Introduction
The 2022–2024 crypto reckoning had two faces: Sam Bankman-Fried and Changpeng Zhao. At the peak of the previous cycle, FTX and Binance were the two most visible exchanges on earth. Their founders were treated as industry statesmen, courted by governments, and profiled as the new face of finance. Within roughly 18 months, both had lost their companies, both had ended up in US federal prison, and the crypto industry's relationship with regulators had been permanently reset.
But the two cases are very different. SBF was convicted on seven federal counts of fraud and conspiracy for what prosecutors and a jury found to be the misappropriation of FTX customer funds — a financial crime in the traditional sense. CZ pleaded guilty to violations of the US Bank Secrecy Act around anti-money-laundering controls at Binance — a regulatory and compliance failure, paid for with a $4.3B corporate settlement and a four-month personal sentence. JudgeMarket prices both continuously, and the spread between them is one of the cleanest signals on the platform of how the world is reading the difference between fraud and regulatory failure.
Similarities
Both SBF and CZ built one of the two largest crypto exchanges in the world in a remarkably short time. Both were enormously wealthy on paper at the 2021 peak. Both played outsized roles in shaping the regulatory conversation about crypto in Washington, Brussels, and Asia. Both ended up in US federal custody by 2024.
Both also presided over operations that mixed exchange and proprietary-trading activities in ways that traditional finance has long policed through strict separation. FTX was paired with Alameda Research, a market maker founded by SBF that was the alleged conduit for the customer-fund misappropriation. Binance's relationship with affiliated market makers and its handling of its native token BNB have been subjects of regulatory scrutiny.
Both also benefited from regulatory arbitrage during the 2017–2022 boom — operating across multiple jurisdictions, optimizing for the lightest-touch regimes, and reaching enormous scale before regulators in any major economy fully caught up.
Key Differences
The legal and moral cases are not the same and should not be conflated. The Department of Justice charged SBF with intentional fraud: misappropriating roughly $8B of FTX customer deposits to fund Alameda's trading losses, political donations, real estate, and other expenses. A jury convicted him on all seven counts in November 2023. He was sentenced to 25 years in federal prison. Customer funds were largely recovered in the FTX bankruptcy proceedings, but the conviction was for fraud, not for failure of bookkeeping.
The Department of Justice's case against CZ and Binance was structurally different. The charges were violations of the Bank Secrecy Act — failure to maintain adequate anti-money-laundering controls and failure to prevent transactions with sanctioned jurisdictions and entities. Binance agreed to pay $4.3B and to install monitors. CZ personally pleaded guilty and received a four-month federal prison sentence in 2024. There was no fraud charge against CZ and no allegation of misappropriation of customer funds. Binance continues to operate, with new leadership.
Their post-conviction trajectories also diverge sharply. SBF is serving a 25-year sentence and his appeals are ongoing. CZ completed his four-month sentence in 2024, retains a substantial fortune, and has remained publicly active — investing in crypto, biotech, and AI projects, and engaging publicly on policy questions. The reputational arcs are not comparable.
The personal styles were also very different. SBF cultivated an image of unkempt earnestness, effective altruism, and media-friendly accessibility — appearing on podcasts and at Beltway events, donating heavily to political campaigns, and presenting FTX as the responsible adult in the room. CZ's style was more reticent — long-form posts on X, infrequent in-person interviews, and a deliberate cultivation of distance from Western political processes.
The Reputation Trade
On JudgeMarket, Sam Bankman-Fried trades as a defining case of crypto-era fraud. His price reflects the verdict on a convicted financial criminal whose remaining narrative arc — appeals, possible cooperation, eventual release — is mostly downside. The interesting question is whether the FTX recovery process (which has actually returned more than 100 cents on the dollar in claims, after asset appreciation) shifts long-run historical assessment at all.
Changpeng Zhao trades very differently. His price reflects an ongoing public figure who has completed his US legal exposure, retained substantial wealth and influence, and continues to participate in the industry. Binance remains operational. CZ's price moves on Binance's continued performance, his own statements and investments, and broader crypto regulatory developments.
Who buys SBF? Mostly counter-narrative buyers who think the appellate process or future cooperation could change the story, or who think his early work on crypto market structure will be reread more favorably with distance from the conviction. The buyer base is structurally small.
Who buys CZ? Those who think Binance's continued dominance, his ongoing influence, and the regulatory resolution leave him well-positioned to be remembered as a flawed-but-foundational figure in the industry — closer to a Mike Milken arc than an SBF arc. Who sells CZ? Those who think the regulatory exposure is not over (other jurisdictions, civil suits, future enforcement actions) and that the reputational ceiling for any founder who has pleaded guilty to federal charges is structurally limited.
Verdict
JudgeMarket does not pick a winner between a convicted defrauder and a founder who pleaded guilty to compliance failures. The market surfaces both prices, and the prices encode very different information.
The case for upside on SBF: essentially none in the short term. The conviction is on seven counts, the sentence is long, and the political-donations scandal alienated the natural constituency. The only real upside is if appellate process or future cooperation changes the legal posture.
The case for upside on CZ: if Binance retains market leadership, if his post-sentence investments perform, and if the next decade's crypto narrative is more about building than about regulating, his price has substantial room to move. The downside is more regulatory exposure or a serious Binance operational failure.
This is the cleanest example in the JudgeMarket ledger of why "convicted" does not mean the same thing for every figure, and why the platform's job is to price each one separately rather than lumping them together. Take your position at JudgeMarket.