Former FTX Engineer Nishad Singh Fined $3.7M in CFTC Fraud Case

Former FTX engineering chief Nishad Singh has settled the remaining relief issues in the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s fraud case, but the official record is narrower than headline shorthand suggests: the agency describes the payment as disgorgement, not a civil monetary penalty, and says Singh’s cooperation is why harsher monetary relief is not being sought for now.

In an April 1, 2026 announcement, the CFTC said the Southern District of New York entered a supplemental consent order against Singh. The underlying order was filed on March 31, 2026 in federal court in Manhattan and closes out remedies left open after his earlier consent judgment.

Key Takeaway

  • The CFTC said in its April 1 release that Singh must pay disgorgement and face temporary market bans, while restitution and a civil penalty are not being sought for now.
  • The order ties the payment to real estate Singh bought in October 2022 using funds that the court record says included misappropriated customer assets.
  • The sanctions include a five-year trading ban and an eight-year registration ban, both running from April 13, 2023.

What the CFTC order actually requires

The supplemental consent order requires Singh to pay disgorgement rather than a civil monetary penalty. The CFTC said in its April 1 release that it is not seeking restitution or a civil penalty at this stage because of Singh’s cooperation in the investigation and related proceedings.

$3.7 million
The supplemental consent order requires Nishad Singh to pay disgorgement, not a civil monetary penalty, in the CFTC case.

The order says the disgorgement matches the value of real estate Singh bought in October 2022 using personal funds from his FTX account that he knew or recklessly disregarded included misappropriated customer assets.

The supplemental order also imposes a five-year trading ban and an eight-year registration ban, both measured from April 13, 2023, when the court entered Singh’s initial consent order.

5 years
The CFTC trading ban runs for five years and is measured from the April 13, 2023 initial consent order.

The CFTC framed that mix of monetary relief and temporary bars as a cooperation case. In the agency’s release, David Miller said the sanctions show why defendants still have reason to assist investigators even in high-profile crypto fraud matters.

“The injunctions and monetary relief imposed here demonstrate the significant benefits that may be achieved through cooperating with the CFTC.”

David Miller, quoted in the CFTC release

Why Singh remained part of the FTX fallout

The CFTC’s February 2023 complaint accused Singh of fraud by misappropriation and aiding and abetting fraud tied to FTX and Alameda Research. As FTX’s former head of engineering, he remained a key figure in explaining how customer funds could be routed inside the exchange group.

The new order adds a narrow but important detail to that timeline. It says the real estate purchase in October 2022 was funded through Singh’s personal FTX account even though the balance included customer assets.

The court record also notes the parallel criminal case, where Singh received time served and three years of supervised release and remains exposed to an $11.02 billion forfeiture order on a joint-and-several basis.

Separately, the SEC said in December 2025 that Singh consented to an eight-year officer-and-director bar in its parallel FTX civil action. Singh’s attorneys later told Business Standard that the CFTC recognized his limited role in the conduct and his extensive cooperation.

What the ruling signals for crypto enforcement and trust

The combination of a five-year trading ban, an eight-year registration ban, and the decision to skip restitution and a civil penalty shows the CFTC is still pursuing FTX-linked misconduct after its February 2023 complaint, while still rewarding cooperation. For future defendants, those are the data points that matter most in deciding whether to settle early or fight for a narrower remedy.

For crypto firms, the more durable message is about governance around customer assets. The order’s focus on an October 2022 real estate purchase funded through an account containing misappropriated assets keeps treasury segregation, internal permissions, and audit trails at the center of compliance expectations.

That credibility problem now shapes how investors read the sector more broadly. Coinwy’s recent coverage of how Genius Group sold its Bitcoin treasury after revenue jumped 171%, how reported U.S.-Iran strike threats have raised macro risk, and how SpaceX’s reported IPO filing at a $1.75 trillion valuation is attracting capital all point to the same contrast: money still moves toward high-growth narratives, but governance failures face a much harsher discount.

That is the balanced takeaway from this order. Regulators are still extracting remedies in FTX cases tied to customer-asset misuse, yet the CFTC also said cooperation helped Singh avoid restitution and a separate civil monetary penalty for now.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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