be used to run the foundation,
ensure Tezos works and help to develop products using the technology.
So where are
all the bitcoins and ethers raised in the ICO stored? That, Gevers said, was
confidential.
“These are
not held in any one place,” he said, “but secured through high-security”
digital wallets “that no single party has control over.”
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