The Daily Telegraph

Crypto hedge fund collapses owing $674m

Three Arrows Capital enters liquidatio­n after a British Virgin Islands court rules in favour of creditors

- By Gareth Corfield

A CRYPTOCURR­ENCY hedge fund set up by two former investment bankers has collapsed owing more than half a billion dollars.

Three Arrows Capital entered liquidatio­n yesterday after a British Virgin Islands court ruled in favour of creditors seeking repayment of debts.

Shortly before its demise the hedge fund had defaulted on a $674m (£556m) loan, triggering creditors to seek its liquidatio­n.

Blockchain analysis business Nansen estimated that Three Arrows had the equivalent of $10bn under management, though the valuation of cryptocurr­encies in real-world money tends to be much more volatile than for other asset classes.

Two partners from US consulting firm Teneo have been appointed by the BVI court to handle the insolvency, Bloomberg reported.

A website will be set up for creditors to register their claims, with a source telling the newswire that a sale of Three Arrows’ remaining assets is possible.

Three Arrows did not respond to requests for comment and Teneo declined to comment.

Three Arrow’s demise marks one of the biggest corporate collapses so far during what commentato­rs have dubbed “crypto winter”: a months-long decline in cryptocurr­ency prices. Almost $2trillion has been wiped off the market’s value since its peak last November.

Prices have stabilised somewhat in recent weeks but Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurr­ency, dropped below $20,000 yesterday.

At its peak, each token was worth more than $68,000.

Three Arrows was set up in 2012 by former Deutsche Bank trader Su Zhu and Kyle Davies, a one-time derivative­s trader for Credit Suisse.

Its collapse has implicatio­ns for other cryptocurr­ency traders, as the fund had large investment­s in digital tokens including Bitcoin and Ethereum, which may now be sold.

One of the hedge fund’s biggest lenders, Toronto-listed cryptocurr­ency trading company Voyager Digital, publicly issued a notice of default to Three Arrows on Monday saying the fund had failed to make required payments on a digital token loan.

Stephen Ehrlich, chief executive officer of Voyager, said: “We are working diligently and expeditiou­sly to strengthen our balance sheet and pursuing options so we can continue to meet customer liquidity demands.”

The loan in question was made up of $350m in US Dollar Coin, a cryptocurr­ency whose value is pegged to the dollar, and 15,250 Bitcoins.

Shares in Voyager have fallen more than 90pc since the start of the year.

Bitcoin’s value has crashed 70pc since its all-time high in November last year, bringing the broader cryptocurr­ency market down with it.

The slump has coincided with rising interest rates around the world, which have sucked liquidity out of more speculativ­e investment­s.

Investors have been spooked by a series of high-profile failures, including the Luna digital token, which was reportedly one of Three Arrows’ larger investment­s.

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