Benzinga -
- The Independent examiner appointed for Celsius Network LLC's chapter 11 case said that the company failed to set up proper accounting and operational controls.
- The examiner found that Celsius hadn't developed a separate infrastructure for the custody program, which it started offering in April.
- Celsius had to transfer funds from the rest of its holdings into the custody accounts to address frequent shortfalls.
- Wall Street Journal reported that Celsius continued to mix deposits in so-called withhold accounts, the second type of account it created in response to regulatory pressure, with the rest of its funds.
- As a result, Celsius customers now face uncertainty over which assets belong to them as of the bankruptcy filing date.
- In 2021, state and federal regulators began investigating whether Celsius's earn accounts were securities that shouldn't be sold to unaccredited investors.
- In September 2021, regulators in New Jersey ordered Celsius to stop offering new yield-earning accounts to individual investors.
- In response, Celsius created the custody and withhold programs, requiring U.S. customers to make any new deposits into those new types of accounts that earned no interest.
- At the time of Celsius's bankruptcy filing, $180 million of coins were held in the custody accounts. Withhold accounts have just over $13 million in deposits.
© 2022 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.