Crypto Lender Genesis Prepares to Liquidate Without Deal With Parent Company
The move comes after New York’s attorney general filed a lawsuit against Genesis and parent Digital Currency Group
The move comes after New York’s attorney general filed a lawsuit against Genesis and parent Digital Currency Group
Crypto lender Genesis Global is pursuing a chapter 11 liquidation plan that abandons a previous settlement proposal to restructure the $1.7 billion in loans it extended to its parent company Digital Currency Group.
Genesis filed court papers Wednesday for a plan to exit from chapter 11 without a resolution of its claims against DCG, the crypto conglomerate founded by finance veteran Barry Silbert. Genesis is now preparing to liquidate its assets without the settlement proposal reached in August that intended to deliver estimated recoveries of between 70% to 90% for Genesis customers, including users of crypto exchange Gemini Trust’s Earn program.
The settlement proposal didn’t get the support of key stakeholders, notably Gemini and its founders, the Winklevoss brothers, and the parties had been in continuing negotiations. Ultimately, Genesis was unable to reach an agreement with DCG on final debt terms, Genesis said in filings with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York.
And last week, New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against Gemini Trust, Genesis and DCG for allegedly defrauding more than 230,000 investors of more than $1 billion. In light of the lawsuit, Genesis and the official committee representing its customers determined that a settlement with DCG isn’t a viable route, Genesis said in the filings.
A Genesis spokesperson said the lawsuit’s claims against the company have no basis, and it has been cooperating with all authorities.
A DCG spokesperson last week said the firm was blindsided by the lawsuit because it cooperated with the attorney general’s investigation. Gemini last week said it disagreed with being named in the lawsuit because the company and its Earn program investors are victims of fraud.
The attorney general’s lawsuit alleges that Gemini misled investors in the Earn program by failing to disclose its risks despite knowing that Genesis’s cryptocurrency loans were undercollateralized and heavily concentrated.
Under the new plan, Genesis customers can expect estimated recoveries of between 61% to 77%, pending court approval. Genesis filed for bankruptcy in January in the wake of the collapse of crypto exchange FTX.
The customers’ estimated recoveries under the new plan is smaller compared with a settlement with DCG that would have delivered more value upfront. Now, customers would have to wait for the outcome of litigation against DCG seeking to collect on its outstanding loans from Genesis.
A DCG spokesperson said in an email that the company remains committed to reaching a fair resolution for all parties, and that a resolution through litigation would result in far lesser recoveries for creditors. The spokesperson also said the company is “fully prepared to defend and win.”
The prior settlement was meant to restructure DCG’s debts to Genesis, including about $630 million in a past-due unsecured loan, and a $1.1 billion unsecured promissory note due in 2032.
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More millionaires call New York City home than anywhere else in the world, according to a report from international wealth migration specialists Henley & Partners.
The Big Apple, which has seen its high-net-worth population jump by 48% over the past decade, is home to 349,500 millionaires, 744 centi-millionaires—those with liquid investable wealth of over US$100 million—and 60 billionaires, according to the firm, which collaborated with data intelligence firm New World Wealth for the analysis.
The city also ranked as the top spot for millionaires last year.
California’s Bay Area, encompassing San Francisco and the tech-mecca of Silicon Valley, ranked second. Wealth in the Bay Area has grown at one of the fastest rates in the world, increasing its number of wealthy citizens by a sizeable 82% over the past decade. It’s now home to 305,700 millionaires, 675 centi-millionaires, and 68 billionaires.
New York and the Bay Area were among 11 areas in the U.S. on the top 50 ranking, making the country the world’s foremost hub of moneyed residents.
Across the pond, London, which ranked as the wealthiest city in the world for many years, tumbled down the ranking, and now sits in fifth place with just 227,000 millionaires, 370 centi-millionaires, and 35 billionaires, a decline of 10% over the past decade, said the report, which was released earlier this week.
Cities with the fastest growing wealth, meanwhile, can be found in China.
Shenzhen’s wealthy population is snowballing most, with their numbers surging by 140% in the last 10 years, the report said.
“Hangzhou has also experienced a massive 125% increase in its [high-net-worth] residents, and Guangzhou’s millionaires have grown by 110% over the past decade,” said Andrew Amoils, head of research at New World Wealth, in the report.
Looking ahead, when it comes to wealth growth potential over the next decade, “cities to watch include Bengaluru, India; Scottsdale, Arizona; and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam,” he added. “All three have enjoyed exceptional growth rates of over 100% in their resident millionaire populations over the past 10 years.”
Underpinning the growth of the world’s wealthiest cities has been the robust performance of financial markets of late, from the S&P 500 to Bitcoin, according to Juerg Steffen, CEO of Henley & Partners.
Plus, “rapid advancements in artificial intelligence, robotics, and blockchain technology have provided new opportunities for wealth creation and accumulation,” Steffen said. “Yet, even as new opportunities emerge, old risks persist. The war in Ukraine, which has seen Moscow’s millionaire population plummet by 24% to 30,300, is a stark reminder of the fragility of wealth in an uncertain and unstable world.”
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