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Writer's pictureIshita Bora

Celsius Filed For Chapter 11 Bankruptcy With Lawyers



Celsius, the crypto lending platform, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, with its lawyers starting to notify individual United States state regulators as of Wednesday.


It has been reported that according to an email received by the platform's users, the company has voluntarily filed petitions for Chapter 11 reorganization, also known as bankruptcy. This comes just days after the embattled lending platform replaced its previously hired law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP with Kirkland & Ellis LLP, the same firm that assisted Voyager Digital with its bankruptcy filing last week.


However, earlier in the day, Celsius closed off the last of its decentralized finance (DeFi) debts owed to Compound, Aave and Maker, reducing its initial debt of $820 million to just $0.013 over the course of a month. Still unknown, however, will be the fate of depositors who still have their assets locked up on the lending platform. Neither the company nor its CEO Alex Mashinsky has made any public comments about whether depositors will receive any percentage of their funds back.

The report said that on Tuesday, Vermont’s Department of Financial Regulation (DFR) issued a warning against the troubled crypto lending firm, reminding consumers that the firm is not licensed to offer its services in the state. The DFR also stated it believed the company was “deeply insolvent” and doesn’t possess “assets and liquidity” to fulfill its obligations toward the customers and accused them of mismanaging customer funds by allocating them toward risky investments.


Vermont has become the sixth state in America to open an investigation into Celsius’s crypto interest rate accounts, joining the likes of Alabama, Kentucky, New Jersey, Texas, and Washington.


Thus, rumors of Celsius’ insolvency began circulating last month after the crypto lender was forced to halt withdrawals due to “extreme market conditions” on June 13.


Source: Cointelegraph


 

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