Coming at a time of tightening credit markets, cryptocurrency business bankruptcies are making big headlines for their sudden entries into bankruptcy courts following rapid declines in the value of digital assets. From July 2022 to January 2023, there have been several bankruptcies filed by crypto brokerages, exchanges, and lenders, resulting in a significant evaporation of value. All signs suggest that more crypto bankruptcies are coming, so investors should understand the potential impact of digital assets held or invested in an exchange.
What Is Causing the Crypto Bankruptcies?
The reasons for these bankruptcies vary, including alleged fraud in the case of FTX Trading Ltd. However, the start of a broader crypto sell-off in the market began in May 2022 with the collapse of the Terra Luna coin and the related “stablecoin” TerraUSD.[1] Within a few days, Terra Luna and TerraUSD both lost substantial value, leading many crypto investors to begin seeking to withdraw their digital assets from various crypto exchanges and brokerages.[2] This led to the failure of crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (or 3AC), which had significant exposure to Terra Luna.[3] Numerous future Chapter 11 filers had loaned money to 3AC, including BlockFi (a cryptocurrency lender), Celsius Network (a cryptocurrency lender), and Voyager Digital (a cryptocurrency brokerage). In particular, Voyager Digital loaned $665 million to 3AC; and when 3AC defaulted on the loan, Voyager filed for Chapter 11.[4] In May 2022, investors withdrew over $1 billion from the Celsius Network platform due to what the CEO of Celsius referred to as a generalized “distrust of cryptocurrency.”[5] Over the course of 2022, the value of Bitcoin dropped approximately 65 percent.[6]
What has followed is a wave of digital asset freezes, followed shortly thereafter by a wave of Chapter 11 bankruptcies in the United States. Celsius Network froze its platform for trading digital assets on June 12, 2022, and then filed for Chapter 11 on July 13, 2022.[7] Voyager Digital froze its trading on July 1, 2022, and then filed for Chapter 11 on July 5, 2022.[8] FTX Trading Ltd. (a cryptocurrency exchange and hedge fund) froze its platform for trading on November 8, 2022, and then filed for Chapter 11 on November 11, 2022.[9] The FTX trading freeze had a serious impact on BlockFi, which had $355 million of assets at FTX.[10] BlockFi also made loans to Alameda Research, an FTX affiliate and hedge fund, which defaulted on approximately $680 million in collateralized loan obligations.[11] BlockFi limited customer withdrawals on November 10, 2022, and then filed for Chapter 11 on November 28, 2022.[12] Genesis Global Capital (a cryptocurrency lender) froze customer redemptions on November 16, 2022, and then filed for Chapter 11 on January 20, 2023.[13] Similar to other crypto bankruptcy filers, Genesis loaned significant amounts to 3AC and Alameda Research, both of which filed insolvency proceedings in 2022.[14]
Most of these Chapter 11 filings occurred with little preplanning, which is rare in contemporary large Chapter 11 filings. Customarily, large companies will conduct weeks or months of planning and negotiations with its creditors prior to filing for bankruptcy, which typically helps to shorten the bankruptcy process and ensure greater certainty as to results. Instead, each of these crypto businesses has largely free-fallen into bankruptcy court, without a go-forward plan, following a rapid decline in value.
The FTX Collapse
The FTX bankruptcy caused significant disruption in the broader market for cryptocurrencies due to its size and perceived stability before its collapse. Sam Bankman-Fried, the majority owner of FTX and its affiliates, was arrested on December 12, 2022, for various alleged crimes connected to his operation of FTX, including wire fraud, securities fraud, and money laundering. Among the allegations by prosecutors is that Bankman-Fried diverted billions of dollars of customer funds for his personal use and to make investments. Bankman-Fried pleaded not guilty to the charges. On December 21, 2022, Caroline Ellison, the CEO of Alameda Research, and Gary Wang, FTX’s cofounder and chief technology officer, each pleaded guilty to charges that they helped Bankman-Fried in a years-long scheme to defraud investors.[15]
At 4:30 a.m. on November 11, 2022 (the day that FTX filed for bankruptcy), Bankman-Fried resigned his CEO role, and all corporate powers and authority were delegated to John J. Ray III, including the power to appoint independent directors and commence the Chapter 11 cases.[16] Ray appointed five restructuring experts as independent directors of each of the five business silos that FTX operated prebankruptcy.[17] Ray has significant restructuring experience, having worked as a chief restructuring officer or CEO on other large corporate failures, such as Enron and Residential Capital.
In the first-day affidavit filed by FTX with the bankruptcy court, Ray stated that he has never seen such a failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information.[18] Ray indicated that he has no confidence in the financial statements produced while Bankman-Fried was in control of FTX,[19] that FTX did not have an accounting department,[20] and that FTX did not have a centralized cash-management system throughout its corporate structure.[21] Under its former leadership, FTX did not keep appropriate books and records, or even security controls, for its digital assets, and Bankman-Fried and Wang controlled nearly all access to digital assets in FTX.[22] Ray has engaged forensic analysts to assist in identifying FTX assets on the blockchain, and cybersecurity professionals to identify any unauthorized transactions.
As a sign of just how volatile these crypto bankruptcies can be, FTX filed for bankruptcy a mere twenty-three days after it sought and received bankruptcy court approval to purchase the digital assets of Voyager Digital for $1.4 billion.[23] That sale fell through and, as of December 19, 2022, BAM Trading Services Inc. (known as Binance.US) was selected as the winning bidder for Voyager Digital’s assets.[24] The deal with Binance.US is valued at $1 billion, and Voyager estimates that the sale will allow its customers to recover approximately 51 percent of the value of their digital asset deposits at the time Voyager filed for bankruptcy.[25]
When a Crypto Exchange Files Bankruptcy, What Happens to the Digital Assets?
When a company files for bankruptcy, a bankruptcy estate comprised of “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case” is created by law.[26] Any and all property of the estate can be used to satisfy claims of creditors or pay expenses of the company in bankruptcy. The questions that should logically follow are these:
- What happens to the digital assets deposited by customers/investors in a crypto company when the crypto company files for bankruptcy?
- Are these digital assets property of the estate?
On January 4, 2023, Judge Martin Glenn of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York determined the answers to these questions in part in the Celsius Network bankruptcy. Judge Glenn determined that Celsius’s terms of use unambiguously established that customer funds deposited in “Earn” accounts at Celsius were property of the Celsius bankruptcy estate and were not property of Celsius’s customers.[27] The Earn account was a product offered by Celsius through which customers could earn interest on digital assets that they deposited in such accounts.[28] When Celsius filed for Chapter 11 in July 2022, there were 600,000 Earn accounts holding approximately $4.2 billion in digital assets.[29] There also were approximately $20 million in stablecoins in the Earn accounts.[30]
Celsius and the official committee of unsecured creditors took the position that the Earn accounts were property of the estate, and, as such, Celsius should be permitted to sell certain stablecoins in the Earn accounts to fund operating expenses and costs of the Chapter 11 case.[31] The Earn account holders argued that they owned the digital assets in the Earn accounts and that such funds should be returned to them.[32]
The Court determined that ownership of the digital assets in the Earn accounts was a “contract law issue.”[33] Per Celsius’s “Terms Version 8,” a clickwrap contract governed by New York law, Celsius held “all right and title to such Eligible Digital Assets, including ownership rights” in the digital assets deposited in the Earn accounts.[34] The customers participating in the Earn accounts overwhelmingly accepted the clickwrap contract terms or an earlier version of those terms.[35] The Court held that the terms of use formed a valid, enforceable contract between Celsius and its Earn account holders and that the terms unambiguously transferred title and ownership of the Earn account assets to Celsius.[36] As such, the Court ruled that the Earn account assets, including the stablecoins held therein, were property of the bankruptcy estate of Celsius and could be sold by Celsius to provide liquidity for the Chapter 11 proceedings.[37]
Importantly, the Court did not determine that holders of digital assets in the Earn accounts would receive nothing at all, but rather determined that the account holders will be considered unsecured creditors and will receive in-kind distributions under a to-be-confirmed Chapter 11 plan filed by Celsius, or under the Bankruptcy Code’s distribution waterfall in the event of a liquidation.[38] This means that the Earn account holders will have to wait a significant period—potentially years—for a recovery from the Celsius bankruptcy.
The Court also did not determine the ownership of assets in Celsius’s “Custody Program,” “Withhold Accounts,” or “Borrow Program,” or whether individual account holders have valid defenses between themselves and Celsius.[39] By contrast with the Earn accounts, the terms of use for the Celsius Custody accounts stated that title to digital assets held in such accounts “shall at all times remain with you and not transfer to Celsius.”[40] Based on the ruling on the Earn accounts, this suggests that the Custody accounts may not be property of the Celsius bankruptcy estate, and the assets therein may be returned to account holders.
On December 7, 2022, Judge Glenn ruled that a small group of Celsius customers, whose deposits were never commingled with other Celsius funds or in interest-bearing accounts, could recover their digital assets.[41]
While these decisions do not resolve all ownership issues that could arise with respect to digital assets in a crypto exchange, they do provide preliminary guidance for how an investor may protect itself in prudently storing digital assets based on the terms of use of an exchange.
Conclusion
As distress in the cryptocurrency market continues, investors should remain vigilant regarding the effects of bankruptcy on both their possession of digital assets in an exchange and the ultimate ownership of digital assets.
Krisztian Sandor & Ekin Genç, The Fall of Terra: A Timeline of the Meteoric Rise and Crash of UST and LUNA, CoinDesk (updated Dec. 22, 2022). ↑
MacKenzie Sigalos, From $10 Billion to Zero: How a Crypto Hedge Fund Collapsed and Dragged Many Investors Down with It, CNBC (updated July 12, 2022). ↑
Id. ↑
Id. ↑
Declaration of Alex Mashinsky, Chief Executive Officer of Celsius Network LLC, in Support of Chapter 11 Petitions and First Day Motions ¶ 35, In re Celsius Network LLC, No. 22-10964 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. July 14, 2022) (Doc. No. 23). ↑
Decl. of Alex Mashinsky, In re Celsius Network, No. 22-10964, Doc. No. 23, at 6. ↑
Declaration of Stephen Ehrlick, Chief Executive Officer of the Debtor, in Support of Chapter 11 Petitions and First Day Motions, In re Voyager Digital Holdings, Inc., No. 22-10943, Doc. No. 15, at 24 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. July 6, 2022). ↑
Danny Nelson & Nikhilesh De, FTX US Temporarily Froze Crypto Withdrawals, Adding to Chaos of Bankruptcy Proceedings, CoinDesk (updated Nov. 14, 2022). ↑
David Hollerith, BlockFi Calls Bankruptcy Filing ‘the Antithesis of FTX’ in First Court Hearing, Yahoo! (Nov. 29, 2022). ↑
Declaration of Mark A. Renzi in Support of Debtors’ Chapter 11 Petitions and First-Day Motions ¶ 96, In re BlockFi Inc., No. 22-19361 (Bankr. D.N.J. Nov. 28, 2022) (Doc. No. 17). ↑
Id. ¶ 97. ↑
Crypto Lending Unit of Genesis Files for U.S. Bankruptcy, Reuters (Jan. 20, 2023). ↑
Caitlin Ostroff, Alexander Saeedy & Vicky Ge Huang, Crypto Lender Genesis Considers Bankruptcy, Lays Off 30% of Staff, Wall St. J. (updated Jan. 5, 2023). ↑
Tory Newmyer & Shayna Jacobs, Two Bankman-Fried Colleagues Plead Guilty to Fraud, Wash. Post (updated Dec. 21, 2022). ↑
Declaration of John J. Ray III in Support of Chapter 11 Petitions and First Day Pleadings ¶ 44, In re FTX Trading Ltd., No. 22-11068 (Bankr. D. Del. Nov. 17, 2022) (Doc. No. 24). ↑
Id. ¶ 47. ↑
Id. ¶ 5. ↑
Id. ¶¶ 18, 23, 28, 36. ↑
Id. ¶ 58. ↑
Id. ¶ 50. ↑
Id. ¶ 65. ↑
Crystal Kim, Binance Wants to Buy the Voyager Assets FTX Won, Axios (Nov. 17, 2022). ↑
Rohan Goswani, Binance.US to Acquire Bankrupt Crypto Exchange Voyager’s Assets for $1 Billion, Weeks After Planned FTX Deal Failed, CNBC (updated Dec. 19, 2022). ↑
Dietrich Knauth, Voyager Gets Initial Approval for $1Bln Binance Deal amid National Security Concerns, Reuters (Jan. 10, 2023). ↑
11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1). ↑
Memorandum Opinion and Order Regarding Ownership of Earn Account Assets, In re Celsius Network LLC, No. 22-10964, at 4 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Jan. 4, 2023). ↑
Jeremy Hill, Celsius Owns Coins Held in Interest-Bearing Accounts, Judge Says, Bloomberg (Jan. 4, 2023). ↑
Crystal Kim, Bankruptcy Judge Rules That Earn Account Assets Belong to Celsius, Axios (Jan. 4, 2023). ↑
Id. ↑
Memorandum Opinion and Order Regarding Ownership of Earn Account Assets, supra note 27, at 5. ↑
Id. ↑
Id. ↑
Id. at 6. ↑
Id. ↑
Id. at 30. ↑
Id. ↑
Id. ↑
Id. at 31. ↑
Terms of Use, Celsius (rev. Sept. 29, 2022). ↑
Dietrich Knauth, Celsius Bankruptcy Judge Orders Return of Some Crypto Assets to Customers, Reuters (Dec. 7, 2022). ↑