Orlando Bravo told investors he was ‘shocked’ by FTX losses: source

Orlando Bravo — the head of one of the US’s biggest tech investment firms — apparently felt he had some explaining to do this week.

The Miami-based billionaire’s firm Thoma Bravo reportedly lost $130 million on an ill-fated investment in FTX, the crypto exchange formerly headed by 30-year-old Sam Bankman-Fried — and held an unusual call with investors on Tuesday to own up to his mistake, sources told On The Money.

The 51-year-old Bravo — whom Forbes calls “Wall Street’s hottest dealmaker,” estimating his net worth at $7.9 billion — admitted on the call that he was “shocked” FTX went bankrupt, a source close to the situation said.

Some of the fund’s backers who were on the call, including the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and the Singapore government investment vehicle GIC, were shocked too, according to a second source.

“Some investors were in disbelief that a firm of Thoma Bravo’s sophistication could put millions to work in an investment where there wasn’t a board or even a CFO,” a source said. 

In response, Bravo pointed out that his firm had only invested in FTX’s first round of financing and did not participate in the richer second and third rounds, which valued FTX as high as $32 billion, according to sources.


Orlando Bravo speaking.
Orlando Bravo admitted to his investors this week that he was shocked by FTX’s bankruptcy filing, sources said.
AP

Given that FTX’s value went to zero, some investors took little comfort about which funding round they’d bought into, sources said. Thoma Bravo plunked down its $130 million on FTX in a July 2021 round that raised a reported $900 million, valuing the now-bankrupt firm at $20 billion.

Thoma Bravo has earned a reputation as a conservative tech investor, mainly betting on less-sexy data and business software companies. The firm was generating a 16% internal rate of return from its 2016 buyout fund as of Sept. 30, and 34% from a 2018 fund, according to Minnesota’s state pension.

In May, however, The Post reported exclusively that Bravo wanted to invest alongside Elon Musk in his $44 billion buyout of Twitter. His partners were divided, so the firm backed off — and, in hindsight, dodged a major bullet.


Orlando Bravo speaking at a conference.
Bravo wanted to participate in Elon Musk’s buyout of Twitter, but partners at his firm voted against the idea.
AFP via Getty Images

Still, Bravo has displayed a soft spot for crypto. Overall, FTX and other crypto investments including Anchorage Digital represent about 15% of the $2 billion Thoma Bravo Growth Fund, sources said.

On June 23 Bravo tweeted, “FTX is so unique in combining innovation and rigorous operations.”

A Thoma Bravo spokesman declined to comment.