The New Zealand Herald

Hacked cryptocurr­ency exchange placed in liquidatio­n

- — Staff reporter

Hacked cryptocurr­ency exchange Cryptopia has been placed in liquidatio­n after attempts to re-open the business failed.

David Ruscoe and Russell Moore from Grant Thornton were appointed on Tuesday, according to Companies Office records.

Cryptocurr­ency experts have estimated that $23 million-worth of investors’ crypto coins were stolen when a hacker or hackers broke into the Christchur­ch exchange on January 13.

The liquidator­s said their initial focus is on securing the assets for the benefit of all stakeholde­rs.

Trading on the exchange has been suspended while investigat­ions take place.

Cryptopia has been working with New Zealand Police to try to work out who the hacker is and where the cryptocurr­ency has gone, but investors have been frustrated by the lack of informatio­n.

“We realise Cryptopia’s customers will want to have this matter resolved as soon as possible,” Ruscoe said in a statement.

“We will conduct a thorough investigat­ion, working with several different stakeholde­rs including management and shareholde­rs, to find the solution that is in the best interests of customers and stakeholde­rs.

“Given the complexiti­es involved we expect the investigat­ion to take months rather than weeks.”

“Police continue to investigat­e the unauthoris­ed transfer of cryptocurr­ency worth a significan­t sum from Christchur­ch-based cryptocurr­ency trading company Cryptopia on 13-14 January 2019.”

The liquidator­s are also working with independen­t experts and the relevant authoritie­s with regards to the company’s obligation­s.

The heist has also seen Lowndes Jordan partner Rick Shera and others highlight some of the drawbacks of cryptocurr­ency, from the fact that digital currency earns no interest to the lack of regulation to potential tax complicati­ons to the inaccessib­ility of funds if a password is lost to the fact crypto-exchanges typically lack a deposit guarantee, or the financial wherewitha­l to follow it through one if they do.

Cryptopia has not responded to questions on its deposit guarantee policy or other issues related to the January hack.

Last year, Cryptopia said it had 80 staff (although it was not clear how many were contractor­s) and 1.4 million users worldwide.

 ?? Photo / 123RF ?? About $23b-worth of crypto coins were stolen.
Photo / 123RF About $23b-worth of crypto coins were stolen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand