The Guardian (USA)

Celsius Network: crypto firm reveals $1.2bn deficit in bankruptcy filing

- Rob Davies

The cryptocurr­ency platform Celsius Network was left with a $1.2bn (£1bn) deficit after suffering from a digital version of an old-fashioned “run on the bank”, according to its bankruptcy filing in the US.

Blaming a combinatio­n of its own poor decisions, a global “cryptopoca­lypse” and unfavourab­le media coverage, the company filed for Chapter 11 – a US process that allows companies to trade while restructur­ing their finances.

Celsius froze customer funds last month as investors raced to withdraw their assets, amid a crash that saw the value of cryptocurr­encies tumble worldwide.

The filing revealed that the company has $4.3bn of assets, set against liabilitie­s of $5.5bn, of which $4.7bn is owed to its users, who numbered 1.7 million as of this month.

In a 61-page document, its chief executive, Alex Mashinsky, admitted the company had “made what, in hindsight, proved to be certain poor asset deployment decisions”.

These included giving 35,000 of the digital currency Ether to a company called StakeHound, which then lost them due to an alleged error by a third company storing the assets, Fireblocks. StakeHound last month issued a suit in Tel Aviv against the Israel-based firm for negligence, which Fireblocks denies.

Celsius also borrowed from a private lender between 2019 and 2021, only to find when it tried to repay the money that the lender was unable to return the collateral that Celsius had put up to secure the funds.

The cryptocurr­ency platform, which was valued at $3bn at one point last year, is owed $439m by the lender, $361m of it in cash and the remainder in bitcoin.

Weakened by missteps such as these, Celsius said it had been putting plans in place earlier this year that it believed would have “succeeded in the near future” if the market had not tanked.

Instead, it says in the filing, it was tipped over the edge by a global “cryptopoca­lypse” as the value of digital assets crumbled in response to “unanticipa­ted” events such as Covid-19 and the war in Ukraine.

The resulting “crypto winter” led to high-profile casualties in the sector, such as the collapse of so-called “stablecoin” terra, Celsius said, fuelling a broader sell-off.

As panicked investors rushed to withdraw their funds, the company said it was hit by an “unexpected and rapid ‘run on the bank’”.

The effect was exacerbate­d, it claimed, by “misleading” statements in social and traditiona­l media.

Celsius said that filing for Chapter 11 would “provide a breathing spell for the debtors to negotiate and implement a plan that will maximise the value of its business and generate meaningful recoveries to our stakeholde­rs as quickly as possible.”

Mashinsky indicated that its recovery plan could involve using bitcoin generated by its crypto mining operation to plug the shortfall in its crypto assets.

 ?? ?? Celsius Network has $4.3bn of assets, set against liabilitie­s of $5.5bn. Photograph: Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/REX/Shuttersto­ck
Celsius Network has $4.3bn of assets, set against liabilitie­s of $5.5bn. Photograph: Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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