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Bankrupt Crypto Lender Genesis, Creditors to Enter Mediation

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Bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Genesis Global Holdco and a key creditor group have agreed to meet with a mediator in an effort to save a proposed bankruptcy exit plan backed by the company’s parent, Digital Currency Group, Bloomberg News reported. Genesis lawyer Sean O’Neal said on Friday that the crypto lender has agreed to a 30-day mediation period including its committee of unsecured creditors, which has opposed the proposed restructuring deal. Genesis is hoping to hold two “substantive” mediation sessions before May 8, O’Neal said. Final terms of the deal will also be made public when mediation is terminated, he said. Genesis and the committee still need to pick a mediator who will oversee the discussions. O’Neal told Judge Sean Lane that they have started reaching out to a list of mediators and will submit an order to the court outlining the process once a mediator is picked. The creditors’ committee is opposed to Genesis’s current restructuring proposal and is seeking better terms, Bloomberg News has reported. Philip Abelson, a lawyer representing the creditors’ committee, said his client’s position hasn’t changed “and we do not want our participation in the mediation to be misconstrued.”

Berkshire-Owned Talc Supplier Follows Other Defendants into Bankruptcy

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A defunct talc supplier owned by Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has filed for bankruptcy, adding to the pileup of cosmetic talc businesses entering chapter 11 to weather mass lawsuits alleging that once-popular consumer products exposed their users to asbestos, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. Former talc supplier Whittaker, Clark & Daniels Inc. and several of its affiliates filed for protection in New Jersey Wednesday, citing liabilities to more than 1,000 personal-injury plaintiffs who allege that asbestos made its way into talc-containing cosmetic products such as Old Spice powder and Mary Kay cosmetics decades ago. Whittaker Clark filed chapter 11 despite the recent appointment of a receiver over its affairs after it was hit by a $29 million verdict in South Carolina in March and found by the trial judge to be in danger of insolvency. Whittaker Clark’s chief restructuring officer, Mohsin Meghji, said in court filings that the company “disputes the validity and enforceability of the receivership order.” His court filing said that Whittaker Clark filed chapter 11 because it lacks any alternative mechanism to efficiently and equitably address its asbestos liabilities. Berkshire Hathaway indirectly owns Whittaker Clark’s parent company, Soco West Inc., which also filed for chapter 11, court papers show. Berkshire Hathaway said Thursday that Whittaker Clark had ceased operations in 2004 and had sold off its operating assets, though it continued to defend against the tort and environmental claims it faced.

SVB Financial Group Stuck in Bankruptcy Stalemate With FDIC

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SVB Financial Group, the former parent company of failed Silicon Valley Bank, is burning through cash while it struggles to gain access to records it says are necessary to move forward in bankruptcy, Bloomberg News reported. The firm is sparring with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. over access to those records — things like minutes from board meetings — as well as $2 billion the agency seized after the bank failed in March. “There’s a category of material that the FDIC claims to have some rights over which the debtor also believes is its property,” Jim Bromley, an attorney representing SVB Financial, said during a bankruptcy hearing on Wednesday. First Citizens Bank’s purchase of SVB’s banking operations last month has complicated negotiations, he said. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn expressed repeated concern over the slow pace of the case, especially given the company’s limited cash. “This process has got to move along,” Glenn said in the hearing Wednesday. “It was clear from the first-day hearing that liquidity is limited and it needs to move forward rapidly.” SVB Financial is negotiating with both the FDIC and First Citizens in order to obtain the records at issue and is close to signing a nondisclosure agreement that will aid the exchange, Bromley said.

Celsius Creditors Seek to Unmask ‘Suspicious’ FTX Crypto Trades

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Celsius Network LLC creditors want a bankruptcy judge to help them unmask FTX users they allege were involved in suspicious cryptocurrency trades that may have manipulated the price of Celsius’s native token last year, Bloomberg News reported. A committee representing Celsius creditors on Wednesday asked a bankruptcy judge for permission to subpoena FTX for information to identify users behind 10 cryptocurrency wallets they say engaged in a pattern of suspicious trades of Celsius’s so-called CEL coin between April and August. Celsius creditors said they need the FTX user information to determine whether the trading was legitimate “or instead a form of market manipulation, such as wash trading,” according to court papers filed yesterday. The committee said it retained blockchain consultant Elementus Inc., which identified 947 transactions over a three-day period “involving a near one-to-one relationship” between CEL token deposits and withdrawals among the 10 private crypto wallets and wallets on the FTX exchange. The CEL trades in question occurred between the date Celsius paused customer withdrawals on June 12 and the company’s chapter 11 filing on July 13, when the price of the token was 81 cents, according to court documents.

Analysis: Supreme Court Hears Oral Argument on Tribal Sovereign Immunity

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To resolve a split of circuits and decide whether Section 106(a) waives sovereign immunity as to Native American tribes, the Supreme Court heard oral argument on April 24 in Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians v. Coughlin, 22-227 (Sup. Ct.), according to an analysis in Rochelle's Daily Wire. To this writer’s way of thinking, the statute is opaque. Notably, the arguments by counsel on both sides and every question or comment from the justices were about textualism. There wasn’t a single statement or question exploring policy, asking what the better answer would be from the point of view of creditors, debtors or tribes, or finding the answer in the objectives of the Bankruptcy Code and federal law regarding tribes.

Binance.US Ends $1 Billion Deal to Buy Bankrupt Crypto Firm Voyager

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Binance.US terminated an agreement to purchase the bankrupt crypto broker Voyager Digital Holdings Ltd., less than a week after federal regulators dropped their efforts to halt the deal in court, Bloomberg News reported. The decision came after months of wrangling and the intervention of multiple federal and state regulators over the deal. In a statement, Binance.US said “the hostile and uncertain regulatory climate in the United States has introduced an unpredictable operating environment impacting the entire American business community.” “While this development is disappointing, our chapter 11 plan allows for direct distribution of cash and crypto to customers via the Voyager platform,” the company said on Twitter. “Consistent with the plan, we will now move swiftly to return value to customers via direct distributions. We will provide more information on next steps and any actions customers need to take in the coming days.” It is the second failed deal for Voyager, which has been trying to exit bankruptcy and repay its customers since filing for chapter 11 protection last year. Voyager was among the first examples of crypto platforms that Sam Bankman-Fried tried to bail out, which at the time earned him a reputation as an industry savior. In September, FTX US won an auction for Voyager assets in an agreement valued at about $1.4 billion. Mere months later, with FTX International facing bankruptcy of its own and Bankman-Fried under arrest on criminal charges, that deal collapsed. In December, Binance.US entered the fray with a proposal worth around $1 billion at the time and that would have brought in about $20 million in cash for creditors of the failed firm.

FTX Poised for $250 Million Loss on LedgerX Sale

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Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX has agreed to sell U.S. derivatives exchange LedgerX for $50 million, a fraction of its purchase price when FTX bought it, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. If the court overseeing FTX’s bankruptcy approves the sale, it would mark a nearly $250 million loss for FTX on its investment in LedgerX, which the company acquired for about $298 million in August 2021, according to a copy of FTX’s 2021 annual financial documents seen by The Wall Street Journal. An affiliate of Miami International Holdings Inc., which operates a number of options exchanges in the U.S., is the proposed buyer for LedgerX. Proceeds from the sale would help FTX’s new management close the $9 billion gap in customer funds it entered bankruptcy with last year. The proposed deal “is an example of our continuing efforts to monetize assets to deliver recoveries to stakeholders,” said John J. Ray III, FTX’s chief executive. In the years before FTX filed for bankruptcy, it went on a streak of investing in and buying other crypto companies. FTX, Alameda Research and other entities controlled by FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried put more than $5 billion into more than 150 startups, as well as venture firms like Sequoia Capital.