3AC Withdraws $45m from Curve and Convex amid Bankruptcy

Three Arrows Capital (3AC) might have declared bankruptcy, but the firm is still conducting a number of robust transactions, according to insights derived from on-chain data. 

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The company, which was also declared as a liquidated entity by a court in the British Virgin Islands, has unstaked a total of 20,945 staked ether (stETH), worth $33.3 million, from Curve Finance.

The transaction was discovered in part because the crypto analytics platform, Nansen, had already marked the wallet address used for the transaction as belonging to 3AC. Su Zhu ran the firm and also withdrew some funds, including 2,421 wrapped ether (3.98 million), 202.7 wrapped bitcoin ($4 million) and 4,051,367 USDT stablecoins from the Convex Finance protocol as well.

The wallet address attached to Three Arrows Capital that was used to initiate the transaction with Curve is also what is being used to keep hold of the unstaked $45 million. According to the balances in the Wallet at the time of writing, a total of $57.86 million.

Prior to its liquidation and subsequent bankruptcy, 3AC was a highly capitalized firm, serving as both a hedge fund as well as an active investment outfit in the broader Web3.0 ecosystem. The trading platform is known to be the prominent backer of key projects like Fireblocks and Terraform Labs.

The bet on Terraform Labs fueled its downfall, and the cataclysmic impact accounts for what has dragged many other crypto firms like Voyager Digital into the bankruptcy circle.

According to liquidation proceedings, it was discovered that the embattled crypto hedge fund owed as much as $3.5 billion to creditors, one of whom was Blockchain.com

While Teneo Restructuring is in charge of the liquidation proceedings, some investors, particularly those with small stakes in the firm, can be adjudged as not having a visible edge in reclaiming their funds.

It is not immediately clear what the unstaked funds are meant for, as no comment or reference has been gleaned from 3AC or its representatives.

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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. 

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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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Mark Cuban Slammed with Lawsuit for Shilling 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. 

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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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South Korean VC Firm Hashed Lost Up to $3.6B to LUNA Crash: CEO

With many crypto companies notably finding it difficult to share the extent to which the collapse of TerraUSD (UST) and LUNA coins affected their businesses, Simon Seojoon Kim, the Chief Executive Officer of South Korean venture capital firm Hashed, has revealed how much the firm lost when Terra collapse back in May.

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In an interview with Bloomberg, Kim revealed that Hashed acquired as many as 30 million LUNA tokens when the project was still in its infancy. The investment grew alongside the protocol, and at the time when LUNA attained its All-Time High (ATH) back in May, the venture capital investments in the token have grown to $3.6 billion.

Kim did not reveal that Hashed sold any of the tokens prior to the crash but noted that despite the crash, his firm still believes in the potential locked up in the digital currency ecosystem. In light of this, Kim told Bloomberg that Hashed is looking to raise a new funding round with the projection to back gaming protocols building in the Wbe3.0 world.

“In the tech sector, there’s no such thing as a portfolio that guarantees success, and we make our investments with that in mind,” said Kim. “We believe in the community’s growth, and that has never changed.”

Known for his bets on platforms like Sky Mavis, the parent company of Axie Infinity, and The Sandbox, Kim is leveraging his experiences picking up good protocols in the gaming sector to back. While he takes responsibility for the turnout of the LUNA token per Hashe’s investments, Kim reiterated that the VC does not give investment advice seeing most projects it backs are in their experimental phases.

The LUNA crash has been attributed as one of the reasons for the collapse of top firms like Three Arrows Capital (3AC) and Voyager Digital.

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South Korean VC Firm Hashed Lost Up to $3.6B to LUNA Crash: CEO

With many crypto companies notably finding it difficult to share the extent to which the collapse of TerraUSD (UST) and LUNA coins affected their businesses, Simon Seojoon Kim, the Chief Executive Officer of South Korean venture capital firm Hashed, has revealed how much the firm lost when Terra collapse back in May.

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In an interview with Bloomberg, Kim revealed that Hashed acquired as many as 30 million LUNA tokens when the project was still in its infancy. The investment grew alongside the protocol, and at the time when LUNA attained its All-Time High (ATH) back in May, the venture capital investments in the token have grown to $3.6 billion.

Kim did not reveal that Hashed sold any of the tokens prior to the crash but noted that despite the crash, his firm still believes in the potential locked up in the digital currency ecosystem. In light of this, Kim told Bloomberg that Hashed is looking to raise a new funding round with the projection to back gaming protocols building in the Wbe3.0 world.

“In the tech sector, there’s no such thing as a portfolio that guarantees success, and we make our investments with that in mind,” said Kim. “We believe in the community’s growth, and that has never changed.”

Known for his bets on platforms like Sky Mavis, the parent company of Axie Infinity, and The Sandbox, Kim is leveraging his experiences picking up good protocols in the gaming sector to back. While he takes responsibility for the turnout of the LUNA token per Hashe’s investments, Kim reiterated that the VC does not give investment advice seeing most projects it backs are in their experimental phases.

The LUNA crash has been attributed as one of the reasons for the collapse of top firms like Three Arrows Capital (3AC) and Voyager Digital.

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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.

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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.”

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MAS Insists Terra, 3AC Unlicensed to Operate in Singapore

Ravi Menon, the managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has corrected the misconception about how some of the most distressing crypto firms are linked to Singapore. Menon indicated that crypto entities like Terraform Labs, the Luna Foundation Guard or Three Arrows Capital are without proper licenses in Singapore.

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In his annual report speech for the 2021/2022 financial year, Ravi said claims that Terraform Labs and the Luna Foundation Guard are “Singapore-based” is false, but rather, the duo is “not licensed or regulated by MAS, nor have they applied for any license or sought exemption from holding any license.”

The MAS boss said liquidated Three Arrows Capital is not regulated under the established Payment Services Act but” had operated under the registered fund management regime to carry out limited fund management business” in the country, an activity it has stopped and has “ceased to manage funds in Singapore prior to the problems leading to its insolvency.”

Ravi Menon also shed insights into the status of Vauld Group as an entity that is “currently not licensed by MAS nor has it sought any exemption from holding a licence under the Payment Services Act.” Menon affirmed that Vauld has “submitted a licence application, which is pending review.”

The misconceptions about the status of these companies come off as another false information flying around in the digital currency ecosystem, which Ravi Menon said the MAS has been warning the public about for the past five years. He still reiterated that retail investments in the crypto ecosystem are very risky and that it will organize a dedicated Green Shoots seminar to share its strategies for the crypto ecosystem in August.

The administration plans to broaden crypto regulation in response to the recent market turmoil in the crypto space. The MAS might further tighten retail-investor access to crypto by covering more activities, Menon disclosed without further evaluation. The consultation is expected to conduct during September and October. 

The Monetary Authority of Singapore is one of the most bullish regulators when it comes to the embrace of digital currency initiatives. However, the apex bank has never compromised on its standards when it comes to granting licenses to startups offering services in the space, a move that has pushed Binance away from its application to do business in the country.

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MAS Insists Terra, 3AC Unlicensed to Operate in Singapore

Ravi Menon, the managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has corrected the misconception about how some of the most distressing crypto firms are linked to Singapore.

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In his annual report speech for the 2021/2022 financial year, Ravi said claims that Terraform Labs and the Luna Foundation Guard are “Singapore-based” is false, but rather, the duo is “not licensed or regulated by MAS, nor have they applied for any license or sought exemption from holding any license.”

The MAS boss said liquidated Three Arrows Capital is not regulated under the established Payment Services Act but” had operated under the registered fund management regime to carry out limited fund management business” in the country, an activity it has stopped and has “ceased to manage funds in Singapore prior to the problems leading to its insolvency.”

Ravi Menon also shed insights into the status of Vauld Group as an entity that is “currently not licensed by MAS nor has it sought any exemption from holding a licence under the Payment Services Act.” Menon affirmed that Vauld has “submitted a licence application, which is pending review.”

The misconceptions about the status of these companies come off as another false information flying around in the digital currency ecosystem, which Ravi Menon said the MAS has been warning the public about for the past five years. He still reiterated that retail investments in the crypto ecosystem are very risky and that it will organize a dedicated Green Shoots seminar to share its strategies for the crypto ecosystem in August.

The administration plans to broaden crypto regulation in response to the recent market turmoil in the crypto space. The MAS might further tighten retail-investor access to crypto by covering more activities, Menon disclosed without further evaluation. The consultation is expected to conduct during September and October. 

The Monetary Authority of Singapore is one of the most bullish regulators when it comes to the embrace of digital currency initiatives. However, the apex bank has never compromised on its standards when it comes to granting licenses to startups offering services in the space, a move that has pushed Binance away from its application to do business in the country.

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Su Zhu Amongst Creditors Files $5m Claim against His Own Firm: Sources

Su Zhu, the co-founder and CEO of bankrupt Three Arrows Capital (3AC), is reportedly amongst the creditors that filed claims against the embattled crypto hedge fund.

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This news was shared by a Twitter user named ‘Soldman Gachs’ who also claimed he was one of the creditors of Three Arrows Capital.

“I’ve just seen the list of creditors to #3AC and noticed that @zhusu has filed a claim for $5 million. While being on the run, he has somehow found the time to diligently and ruthlessly fill out forms to pursue a claim against his own Fund,” he said in a tweet.

While the news that Su Zhu filed a claim against his own company may sound bizarre, Soldman Gachs also revealed that ThreeAC Limited, the investment manager of 3AC, also filed a $25 million claim against Three Arrows Capital. The creditor also shared the list of other creditors of the company, citing the likes of Digital Currency Group (DCG), Algorand, CoinList, and the MoonBeamNetwork amongst others.

Teneo Restructuring published the list of the creditors, which is made public for the first time since it was appointed by a court in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) to handle 3AC’s liquidation process. These creditors were reportedly expected to have a meeting on Monday, July 18.

The total value of all claims against Three Arrows Capital came in at $2.8 million, and per Soldman Gachs, some of these creditors filed for just $1 with the right.

It is highly unlikely that 3AC has enough collateral and assets to meet up with all of these claims, a harsh reality that might make some creditors lose their funds. The liquidation process is a cycle in the current crypto ecosystem, and one of 3AC’s creditors, Celsius Network, has also filed for bankruptcy in the US recently.

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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.

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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.

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