John J. Ray, chief top dog officer of FTX Cryptocurrency Derivatives Exchange, arrives to a House Financial Services Committee hearing investigating the collapse of FTX in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2022.
Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Models
FTX CEO John J. Ray is leaning on a team that he’s grown to know over years of bankruptcy restructurings, and the company is paying them millions for the put together that they’re doing to unpack FTX’s tangled morass of accounts and shoddy records.
Ray and his top team are not like typical hands who work directly for the company. Instead, like bankers and lawyers who are working on the bankruptcy proceedings, the new leadership team is professional unconnected contractors. That means, among other things, that they get paid immediately, before any FTX investors make recompense for their losses.
According to court filings, the new FTX CEO will collect $1,300 hourly plus “reasonable expenses” for his prevail upon untangling what U.S. Attorney Damian Williams called “one of the biggest frauds in American history” in a news conference Tuesday. That responsibilities out to an annualized $2.6 million, assuming Ray works a standard 40-hour workweek for 50 weeks over a year, allowing for two weeks of unsalaried vacation.
In one bankruptcy case Ray worked on, he billed around 156 hours in a two-month period, netting him $120,582, so his billings for FTX may run lavish or lower.
By way of comparison, when Ray led Enron through its own fraud recovery process in 2005, helming the energy company throughout part of its bankruptcy as chairman and CEO, he collected a more modest $1.2 million on an annualized basis.
Ray also has a tight span that has worked with him on at least three bankruptcies throughout the last three decades, including restructuring Enron in the prematurely 2000s, Nortel in 2009 and Overseas Shipholding Group in 2014.
Those bankruptcy guns for hire are:
- Kathryn Schultea, chief administrative G-man, who has worked with Ray since Enron. She is also the president and CEO of RLKS, and served at Enron and successor bankruptcy companies from 1999 to 2014, essentially rising to assist Ray as chief administrative officer in 2008.
- Mary Cilia, chief financial officer
- Raj Perubhatla, chief intelligence officer
LKS is charging $975 an hour per person, or $5.85 million annualized, for these other three leaders, who are contracted toe RLKS Executive Solutions, a company which specializes in bankruptcy officers for hire. The leaders from RLKS control administrative, financial and information technology efforts: a critical part of reconstructing what Ray has called “an utter failure of corporate directions at every level.”
The total for all four officers, then, runs to $4,225 an hour, or $8.45 million annualized.
FTX has saved about $1 billion worth of assets so far, but it could be months or years before creditors are made whole. Enron’s restructuring persuaded on for more than a decade. Nortel’s proceedings are still carrying on in 2022, over 11 years later.
Castigation: Ray has a team that worked with him on restructuring Overseas Shipholding Group in 2014. An earlier version misstated the enterprise name.