Kalshi Executive Challenges “SBF Backed AI Unicorns” Narrative, Says Leopold Aschenbrenner Was Key Figure

By: WEEX|2026/06/11 00:00:32
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In June, according to Odaily, John Wang, head of crypto at prediction market platform Kalshi, said on X that the long-running narrative portraying Sam Bankman-Fried, or SBF, as a top venture investor is inaccurate. He argued that early bets on popular AI projects such as Anthropic and Cursor should not be primarily credited to SBF.

According to Wang, the key person behind those investment judgments and early resource allocation was Leopold Aschenbrenner, a former OpenAI researcher, rather than SBF himself.

The comment quickly triggered discussion across crypto and venture capital circles. The focus is not a new deal, but a reassessment of an existing capital narrative. SBF was not only the founder of FTX, but was also once viewed as a major figure connecting crypto capital, quantitative trading, and Silicon Valley frontier technology investing.

If this “star investor” image is further challenged, the market may need to reassess the real decision-making chain behind Alameda and FTX’s exposure to the AI sector.

The original report also mentioned that Situational Awareness, the AI fund founded by Leopold Aschenbrenner, has reportedly grown to more than $20 billion in scale, with Jane Street said to have invested in it. The report also cited claims that the fund has achieved a 270% return this year and more than 1,000% cumulative returns, with its Anthropic position contributing significantly. It was also said to have participated in financing rounds for projects such as MatX and Fluidstack.

However, these figures mainly come from secondary circulation at this stage. The clearer fact is that John Wang publicly questioned the narrative around SBF’s investment ability on social media. Due to limited available information, details around the fund’s size, returns, and specific investment relationships still require more verifiable sources.

In the current market context, this controversy is unlikely to become a direct price catalyst for crypto assets. But it touches on a more practical question: what role did crypto capital actually play in the AI boom? Was it mainly a funding channel, a branding amplifier, or the real center of investment decision-making?

For market participants who lived through the FTX cycle, the issue matters because it may show whether the influence of old crypto capital networks has been overestimated.


Why It Matters

The significance of this news lies in capital attribution, not personality drama. Over the past few years, SBF’s personal brand covered FTX, Alameda, venture investment, and policy lobbying. The market often assumed that he was the central node behind many trading and investment decisions.

If more information now suggests that the real AI investment judgment came from others, outside observers may need to shift their understanding of the FTX-linked capital network from a personal myth to a more complex division of teams, relationships, and deal access.

Another key point is that the boundary between crypto capital and AI capital is becoming more blurred. Even if this incident began as a social media comment, it still brings Jane Street, Anthropic, a former OpenAI researcher, and crypto community narratives back into the same discussion.

However, public information is still not enough to fully confirm Leopold Aschenbrenner’s actual role and authority in the relevant investments. Any market interpretation should remain cautious.


WEEX View

The core question is not whether SBF was overrated. The real issue is who actually controlled deal flow, project selection, and exit pathways inside the old crypto capital network.

If the key resource allocation for early AI projects was not decided by SBF, it means the market may have mistaken the brand power of FTX and Alameda for true investment decision-making ability. From a front-line CEX perspective, this narrative correction will not immediately move token prices, but it may affect how project teams, market makers, and primary funds judge who can provide real liquidity and follow-on financing.

Put more directly, brand intermediation and asset pricing power are not the same thing. When Old Money reallocates capital, the first thing it looks at is the exit channel, not social media attention.

The next things to watch are several pieces of hard information that have not yet been fully disclosed. First, the legal entities, LP structure, and historical transaction records connected to Leopold Aschenbrenner and related AI investment vehicles. Second, whether Jane Street’s participation was at the fund level, through project co-investments, or limited to specific SPVs. Third, whether these AI assets have any transferable liquidity network connected to crypto capital.

If the discussion remains limited to personality attribution and insider commentary, the actual trading impact will likely be limited. But if a more complete capital coordination chain is later disclosed, the market may reassess the arbitrage boundaries between AI, quantitative capital, and crypto infrastructure, as well as who will price the next wave of high-valuation projects.


Timeline

  • June 2026: John Wang, head of crypto at Kalshi, publicly questioned the narrative that SBF was the key figure behind early investments in AI projects such as Anthropic and Cursor.
  • June 2026: Wang said the more important figure behind the relevant investment judgment and early resource allocation was former OpenAI researcher Leopold Aschenbrenner.
  • June 2026: The discussion triggered broader debate across crypto and venture capital circles over how much of FTX and Alameda’s AI investment narrative should be attributed to SBF personally.

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