• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
Azerbaijan State Oil Company (SOCAR): The biggest uncertainty in the current crude oil market comes from geopolitical risks, not the supply and demand balance itself.Maersk Oil Trading CEO: There is a significant downside risk to oil prices due to weak demand growth and increased OPEC+ production.The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong opened at 25,711.07 points, up 77.16 points, or 0.3%, on Tuesday, September 9; the Hang Seng Tech Index in Hong Kong opened at 5,786.76 points, up 33.01 points, or 0.57%, on Tuesday, September 9; the CSI 300 Index opened at 9,141.56 points, up 19.9 points, or 0.22%, on Tuesday, September 9; and the H-share Index opened at 4,332.77 points, up 10.1 points, or 0.23%, on Tuesday, September 9.When the Hong Kong stock market opened, the Hang Seng Index rose 0.3%, the Sci-Tech Index rose 0.57%, and Dahang Technology (02543.HK) rose 36.36% on its first day of listing.According to the Wall Street Journal on September 9, OpenAI executives are increasingly concerned that escalating political scrutiny in California could hinder their plans to transition to a for-profit company, and have discussed moving their headquarters out of the state as a last resort. Some of Californias largest charities, nonprofits, and labor unions are jointly resisting OpenAIs restructuring plan. They are asking the California Attorney General to ensure that the newly formed company does not violate the states charitable trust law. The attorneys general of California and Delaware are investigating OpenAIs restructuring proposal. OpenAI currently operates as a subsidiary, does not issue traditional equity, and is controlled by a nonprofit parent. This structure is extremely unpopular among investors, who are pushing for a change. OpenAIs financial backers have tied approximately $19 billion (almost half of its total funding over the past year) to shares in the newly formed for-profit company. If the restructuring fails, these funds could withdraw, hindering OpenAIs massive investments in building large data centers, developing custom chips, and remaining at the forefront of AI research.

U.S. judge says Celsius Network owns most customer crypto deposits

Skylar Shaw

Jan 05, 2023 14:39

微信截图_20230105101614.png


The ruling by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in New York affects approximately 600,000 accounts that held assets valued at $4.2 billion when Celsius filed for bankruptcy in July. The company does not have enough funds to fully repay those deposits, Glenn wrote.


The ruling means that most Celsius customers will be lower priority than customers who held non-interest bearing accounts and other secured creditors. It was unclear whether Celsius has significant secured debt.


The ruling also prevents in-fighting for higher priority among customers with interest-bearing accounts, avoiding a situation in which some of those customers are repaid 100% of their deposits while similarly-situated customers are able to recover “only a small percentage” of their deposits, according to Glenn. Celsius’ terms of service made clear that the crypto lender took ownership of customer deposits into its interest-bearing Earn accounts, according to Glenn. That means that Earn customers will be treated as unsecured creditors in Celsius’ bankruptcy, and they will be last in line for repayment after Celsius repays higher-priority debts.


Twelve U.S. states and the District of Columbia had objected to Celsius’ bid to claim the digital assets. They argued among other things that it was unclear if customers understood the terms of service and that Celsius was under investigation in several states for violating regulations, which could arguably prevent the company from relying on the terms of use.


The ruling does not mean that Earn customers will get “nothing” in the bankruptcy case, and it does not stop further challenges to Celsius’s ownership of the crypto deposits, Glenn wrote.


Celsius customers may be able to bring fraud or breach of contract claims against the crypto lender, and state regulators may be able to make the case that the accountholders’ contracts cannot be enforced because they violated state securities laws, according to the ruling.


“The Court does not take lightly the consequences of this decision on ordinary individuals, many of whom deposited significant savings into the Celsius platform,” Glenn wrote. “Creditors will have every opportunity to have a full hearing on the merits of these arguments during the claims resolution process.”


The ruling authorizes Celsius to sell approximately $18 million stablecoins that had been held in customers’ Earn accounts.


In December, Glenn ruled that a relatively small group of customers with different kinds of Celsius accounts were entitled to their deposits back during Celsius’s bankruptcy. That ruling was limited to customers who had non-interest-bearing custody accounts, whose funds were not commingled with other Celsius assets, and whose accounts were too small for Celsius to seek to claw them back to repay other customers.


The broader question of who owns crypto assets is a critical one in other crypto bankruptcies as well, including the cases of crypto lenders Voyager Digital and BlockFi.