Troubled crypto lender Vauld gets extended creditor protection

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The company claims that the negotiations with potential crisis managers entered the “advanced stage.”

Embattled crypto lending platform Vauld one more time gets the period of creditor protection from a Singapore court. The company should come up with a revival plan before Feb. 28. 

As reported by Bloomberg on Jan. 17, Vauld has been granted more than a month to close its negotiations with one of two digital-asset fund managers to take over the executive control of the tokens stuck on its platform. Apparently, the Singapore high court was satisfied by the company’s claim that the negotiations have entered to the “advanced stage.”

In July 2022 the platform halted the withdrawals for its 800,000 customers, citing unfavorable market conditions and an unprecedented $200 million worth of withdrawals in under two weeks. In August, it has already been granted a three-month moratorium to come up with a restructuring plan for the business and provide a better outcome for its creditors. Back then the judge denied the company’s request for a six-month protection period, citing concerns that a lengthier moratorium “won’t get adequate supervision and monitoring.”

From the very beginning of the first moratorium, it became known that Nexo, a Swiss-headquartered crypto lender, intended to acquire Vauld with all its assets. However, after Nexo’s own office in Bulgaria has been raided by the prosecutors, Vauld denied any possibility of this deal.

Related: 3AC, Coinflex founders collaborating to raise $25M for new claims trading exchange

That’s not the first time Singapore authorities demonstrate their readiness to let the troubled crypto companies fix their problems. Another major Singapore-based platform, Zipmex, has also been granted a three-month moratorium to sort out liquidity issues in August.

However, the fate of crypto lending in the country remains unclear with Singapore’s central bank proposing banning digital payment token service providers from offering “any credit facility” to consumers, including both fiat and cryptocurrencies.

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