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Bankrupt lender Celsius files motion to extend time for ‘reorganization’

Troubled crypto lender Celsius said it filed a motion with a U.S. court asking to extend the time it needs to come up with a reorganization plan. The firm is now going through bankruptcy proceedings, months after it froze billons of dollars in customer funds in June.

In July, Celsius filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York — roughly a month after it halted customer withdrawals. 

The initial filing initiated a four-month “period of exclusivity” giving the firm the right to come up with a reorganization plan that details how it will repay its debts. Meanwhile, all attempts at civil litigation from creditors are kept on hold. It owes more than $5.5 billion, the company reported.

As the exclusivity period is nearing an end, Celsius has asked for an extension. The exclusivity period can be reduced or extended by the court. Celsius must submit a standalone proposal to reorganize and the process must also include steps for the sale of its assets. Celsius said it needs more time to complete reorganization plan because the work is “complex.”  

“We are making substantial progress towards the determination of a value-maximizing path forward, but this important work is complex and it is critical for us to be as rigorous and thorough as possible in the interest of all stakeholders,” Celsius said.

During an intense market downturn, Celsius is one among many crypto firms dealing with insolvency — the latest being FTX exchange and its sister firm Alameda Research. Other crypto companies including Three Arrows Capital, Voyager, Vauld, Zipmex and Babel Finance are also facing serious insolvency issues. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Vishal Chawla

FTX’s demise part 2 with Wintermute’s Evgeny Gaevoy and CryptoQuant’s Ki Young Ju

Episode 110 of Season 4 of The Scoop was recorded live with The Block’s Frank Chaparro, Wintermute Founder and CEO Evgeny Gaevoy, and CryptoQuant Co-founder and CEO Ki Jung Ju.

Listen below, and subscribe to The Scoop on AppleSpotifyGoogle PodcastsStitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts. Email feedback and revision requests can be sent to podcast@theblockcrypto.com.


In part one of The Scoop’s coverage of the on-going controversy surrounding FTX and Alameda, Framework Venture co-founder Vance Spence suggested that FTX must have a very large hole in their balance sheet to be forced to turn to their biggest competitor for a buyout.

We now know that FTX likely has upwards of an $8 billion hole in its balance sheet, which CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is attempting to fill through fundraising efforts.

In part two of this breaking news episode of The Scoop, Evgeny Gaevoy, Founder and CEO of crypto market-making firm Wintermute, and Ki Jung Ju, Co-Founder and CEO of crypto data provider CryptoQuant, examine FTX’s demise with Framework Ventures Co-founder Vance Spencer. They discuss the relationship between FTX and Alameda, as well as what comes next for the crypto industry when the dust finally settles.

According to Ju, whose company CryptoQuant specializes in analyzing on-chain data, there have been many substantial transfers between FTX and Alameda:

“Digging into their wallets, FTX and Alameda’s wallets, and there are many significant flows between those entities… I think there are many untransparent or shady deals between FTX and Alameda…”

While the full extent of the relationship between FTX and Alameda remains unknown for now, Gaevoy also says that the connection between the two companies was improper:

“It turned out that there was this massive moral hazard — there were way more connection points than should have been morally possible, and it ended with a spectacular, spectacular blowup.”


This episode is brought to you by our sponsors Tron, Ledn
About Tron
TRON is dedicated to accelerating the decentralization of the internet via blockchain technology and decentralized applications (dApps). Founded in September 2017 by H.E. Justin Sun, the TRON network has continued to deliver impressive achievements since MainNet launch in May 2018. July 2018 also marked the ecosystem integration of BitTorrent, a pioneer in decentralized web3 services boasting over 100 million monthly active users. The TRON network completed full decentralization in December 2021 and is now a community-governed DAO. | TRONDAO | Twitter | Discord |

About Ledn
Ledn was founded on the unshakeable conviction that digital assets have the power to democratize access to the global economy. We help you to experience the real life benefits of your Bitcoin without having to sell it. Start a savings account, take out a loan, or double your Bitcoin. For more information visit Ledn.io

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Davis Quinton and Frank Chaparro

Which crypto companies have exposure to FTX?

With the fate of crypto exchange FTX hanging in the balance, many of crypto’s most notable companies have taken to social media to clarify whether they have exposure to the exchange, its native token FTT and sister trading firm Alameda Research.  

Here are some of the most prominent announcements The Block has tracked since Nov. 8.  

The exposed

Notable companies that have disclosed exposure to FTX or have funds stuck in the exchange.

Amber Group: Amber Group said it did not have any exposure to Alameda or FTX’s native token FTT, but that it does have less than 10% of its trading funds stuck on the FTX exchange. The situation does not threaten its operations or liquidity, it said in a Twitter update. 

Crypto.com: Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek tweeted that its direct exposure to FTX is “immaterial,” with less than $10 million of its capital deposited on the exchange to execute customer trades. 

Galaxy Digital: Galaxy Digital said in its third-quarter earnings report that it has a $76.8 million exposure to FTX. Of that, $47.5 million is “in the withdrawal process,” according to the company.

Kraken: Crypto exchange Kraken said it holds 9,000 FTT, but that it has no exposure to Alameda. “We have not listed the FTT token on our spot or futures exchanges and Kraken is not affected by the recent FTX news in any material way,” said the company in a statement.

Multicoin Capital: Crypto venture capital firm Multicoin Capital is significantly impacted by the FTX crisis, according to a letter obtained by The Block. About 10% of the assets under management in its Master Fund were still pending withdrawals on the exchange as of the morning of Nov. 9. These assets include bitcoin, ether and U.S. dollars.

Selini Capital: Selini Capital has about 3% of its assets directly on FTX that it hopes to get back, the company’s chief investment officer Jordi Alexander told The Block in an interview. However, he said “it’s not the end of the world,” and that the firm is more concerned about the long-term impact of the situation on the industry. 

Sequoia Capital: Venture capital firm Sequoia Capital sent a letter to limited partners saying it had exposure of $213.5 million related to FTX. However, it called its exposure to the exchange “limited.” Sequoia marked down its FTX investments to zero. 

Wintermute: Crypto market maker Wintermute said it has funds stuck on FTX, but did not disclose the amount. It said that while not ideal, the amount is “within our risk tolerances and does not have a significant impact on our overall financial position.”

Those with fewer problems

Companies that claim little to no exposure to FTX. 

Anchorage Digital: Institutional crypto platform Anchorage Digital does not have loans or “trading exposure” to FTX or its sister company Alameda Research, an Anchorage spokesperson told The Block. Anchorage confirmed that Alameda is an investor in the company. 

AlphaLab: Singapore-based technology trading firm AlphaLab Capital Group said it hadn’t taken any external loans and they’ve never had any exposure to Alameda or its lenders. AlphaLab transacts over $2 billion in crypto assets across over 40 exchanges, according to its website

Bitmex: Crypto exchange Bitmex said it did not have any exposure to FTX, Alameda or FTX’s native FTT token. 

Coinbase: Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong tweeted on Nov. 8 that the exchange does not have any exposure to FTX or the FTT native token. 

Cumberland: Crypto trading firm Cumberland said it had “virtually no exposure to FTX” on Twitter. 

Deribit: Crypto derivatives exchange Deribit said on Twitter that it doesn’t have any special terms for large and risky positions with Alameda. “Furthermore, Deribit or group companies do not have assets with FTX or other exposure to e.g. FTT or SOL,” the company tweeted.

Genesis: Crypto trading and lending firm Genesis Trading said it had no material exposure to FTX’s native token or “any other tokens issued by centralized exchanges.” However, it did disclose about $7 million in losses across all counterparties — including Alameda Research — after hedging and selling collateral in anticipation of market volatility on Nov. 8. 

Solana Labs: U.S.-based Solana Labs did not have any assets on FTX.com, co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko tweeted

Nexo: Crypto lending platform Nexo tweeted on Nov. 8 that it has “$0 net exposure” to FTX and Alameda, and has withdrawn its entire balance from the exchange. It said it did have a “small loan” to Alameda equal to less than 0.5% of its assets, “fully collateralized by digital assets that were sold in full by our team two days ago.”

Tether: Tether CTO Paolo Ardoino tweeted that the stablecoin issuer has no exposure to FTX or Alameda. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kristin Majcher and Kari McMahon

Bankman-Fried tells FTX top priority is fundraising after failed Binance deal

FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried hasn’t given up yet.

A day after rival Binance walked away from making a deal with troubled crypto exchange FTX, Bankman-Fried is once again looking to raise money for his company, according to a Slack message shared by Bankman-Fried to his staff on Thursday and confirmed as genuine by a source at the company. 

“For the next week, we will be conducting a raise. The goal of this raise will be first to do right by customers; second by current and possible new investors; third all of you guys,” the message reads. “And in, and only in, a hypothetical world where everything turns out amazingly and everyone else is done right, maybe myself as an investor, fourth and last — but that’s not a particularly important part of anything we’re going to be doing as a company.”

With FTX facing collapse, it made a deal with larger rival Binance on Tuesday for a potential acquisition. But Binance walked away a day later after looking at its financials during due diligence.

Bankman-Fried seemed understandably annoyed at Binance’s action. “On Binance: I shouldn’t throw stones in a glass house, so I’ll hold back a bit here, except to say: probably they never really planned to go through with the deal, but so be it; we’re going to do our jobs here regardless,” he said in the Slack message.

Bloomberg reported Wednesday, citing a person with direct knowledge of the matter, that Bankman-Fried told FTX investors that the company would need to file for bankruptcy without a cash injection.

Bankman-Fried reportedly informed investors on the call that FTX faced a shortfall of up to $8 billion and needed $4 billion to remain solvent and that FTX is attempting to raise rescue financing in the form of debt, equity, or a combination of the two. The call reportedly took place before Binance pulled out of the deal.

Earlier today, Tron founder Justin Sun said in a tweet that he is working on a solution with FTX, without giving any details. Bankman-Fried retweeted Sun’s tweet. His Slack message also mentions working with Sun. “As one part of the potential above raise, we have had talks with Justin Sun (as Twitter broke). Details forthcoming there,” reads the message.

The raise, if successful, may end up being a combined FTX International and FTX U.S. infusion, according to the message.

Besides planning the fundraise, Bankman-Fried’s other priorities in the coming days include a detailed explanation of what happened and what went wrong and deciding management structure and leadership going forward.

Bankman-Fried encouraged FTX staff to stay on, but he won’t mind if anyone decides to leave the firm, according to the Slack message.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Yogita Khatri

Kraken holds FTT tokens, but claims no exposure to Alameda

Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken said it has no exposure to Alameda Research, but that it holds around 9,000 FTT, the native token of embattled exchange FTX. 

“We have not listed the FTT token on our spot or futures exchanges and Kraken is not affected by the recent FTX news in any material way,” said the company in a statement. 

The statement comes amid rife speculation as to which companies might be affected by the stunning collapse of FTX — either by having lent it money, through equity investments, or because of money held on the exchange.

On Nov. 8, FTX revealed that it had agreed to an acquisition by rival Binance. Yesterday, however, that acquisition fell through after Binance reviewed the FTX’s financials. 

An array of crypto heavyweights and other companies have issued statements on their exposure, or lack thereof, to FTX in the past 24 hours. Sequoia Capital said that $213.5 million in equity investments in FTX across two of its funds are now effectively worthless

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Tom Matsuda

Justin Sun says he is working on solution to FTX crisis

Justin Sun, the billionaire founder of the Tron blockchain, said late on Nov. 9 that he is working on a solution to the crisis engulfing FTX, the crypto exchange.

In a tweet, Sun said, “we are putting together a solution together with FTX to initiate a pathway forward.”

FTX’s CEO Sam Bankman-Fried retweeted the post — his first action on Twitter since he announced that Binance had agreed to acquire the embattled exchange. That proposal fell apart earlier today, with Binance stating that FTX’s issues are beyond its control.

Sun did not provide any further details about the solution, and — after the failed Binance deal — there will be significant doubts about whether an agreement with FTX can indeed be reached.

In subsequent tweets, Sun said that the “ongoing liquidity crunch, despite short term in nature, is harmful to the industry development and investors alike,” adding that his team has been working hard to avoid “further deterioration.”

Sun was recently rumored to have quietly masterminded the acquisition of crypto exchange Huobi by About Capital Management’s M&A fund, but he denied those reports, claiming he is “only an advisor” to the company.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Ryan Weeks

Starknet reveals new governance entity, StarkNet Foundation

Ethereum scaling protocol Starknet announced a new governance organization called the Starknet Foundation, which will lead grants and funding for new Starknet protocols and aim to create standards that it claims will align with Ethereum’s decentralization and open source standards.

The foundation will receive 50.1% of the total StarkNet token supply, which it could use for these purposes. The announcement comes amid the crisis surrounding FTX and Alameda.

The Starknet Foundation will start off with seven elected board members who will play key leadership roles in the foundation’s long-term direction. Members include Andrew McLaughlin, former deputy chief technology officer of the United States under the Obama administration, and Eric Wall, a well-known blockchain whistleblower.  

The board will operate on a majority-rule vote structure to start, and may decentralize this process in the future,  Wall told The Block. 

The foundation will primarily focus on research, funding, and “developing Starknet governance mechanisms,” it said in its announcement. These mechanisms include research and development around its sequencer and proving systems, which are core protocol components that have posed a challenge to decentralize in Ethereum scaling protocols. 

Although the Starknet Foundation listed several of its priorities in its post, “it’s free to take whatever positions it chooses regarding Starknet,” it said.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Mike Truppa

Sequoia says its investment in FTX is now worthless

Sequoia Capital, a leading venture capital firm, said in a letter to its limited partners that it has marked down the value of all its investments in FTX to zero.   

The letter, sent today by the Sequoia Capital team and shared by the firm on Twitter, laid out details of its exposure to FTX across two different funds. In total, the venerable venture capital firm stomached a $213.5 million loss. 

“Sequoia Capital’s exposure to FTX is limited,” the letter reads. “We own FTX.com and FTX US in one private fund, Global Growth Fund lll. FTX is not a top ten position in the fund, and our $150 million cost basis accounts for less than 3% of the committed capital of the fund.” 
 
The letter goes on to state that although it took a $150 million loss on FTX, Sequoia’s Global Growth Fund lll is in “good shape” and has returned approximately $7.5 billion in realized and unrealized gains that offsets this loss. 

“Separately, SCGE Fund, L.P. invested $63.5 million in FTX.com and FTX US, representing less than 1% of the SCGE Funds 9/30/2022 portfolio (at fair value),” it continued, detailing a separate fund’s exposure.  

At the end of the letter, Sequoia said it is “in the business of taking risk.”  

“At the time of our investment in FTX, we ran a rigorous diligence process,” it added. “In 2021, the year of our investment, FTX generated approximately $1 billion in revenue and more than $250 million in operating incoming, as was made public in August 2022.” 

The letter comes after the stunning collapse of FTX, the exchange operator run by Sam Bankman-Fried. After a liquidity crunch at FTX and Alameda, a connected trading business, Binance briefly looked as though it might swoop and acquire FTX — but backed out of the deal earlier today. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Mike Truppa

Justice Department joins SEC in FTX probe: WSJ

For collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, legal troubles are mounting.

The Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are working together to investigate FTX’s U.S. subsidiary, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing an unnamed person familiar with the matter.

FTX, now facing potential bankruptcy, has garnered the attention of multiple regulators. Amid the expansion of the SEC’s months-long probe into whether assets on FTX.us may be considered securities, the agency is in close contact with the DoJ, the newspaper reported. If the SEC determines the assets in question to be securities, it would mean FTX may have violated U.S. exchange laws.

Regulators also are turning their attention to the relationship between FTX.us and its Caribbean parent company, as well as the nature of its connections to trading firm Alameda Research.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Jeremy Nation

FTX turmoil, midterms scramble crypto’s D.C. agenda

With the digital asset market tumbling, the industry’s best-known face in Washington, D.C. in serious trouble, and control of the Senate in limbo, crypto policy advocates scrambled to chart a path forward on Wednesday. 

The credibility crisis they face comes at a key moment, as policymakers consider writing new rules for the industry and a new class of lawmakers prepares to join Congress. 

“Recent developments show that even the crypto companies that fashion themselves as the most responsible and legitimate actors in the industry appear to be selling the public false goods. Policymakers and regulators should strengthen rules to protect consumers and should be skeptical of the industry’s efforts to write their own regulations,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said in a statement to The Block. 

Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler weighed in on the FTX turmoil, calling it part of a pattern that hurts investors. The Biden administration also has encouraged regulators to use existing rules to bolster its enforcement actions against crypto firms.

Adding to industry tensions Wednesday, news broke that Binance pulled out of its letter of intent to effectively bail out troubled rival FTX, renewing fears of contagion in the crypto markets.

“There are a lot of unknowns right now,” said Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association, an industry trade group. 

The shock decline of an industry powerhouse is front-of-mind for digital asset advocates, who are also waiting to see which party will control Congress after unexpectedly close midterm elections.  

“A lot happened in just the last 24 hours, so people here are still trying to digest the news,” said Paul Brigner, the head of U.S. policy and strategic advocacy at Electric Coin Company.

The saga playing out between FTX and Binance will surely draw additional scrutiny from regulators. A spokesperson for FTX.US Head of Policy Mark Wetjen declined to comment. 

Digital asset industry advocates are on edge. Rumors that Binance would back out of the deal to buy FTX sent whispers through a breakfast meeting of crypto policy buffs on Wednesday morning. By the afternoon, Binance had walked away from the deal. 

Meanwhile, it’s not clear whether Democrats or Republicans will control Congress next year.  Republicans are on track to win a slight majority in the House of Representatives, but that outcome is uncertain. Votes for crucial Senate races are still being counted in contests in Arizona and Nevada, and the Georgia race between Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., and football star Herschel Walker is headed to a runoff in December because neither candidate cleared 50% of the vote.

Regardless of which party wins control of the House and Senate, any crypto-related legislation will likely need bipartisan support to become law.

Even industry proponents are warning that the FTX fallout could damage crypto’s reputation on Capitol Hill. Bankman-Fried had been a vocal supporter of a digital commodity regulation bill filed by Sens. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., and John Boozman, R-Ark., and was pushing lawmakers to pass the proposal as part of a larger legislative package before the end of the year. 

“It will become increasingly difficult to convince already skeptical members of Congress and regulators of the good intentions of the industry when one of its best-known advocates in D.C. is impacted so visibly,” said Alex Grieve, a vice president at Tiger Hill Partners, an advocacy firm that represents clients in the digital asset industry.

Gensler, the SEC chair, seemed to throw cold water on Bankman-Fried’s priority bill at a conference on Wednesday. Gensler said that “some of that legislation was promoted by some of the same folks that failed in the last day or two. And you sort of wonder why. Because it was too light touch.”

The FTX implosion could also serve as a catalyst for regulators to beef up enforcement of existing rules, Prometheum Founder and Co-CEO Aaron Kaplan said.

“It’s becoming more and more apparent that centralized exchanges need to be operating under a federal framework, which is meant to protect customers, to protect investors, to segregate customers’ funded securities. And it’s my belief that the best framework for that is the federal securities laws,” Kaplan said. Prometheum recently began offering digital securities trading on a platform regulated by the SEC.

“As a result of the events that we’re seeing when it comes to FTX particularly, I think we’ll see an additional degree of government oversight,” Kaplan added.

It’s unlikely that the Bankman-Fried-backed commodities bill will pass before the end of the year, but advocates say the exchange’s failure could be a catalyst for lawmakers to draft more crypto legislation. 

“The work of educating policymakers is going to continue. I think it’s incumbent upon us to tell them good stories, and to differentiate the good actors from the bad actors. And that’s not an ideal place to be, but it’s the place that we’re in,” said Smith, the Blockchain Association head. 

“We’ve got our work cut out for us, but I’m confident that it will get there and we’ll be able to move forward,” Smith added. “We might not all make it, but most of us are gonna make it.” 

 

With additional reporting by Kollen Post. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Stephanie Murray


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