The Man Who Might Be Satoshi Is Going Public Through the Commerce Secretary’s Son’s Firm

Adam Back, Howard Lutnick, and a $118 billion disclosure problem

The guy the New York Times just identified as the secret creator of Bitcoin is in the process of going public through a company chaired by Howard Lutnick’s son.

Take a second with that.

Adam Back is a British cryptographer who invented Hashcash, the proof-of-work system that Satoshi Nakamoto cited in the Bitcoin white paper. Back has always been near the top of the suspect list. But last week, NYT investigative reporter John Carreyrou published a 10,000-word investigation naming him as the most likely candidate – based on 18 months of stylometric analysis, overlapping timelines, forum post comparisons, and what Carreyrou describes as a very suspicious slip of the tongue during a two-hour confrontation at a conference in El Salvador. Back denies it. He has denied it, by my count, more than six times in public since the piece dropped.

But here’s the part nobody’s really sitting with: Adam Back is currently CEO of Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company, known as BSTR. BSTR is merging with Cantor Equity Partners I – a SPAC chaired by Brandon Lutnick, son of Howard Lutnick, who is currently the United States Secretary of Commerce. The Cantor Fitzgerald deal was announced last July and has been pending SEC review and shareholder approval since then.

If Back is Satoshi, he’s sitting on approximately 1.1 million Bitcoin. At current prices, that’s around billion. And under US securities law, as CEO of a company going public, he would be required to disclose any information material to investors. A billion undisclosed stash that could crash the market if sold would pretty clearly qualify.

Carreyrou actually raised this in the piece. The merger with the Lutnick family SPAC is what drew him to the story in the first place – ’cause it created a disclosure obligation that didn’t exist before. Back went from a mystery to a potential securities violation.

And Howard Lutnick is not a background character here. He testified to Congress about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein last month. He’s the Commerce Secretary. His son runs the company that’s serving as the vehicle for Back’s public debut. Cantor Fitzgerald is also the same firm that structured a .6 billion SPAC with Tether and SoftBank for Bitcoin acquisition. They are deep in this world.

Back’s lawyers are at Skadden. The deal is still pending – it was supposed to close Q4 2025, then got pushed to Q1 2026. As of April 2026, it still hasn’t closed. Every extension is another month that the disclosure question hangs in the air.

Back says he’s not Satoshi. Maybe he isn’t. But if he is, the mechanism by which Bitcoin’s creator would go public – potentially without disclosing the most material fact imaginable – runs through the Commerce Secretary’s family.

That’s not a conspiracy theory. That’s just the corporate structure.


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