# The $100 Billion Man We Threw Away > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/the-100-billion-man-we-threw-away) > Author: Anonymous > Date: 2026-03-17 **Sam Bankman-Fried made the most prescient investment bets in modern history. Then we destroyed him for stealing lunch money.** Everyone loves to hate Sam Bankman-Fried. The curly hair, the cargo shorts, the sanctimonious effective altruism lectures. The fraud, obviously. But here's what nobody wants to admit: before he became crypto's biggest villain, SBF was quite possibly the most brilliant technology investor of the past decade. While you were buying GameStop and Dogecoin, Sam Bankman-Fried was quietly assembling what would have been a $100 billion investment portfolio. While venture capitalists were still figuring out what "blockchain" meant, he was writing nine-figure checks to companies that would define the 2020s. While the entire tech establishment missed the AI revolution, SBF saw it coming and positioned perfectly. The numbers don't lie, even when the people behind them do. And the numbers suggest that we may have just destroyed the Warren Buffett of our generation over $8 billion in customer funds that, frankly, would have been pocket change compared to what his investments were about to generate. ## The Anthropic Bet That Proves He Saw the Future In October 2021, when artificial intelligence was still confined to research papers and sci-fi movies, Sam Bankman-Fried wrote a $500 million check to a startup called Anthropic. Most investors had never heard of the company. Most still couldn't explain what a large language model was. The entire AI sector was valued at less than what individual AI companies are worth today. SBF didn't just see the AI revolution coming. He positioned for it with surgical precision. That $500 million investment -- representing an 8% stake in Anthropic -- would be worth $30.4 billion today. Anthropic is now valued at $380 billion, generates $14 billion in annual revenue, and is considered one of the three most important AI companies on Earth alongside OpenAI and Google DeepMind. Let that sink in. While every other investor was chasing the next social media app or food delivery startup, SBF was funding the technology that would reshape human civilization. A 60x return on a half-billion-dollar bet. In venture capital, that's not just success -- that's prophecy. ## The Solana Vision That Everyone Called Crazy Remember when Solana was dismissed as an "Ethereum killer" that would never work? Remember when crypto Twitter mocked its network outages and called it centralized garbage? Sam Bankman-Fried was accumulating $1.16 billion worth of SOL tokens while everyone else was buying the "flippening" narrative. Court documents reveal that FTX's total exposure to the Solana ecosystem exceeded $3.4 billion through direct holdings, venture investments, and strategic partnerships. SBF understood what the entire crypto establishment missed: that speed and cost would ultimately determine which blockchains achieved mainstream adoption. Today, Solana processes more daily transactions than Ethereum. It hosts the majority of successful crypto consumer applications. It's become the platform of choice for everything from DeFi to gaming to memecoins. SBF's Solana ecosystem bets would be worth approximately $3 billion today -- vindication for a thesis that everyone called wrong until it became obviously right. ## The Robinhood Play: Democratizing Finance Before It Was Cool While traditional finance was still sneering at retail investors as "dumb money," SBF invested $546 million in Robinhood at around $8-10 per share. The investment reflected his belief that democratized trading and crypto adoption would fundamentally reshape financial markets. With Robinhood stock now trading at $75.31, that investment would be worth $4.5 billion -- nearly a 10x return. The gain reflects not just Robinhood's recovery, but the broader transformation of retail trading that SBF correctly predicted would explode. ## The Venture Portfolio That Redefined Success FTX Ventures didn't just make three lucky bets. The fund systematically invested across 69 companies in crypto, AI, and emerging technologies with a hit rate that would make Sequoia Capital jealous. Court filings reveal investments in Mysten Labs (Sui blockchain), Magic Eden (leading NFT marketplace), and dozens of other projects that have since matured into billion-dollar platforms. Consider Mysten Labs alone. FTX invested $101 million in the company behind the Sui blockchain. The bankruptcy estate was forced to sell the stake back for $96 million in March 2023. Today, with SUI tokens trading at $3.63 and a market cap exceeding $10 billion, that stake would be worth several billion dollars. Every. Single. Investment. Thesis. Was. Right. AI would dominate the decade. Solana would become essential infrastructure. Retail trading would explode. DeFi would mature into a trillion-dollar market. SBF called all of it before it happened and positioned accordingly. ## The $100 Billion Man We Chose to Destroy If FTX had continued operating without the fraud -- if SBF had simply been patient instead of desperate -- the exchange would be worth $50-80 billion today based on crypto trading volumes. Combined with his venture portfolio's explosive growth, SBF's net worth would conservatively exceed $100 billion. That would make him the fifth-wealthiest person on Earth, ahead of Warren Buffett and approaching Elon Musk territory. The Anthropic investment alone would place him among the most successful investors in history. His Solana thesis would be studied in business schools. His democratized finance vision would be hailed as transformative. Instead, we have a 32-year-old serving 25 years in federal prison while bankruptcy trustees auction off the greatest investment portfolio ever assembled. ## The Uncomfortable Truth About Genius and Morality Here's what nobody wants to admit: Sam Bankman-Fried's investment record is better than virtually every professional investor alive. His returns exceed those of Berkshire Hathaway, Sequoia Capital, and Andreessen Horowitz. His market timing was supernatural. His technology thesis was flawless. Yes, he stole $8 billion in customer funds. Yes, he deserves to be in prison. But let's not pretend that makes his investment acumen any less extraordinary. The man saw the future with clarity that borders on the supernatural and positioned perfectly for it. We destroyed him not because he was a bad investor, but because he was a great investor who couldn't resist stealing. The fraud doesn't erase the brilliance. It just makes the brilliance tragic. ## The Greatest "What If" in Modern Finance Sam Bankman-Fried's story isn't really about crypto or fraud or effective altruism. It's about how perfect market vision can coexist with catastrophic moral blindness. It's about how someone can be right about everything that matters to civilization and wrong about the one thing that matters to himself. The $100 billion portfolio that could have been stands as a monument to wasted potential. Every day SBF spends in prison is another day his former investments compound into wealth he'll never see. Every Anthropic breakthrough, every Solana adoption milestone, every Robinhood earnings beat is a reminder of what we lost when we chose to focus on the $8 billion he stole instead of the $100 billion he would have generated. Maybe that's the real tragedy. We had the Warren Buffett of technology investing, and we threw him away for being a common criminal. The markets, as always, were perfectly efficient. They just couldn't account for the fact that genius and morality don't always travel together. In a cell in Brooklyn, the man who saw the future sits alone with the knowledge that he was right about everything except himself.