Galois Capital will return 90% of the available funds to investors and temporarily hold on to the remaining 10%. 1895 Total views 21 Total shares Listen to article 0:00 News Own this piece of history
Collect this article as an NFT Hedge fund Galois Capital, one of the victims of the FTX collapse, has thrown in the towel after half of its assets got trapped in the bankrupt exchange. The fund has finally decided to shut down and return its remaining assets to investors.
On Nov. 12, 2022, the hedge fund admitted in an announcement from its official Twitter account that it had significant exposure to the FTX exchange.
For the record, yes we did have significant funds stuck on FTX. No, we did not use any Bahamian method to move funds out. Galois Capital (@Galois_Capital) November 11, 2022
According to a report from the Financial Times, the fund has now told investors in a letter that all trading was halted and the fund rolled back its positions. Kevin Zhou, the co-founder of Galois Capital, apologized to their investors and pointed out that the severity of the FTX situation makes them unable to justify continuing its operations.
In addition, the hedge fund said that investors would receive 90% of the available funds, which are not trapped in the FTX exchange. The remaining 10% will be kept by the company temporarily until discussions are finalized.
Apart from these, Zhou also expressed an inclination to sell the hedge funds claims instead of waiting on a lengthy bankruptcy process that could take a decade. According to the Galois Capital co-founder, buyers of these claims are more capable of pursuing claims in bankruptcy courts.
Related: Voyager creditors serve SBF a subpoena to appear in court for a remote deposition
The FTX bankruptcy froze millions of company funds, including firms like New Huo Technology and Nestcoin. Galois Capital is also one of the many victims of the FTX debacle, with at least $50 million in funds stuck in the exchange.
Meanwhile, similar to Galois Capitals approach, the largest Mt. Gox creditor has also chosen an early payout option instead of waiting for a lengthy legal process that could take years. On Feb. 17, Mt. Gox Investment Fund said it decided to be paid in September instead of waiting longer to get its assets back. #Business #Bankruptcy #Hedge Fund #FTX
Add reaction
Add reaction Related News What is impermanent loss and how to avoid it? Google invests $300M in AI firm previously funded by Sam Bankman-Fried FTX seeks to claw back political donations by the end of February Sam Bankman-Fried lawyers reach agreement on use of messaging apps Crypto Biz: FTX clawbacks, Genesis silver lining?