Vebitcoin Crypto Exchange Shuts Down its Business, Turkish Financial Watchdog Investigates

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Turkey’s Vebitcoin cryptocurrency exchange has made a disturbing announcement that it has halted all of its trading activities due to financial strains facing the firm.

Vebitcoin announced: “Due to the recent interest in crypto, our transactions have become much more intense than expected. We regret that this situation has put us in a financially difficult position.”

The exchange stated that it stopped all its trading operations so that to “honour the claimants’ rights,” and further said that more information will follow shortly.

After the announcement, Turkish financial crimes watchdog – the Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) – blocked all bank accounts of Vebitcoin and launched an investigation into the crypto exchange and its managers.

Vebitcoin has become the second crypto exchange in Turkey to stop its trading activities after Thodex shut down its doors on Wednesday, April 21. Thodex cryptocurrency exchange ceased its trading activities, citing that the transfer of shares to an outside investor could not be completed and later mentioned cyber attacks as the cause of its business closure.

Vebitcoin is one of the smaller crypto exchanges in Turkey. While its daily trade volume was $60 million yesterday, Thodex’s daily trade volume was $585.5 million on the last day of its trading. In comparison, Paribu – one of the largest crypto exchanges in Turkey – recorded a trade volume of $1 billion yesterday.

Turkish Crypto Experiencing Worst Moment

It has been a tragic week for cryptocurrency in Turkey. On April 16, The Turkish central bank announced a ban on cryptocurrency as a means of payment. 

The ban comes at a time when the use of cryptocurrency has soared as the Turkish lira currency is facing significant outside selling pressure. The national fiat currency plunged in foreign exchange markets after president Recap Tayyip Erdogan fired the central bank governor, Naci Agbal, in March. The dismissal of the central bank governor triggered fears of a sharp slide in the lira currency.  

The ban on cryptocurrencies in the country will be in effect on April 30. This ban comes at a time when the use of crypto assets in Turkey has increased because of the plunge in the price of the Lira. Several Turkish citizens have turned to cryptocurrencies as an alternative method of payment to circumvent the issue of declining Lira currency.

On Wednesday, April 20, the discovery of Thodex crypto exchange ceasing its trading shocked crypto customers in the country. Thodex has been accused of fraud and scam. Thodex’s CEO fled the country after the closure of the crypto exchange. The shocking incident has resulted in over 391,000 active customers unable to access their funds from the exchange.

Now Vebitcoin is the next and its customers have been adversely affected following the news that the crypto exchange has halted its trading activities.  

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Three Arrows Capital Files for Chapter 15 Bankruptcy in the US

The embattled cryptocurrency hedge fund, Three Arrows Capital (3AC) has filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy in the United States of America as it looks to preserve its assets in the country.

According to the filing lodged with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan), creditors will not be able to seize the firm’s assets in the US with this move.

A court in the British Virgin Islands ordered the liquidation of Three Arrows Capital last week as the company was unable to meet its obligation to creditors such as BlockFi, and Voyager Capital.

The woes of Three Arrows Capital were ignited by the collapse of LUNA-UST which the company has a significant amount of exposure.

The entire event of the two tokens fueled a market onslaught that many projects are yet to recover from today. The ongoing liquidation of 3AC is being handled by Teneo Restructuring, and without legal protection such as the Chapter 15 Bankruptcy that 3AC is filing, the firm might enlist the company’s assets around the world as this is the process it started its functions with according to sources close to the matter.

The bankruptcy case is tagged Three Arrows Capital Ltd and Russell Crumpler, 22-10920, and the company is being represented by the law firm Latham & Watkins. 

Three Arrows Capital was one of the first and most celebrated crypto hedge funds that were founded by Credit Suisse traders, Su Zhu and Kyle Davies. At its peak this year, the firm had about $10 billion in Assets Under Management (AUM) in March according to data from Nansen. In the wake of its challenges, Voyager Digital has issued a notice of default to the company, claiming 3AC has not been able to repay a loan worth $650 million.

It is unclear if 3AC and its founders will be subjected to any legal reprimand from authorities as to the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) accused the firm of sharing false information while it was operating in the country.

Voyager Digital Files Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in New York

Cryptocurrency broker Voyager Digital Ltd. said that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in New York.

The bankruptcy was filed days after the company suspended withdrawals and trading on its platform. The company has said that it will seek recognition of the case in its home country Canada, where it is listed.

According to The Block, per the petition for Voyager Digital Holdings, estimated assets are between $1 billion and $10 billion, with between $1 billion and $10 billion in estimated liabilities. The estimated number of creditors exceeds 100,000.

Currently, three business entities – Voyager Digital Holdings, Voyager Digital LLC and Voyager Digital, Ltd. – are seeking protection. 

The three largely identical petitions were submitted via the Southern District of New York bankruptcy court.

Last week, Voyager halted users’ access to withdrawals, deposits and trading, citing the present market conditions. “This was a tremendously difficult decision, but we believe it is the right one given current market conditions,” CEO Stephen Ehrlich said at the time.

Prior to the suspension of withdrawals, Voyager had issued a notice of default to hedge fund Three Arrows Capital Ltd. over failed repayment of a $650 million loan. The hedge fund was also ordered to liquidate after the crash of cryptocurrencies it had heavily invested in.

Three Arrows itself also filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy last week.

Voyager stated that it is “actively pursuing all available remedies for recovery” from Three Arrows, including through court-supervised processes in the British Virgin Islands and New York.

Voyager Digital Executives Threatened by Clients, Revealed in Bankruptcy Hearing

Senior executives of crypto broker Voyager Digital and their families were reportedly threatened by their clients, a court in Manhattan revealed last Friday.

At the first-ever bankruptcy hearing for Voyager Digital took place before U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Wiles in Manhattan last Friday, the company’s attorney, Christopher Marcus of Kirkland & Ellis said the firm’s executives and their families were threatened by customers when their accounts were frozen. 

Marcus highlighted how inevitable it is for Voyager Digital to file for bankruptcy, a move it did as soon as it was able to. At the time when the firm filed the bankruptcy claim, it said there were as many as 3.5 million active users holding as much as $5.9 billion in assets. With the liquidity pressures the firm was facing as well as the current losses it is experiencing from the ordered liquidation of Three Arrows (3AC), its business continuity was notably hampered.

Amidst the escalating personal threats Voyager Digital’s executives are receiving, Marcus said the restructuring approach is to show users that there is still hope.

“We are focused on a path forward,” Marcus said. “It is not correct to think that there is no hope.”

Experts have noted that the Chapter 11 bankruptcy is the best for Voyager Digital as a broker-dealer liquidation would completely halt Voyager’s operations and result in a lot of expensive litigation that would benefit no one according to Josh Sussberg of Kirkland.

Voyager Digital is not alone as there have been reports that LUNA coin holders also threatened Do Kwon when the coin shed as much as 99.9% of its value back in May. Kwon has moved from South Korea and is now resident in Singapore following the event.

The spate of liquidations in the digital currency ecosystem is now very alarming, and the credit extension from Alameda Ventures was unable to save Voyager Digital. Three Arrows Capital has also filed for Chapter 15 Bankruptcy in the US while another struggling firm, Celsius Network is resisting the urge to file for bankruptcy on its lawyer’s recommendation.

Celsius Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection, Clears Debt with Compound

Crypto lender Celsius Networks has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, MarketWatch reported.

The embattled crypto lender has also repaid its remaining debt to the decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocol Compound.

Celsius co-founder and Chief Executive Alex Mashinsky on Wednesday said the bankruptcy filing “is the right decision for our community and company.”

The embattled crypto lender made the filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

“I am confident that when we look back at the history of Celsius, we will see this as a defining moment, where acting with resolve and confidence served the community and strengthened the company’s future,” he said.

The bankruptcy filing makes it the latest victim in the cryptocurrency sector to collapse under a dramatic price plunge.

According to the court filing, the New Jersey-based crypto lender listed estimated assets and liabilities on a consolidated basis in the range of $1 billion to $10 billion.

Celsius had positioned itself in the market by promising more than 18% in interest to peoples’ holdings who deposit their digital coins. The crypto lender, in turn, lent those coins out, Bloomberg reported.

Crypto lenders entered the market guns blazing during the COVID-19 pandemic as the digital market gained popularity and drew depositors with high-interest rates and easy access to loans that traditional banks rarely provide.

However, they have been experiencing a gradual downfall in recent months following a crash in cryptocurrency prices and the collapse of the major token TerraUSD in May.

Prior to filing for bankruptcy, the crypto lender had repaid its remaining debt to Compound, and in doing so, Celsius freed up nearly $200 million of pledged collateral.

According to a report, early Wednesday, Celsius repaid in part $50 million to Compound and reclaimed 10,000 wrapped bitcoin (wBTC) – a bitcoin-replica token retrofitted for the Ethereum blockchain.

Etherscan data shows that a wallet in connection with Celsius transferred 50 million DAI tokens to Compound in two instances. Following the down payments, Compound released 6,900, then 3,100 wBTC tokens to Celsius. The wBTC tokens had been locked up on the protocol as collateral.

Finally, 10,000 wBTC was transferred by Celsius to an unlabeled wallet address where the firm’s 416,000 stETH stake – some $435 million at current prices – ended up the day before.

The bankruptcy filing also comes a day after Vermont’s Department of Financial Regulation (DFR) on Tuesday said that Celsius is “deeply insolvent” and it is not honouring its obligations to customers and creditors as it does not have the assets and liquidity to do so, Blockchain.News reported.

The DFR also said that Celsius has been involved in an unregistered securities offering, selling cryptocurrency interest accounts to retail investors, including investors in Vermont. The crypto lender also lacks a money transmitter license.

Celsius, until recently, was operating largely without regulatory oversight.

The regulator said, “due to its failure to register its interest accounts as securities, Celsius customers did not receive critical disclosures about its financial condition, investing activities, risk factors, and ability to repay its obligations to depositors and other creditors.”

The crypto lender froze all withdrawals and transfers around a month ago, citing unfavourable market situations as the crypto market plunged, while other crypto firms, Voyager Digital Ltd. and Three Arrows Capital, recently filed for bankruptcy.

The company said at the time that bankruptcy was an option and that it was also looking at restructuring its debts, MarketWatch reported.

However, despite the bankruptcy, Celsius has also already begun working on a restructuring process, according to a report from Blockchain.News.

Celsius has hired new lawyers to advise the troubled cryptocurrency lender on restructuring, according to a recent report from the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

The WSJ said that the much-needed restructuring plan has come as it seeks to escape the recent turmoil in crypto markets, citing people familiar with the matter.

According to the WSJ report, Kirkland & Ellis LLP lawyers have been called on board to advise Celsius on options, including a bankruptcy filing.

Celsius said it has $167 million in cash on hand, which will provide liquidity as it continues to operate during the restructuring process.

According to a press release from the crypto lender, the company is not requesting authority to allow customer withdrawals at this time. it further added that it has filed a series of customary motions with the court to allow it to continue operations in the normal course.

Celsius left 1.7 million customers unable to redeem their assets by freezing withdrawals and transfers last month, which has prompted state securities regulators in New Jersey, Texas and Washington to investigate the decision.

Voyager Digital Asks Court to Allow Withdrawals Request

Embattled crypto brokerage firm Voyager Digital recently sought permission to process user withdrawals from the Federal Bankruptcy Court.

According to a recent court filing, Voyager is requesting a permit from the court to approve users’ withdrawal requests. The amount is in excess of $350 million. The funds are in a For Benefit of Customers (FBO) account with New York’s Metropolitan Commercial Bank.

The firm is trailing this line to lessen customers’ worry and restore investors’ confidence. According to the firm, “failure to honour customer withdrawals any longer could materially harm customer morale.”

Recall that, on July 4, Voyager Digital halted withdrawals on its platform due to the market downturn. The firm said at the time that the move would allow it time to explore possible options to scale the difficulties brought about by the current bearish run.

Shortly after, the troubled firm filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to preserve its assets and maximize customers’ value.

The struggling firm says it has $1.3 billion in crypto assets on its platform and also holds over $350 in an FBO account with Metropolitan Commercial Bank.

In addition to this, Voyager says it has claims in excess of $650 million with Singaporean-based Three Arrows Capital.

Along with its request for permission to honour withdrawals, Voyager is also asking for approval to proceed with its other financial services. These include liquidating user accounts with negative balances and also liquidating sweep cash with third-party exchanges. 

Furthermore, it wants to carry out ordinary course reconciliation on the user accounts and also continue its crypto staking services.

With customers’ funds still trapped, the crypto community awaits the court’s ruling on the issue. The court has fixed August 4, 2022, at 11.00 am E.T. for the hearing.

The prolonged bearish market continues to affect players’ fortunes in the nascent industry adversely. 

Collapsed crypto lender Three Arrows Capital also recently filed a chapter 15 bankruptcy in the U.S. after a British Virgin Islands court ruled that the firm should be liquidated. Other crypto lenders like Celsius, Vauld, and Babel Finance have also paused withdrawals on their platforms.

Several firms, including Coinbase, Gemini, and BlockFi have reduced headcount in order to remain operational.

Celsius Case Experts Yet to Understand Cryptos Ruling Under US Bankruptcy Code

Celsius Network’s repayment options to creditors suggest either accepting “cash at a discount” or remaining long-term crypto holders, but this is yet to be decided as the crypto lender’s bankruptcy case carries on.

Celsius filed for court protection against bankruptcy last week. The crypto lender’s case involves billions of dollars of customers’ assets tied with the platform; however, experts are yet to find a solution as they are puzzled about how cryptocurrencies should be treated under the US bankruptcy code.

According to Bloomberg, Celsius customers will be represented by an official voice from a committee of creditors in the case once the panel is appointed by the office of the US Trustee – an arm of the US Department of Justice that oversees corporate bankruptcy cases.

The crypto lender suggested, via a slide presentation posted on the company’s bankruptcy website, for its part that it may give customers “the option, at the customers’ election, to recover either cash at a discount or remain ‘long’ crypto.”

The company also said on the opening day of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy hearing on July 17 that it promises not to force customers to accept repayment they may be owed in fiat currency

Patrick Nash, a bankruptcy lawyer for Celsius, said some users could be interested in receiving cash recoveries, but a “substantial majority” will prefer to fight through the crypto winter by remaining “long crypto.”

However, Celsius’ bankruptcy case rides on uncertainty as even veteran US Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn, overseeing the bankruptcy case in Manhattan, is fighting to grapple with several fundamental questions. Glenn must find a way to see how he can crack this puzzle of a case involving a firm that bills itself as a lender but has none of the traditional protections enjoyed by regulated banks.

Adding more to the turmoil, Celsius’s terms of service state that its users’ digital assets are “unsettled” and “not guaranteed” in the event of insolvency, which could mean that users may be treated as unsecured creditors.

According to Bloomberg, “under US law, traditional banks are not allowed to declare bankrupt; instead, they are taken over by regulators and customer deposits are protected. However, bank holding companies that do not hold any deposits will sometimes use Chapter 11 to reorganise themselves and pay off creditors.”

However, Chirs Giancarlo commented about the bankruptcy case to CoinDesk, noting that the “Chapter 11 filing is different” and the bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code allows a company to regroup, not put it out of business. That period of restructuring and reorganization “is exactly what Celsius is attempting to do,” he added.

Giancarlo, a senior counsel at law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, also pointed out that in most cases, “we often think about bankruptcy as the final step at the end of a company or enterprise’s existence.”

The former Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chief also believed the case would be one of those mile markers in the progression of this new asset class, resulting in “the regime that will be followed on a bankruptcy will be more clearly articulated,” as “it will be the first time a federal bankruptcy court will weigh in on a crypto collateral-based bankruptcy.”

In favour of Celsius’ effort of restructuring, the crypto lender also received approval during the July 17 hearing from Glenn to spend $3.7 million in construction costs at a new bitcoin mining facility in Texas. 

The bankruptcy case is “not a liquidation,” Nash told Glenn. “All is not lost. We intend for this to be a reorganisation.”

Glenn also approved $1.5 million on customs and duties on imported bitcoin mining rigs for Celsius.

As part of the restructuring process, the bitcoin mining facility is a means for the company to repay debts. 

Nash told Glenn that Bitcoin mining could provide a gateway to repay customers whose assets were frozen before the firm’s bankruptcy filing.

“In a world where the crypto market rebounds, the mining business has the potential to be quite valuable,” Nash said.

Prior to bankruptcy

According to a report from Blockchain.News, the crypto lender suspended all withdrawals and transfers around a month ago, citing unfavourable market situations as the crypto market plunged, cutting off access to savings for individual investors.

Celsius left 1.7 million customers unable to redeem their assets by freezing withdrawals and transfers, prompting state securities regulators in New Jersey, Texas and Washington to investigate the decision.

According to Reuters, Celsius had about 23,000 outstanding loans to retail borrowers as of July 13. It added that the loans totalled $411 million backed by collateral with a market value of $765.5 million in digital assets.

Celsius officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on July 13 at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. However, a $1.19 billion deficit was listed on the company’s balance sheet the next day.

Celsius had positioned itself in the market by promising more than 18% in interest to peoples’ holdings who deposit their digital coins. In turn, the crypto lender lent those coins out, Bloomberg reported.

However, the crypto lenders’ business model came under scrutiny following a sharp crypto market sell-off spurred by the collapse of major tokens terraUSD and luna in May.

Celsius Network Petitions Court to Consult Former CFO Rod Bolger

Embattled cryptocurrency lending platform Celsius Network has petitioned the US Bankruptcy Court to grant it permission to re-engage Rod Bolger, its former Chief Financial Officer (CFO).

The firm highlighted its plan to tap from the wealth of experience Bolger, which he deployed in the firm’s services when he was the CFO for a period of 5 months.

Bolger replaced Yaron Shalem, who was nabbed for his crypto-related fraud activities. Chris Ferraro succeeded Bolger. Should the petition to onboard him be granted by the court, Bolger will join the list of advisers the firm has employed for consultation ahead of the hearing slated for August 5.

“As CFO for the Debtors during the extreme market volatility in 2022, Bolger led efforts to steady the business, guided the financial aspects of the business, and acted as a leader of the company,” the petition reads as it makes an argument with the court. “Through the Advisory Agreement, the Debtors will be able to continue utilising Mr. Bolger’s institutional knowledge and services for at least two additional months for the benefit of their business and their estates as they continue to transition roles and responsibilities to their new CFO.”

Celsius Network resisted filing for bankruptcy for a while, and now that it has succumbed, the firm needed the best hands to help it douse the tension with customers, investors, and creditors. For his role, Bolger is bound to be handsomely rewarded as his monthly wage is set for Canadian $120,000 ($93,188), 

This new salary scale is even more than his salary while serving as the firm’s CFO, as he earned $750,000 yearly. Had he not resigned as the CFO, he would have gone on to receive performance-based cash bonuses, up to 800,000 CEL tokens.

Ex-Voyager Executives Suggest Live Trading as Restructuring Plan

Shingo Lavine and his father, Adam Lavine, both equity holders in Voyager and developers of Ethos, a leading cryptocurrency technology company, have proposed a restructuring plan to the troubled U.S. crypto lender.

Lavine’s restructuring proposal filed last week suggests that Voyager suspends all its lending activities and focuses on conducting live trading.

Three years ago, Voyager acquired the assets of crypto tech firm Ethos at about $4 million. This made Shingo Lavine the Chief Innovation Officer at Voyager while he was still a member of the company’s Board of Directors. Shortly after, he left Voyager due to certain disagreements with the company’s direction.

In the turmoil of the current crypto winter, Voyager Digital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York. This afforded it the right to come up with an efficient restructuring plan which will create a path to resume account access and return value to customers while reimbursing them. 

Voyager’s Initial Restructuring Proposal

Not cast on stones, the initial restructuring plan was to give customers with crypto in their accounts an assortment of proceeds from the loan owed by Three Arrows Capital (3AC), shares in the newly restructured company, and Voyager tokens. This is in addition to the crypto already in their accounts.

3AC currently owes the crypto assets lender over $650 million in cryptocurrency. Breaking it down further, the previously undisclosed loan is 15,250 Bitcoin (BTC) and $350 million USDC. At hand, Voyager has over $110 million as cash and owned crypto assets. It still has $350 million in its For Benefit of Customers (FBO) account at Metropolitan Commercial Bank.

Voyager has over $1.3 billion in crypto assets on its platform. Although, some of it was planned to be used as liquidity for the day-to-day running of the platform while the restructuring takes place. Not yet to be concluded, but the Lavines’ new 8-step proposal is a shift from these initial plans.

The father and son wish their new firm Emerald would become a pivotal collaborator with Voyager in the restructuring process. The bottom line of their plan is to integrate live trading and issue a recovery token to customers to retain them on the platform.

A snippet of the plan sought to “provide major additional upside to unsecured creditors and incentivize customer retention through a ‘recovery token’ in addition to VGX Tokens. Give everyone a shot at full, or even above 100%+ recovery.”

Mark Cuban Slammed with Lawsuit for Endorsing Bankrupt Voyager Digital

Days after going tough on metaverse real estate, Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the basketball team Dallas Mavericks, has been slammed with a class action lawsuit for his role in promoting the bankrupt crypto platform Voyager Digital. 

The class action suit was filed by the Moskowitz Law Firm in the United States District Court in Southern Florida and is demanding that Cuban, alongside Voyager Digital’s CEO, Stephen Erlich, and Dallas Mavericks pay back those who have suffered losses through the platform whom it said its products were paraded as a Ponzi scheme.

The lawsuit alleges that the business model of Voyager Digital was hinged on frequent promotions from Mark Cuban.

“Cuban and Ehrlich, went to great lengths to use their experience as investors to dupe millions of Americans into investing—in many cases, their life savings—into the Deceptive Voyager Platform and purchasing Voyager Earn Program Accounts (‘EPAs’), which are unregistered securities,” the lawsuit alleges.

He is known as one of the first Wall Street veterans to embrace digital currencies, and he is particularly known as a lover of Bitcoin (BTC) and Dogecoin (DOGE), a tag he competes with Elon Musk for. He took his advocacy to Voyager Digital, and per the lawsuit;

“Voyager Platform relied on Cuban’s and the Dallas Maverick’s vocal support and Cuban’s monetary investment in order to continue to sustain itself until its implosion and Voyager’s subsequent bankruptcy.”

Voyager Digital declared bankruptcy after halting withdrawals on its platform, a situation highlighting its disrupted business opportunity with the inability of Three Arrows Capital (3AC) to pay as much as $670 million it owed the company. 

Considering its current woes, it is unclear how well the company will fare with this new lawsuit. Still, it is very focused on bringing succour to some of its customers, which is now necessary since the firm’s representatives advised against accepting the offer from FTX and Alameda Research.

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