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South Korean crypto lending firm Delio under investigation by regulators

The firm allegedly denied having any exposure to troubled sister lending firm Haru Invest before suspending transfers earlier this month.

According to a report by local news outlet Digital Asset, South Korean crypto lending firm Delio is currently under investigation by the country's Financial Services Commission (FSC) as of June 30. The Commission alleges fraud, embezzlement, and breach of trust related to Delio's unilateral decision to suspend users' deposits and withdrawals on June 14. 

During an extraordinary investors' meeting on June 17, Jung Sang-ho explained that the firm would resume withdrawals, albeit with no fixed schedule at the time. On June 27, the company began opening withdrawals for a portion of its staking services.

"[Delio] will secure as much capital as possible to compensate," Sang-ho said. Delio is currently one of South Korea's largest crypto lenders, holding an estimated $1 billion in Bitcoin (BTC), $200 million in Ether (ETH), and $8.1 billion in various altcoins. Its CEO and management staff have been reportedly barred from leaving the country pending an investigation by prosecutors.

On June 13, Delio's sister firm, Haru Invest, suspended withdrawals and deposits, citing an issue with a "consignment operator." The move prompted Delio to do the same the day after, likely due to counterparty exposure. Since the announcement, Haru Invest has reportedly cut the majority of its staff. The company says it is currently taking legal action against its service partner.

As a registered virtual asset provider (VASP), Delio is regulated by the country's Financial Intelligence Unit. However, Haru Invest is reportedly not a VASP and therefore does not fall under regulators' jurisdiction. It was alleged that Delio management denied exposure to Haru Invest shortly before its decision to suspend withdrawals.

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Crypto lender Delio to resume withdrawals after counterparty contagion

"We will come up with a plan to recover the loss," said company officials.

According to a recent report by local news outlet Decenter, South Korean crypto lending platform Delio will resume withdrawals, albeit with no fixed schedule, after pausing them on June 14. In a meeting with investors on June 17, CEO Jung Sang-ho explained, "[Delio] will secure as much capital as possible to compensate” and that "users’ withdrawals would come in phases." No details regarding the specific repayment period, method and amount of damage were disclosed, however. 

Delio is one of South Korea’s largest crypto lending firms and claims to hold an estimated $1 billion in Bitcoin (BTC), $200 million in Ether (ETH) and approximately $8.1 billion in altcoins. The firm entrusted a sizable portion of clients’ funds to fellow South Korean crypto yield platform Haru Invest.

On June 13, Haru suspended deposits and withdrawals after claiming “certain information provided by a consignment operator was suspected to be false” during an “internal inspection process." Haru Invest claims to have a user base of over 80,000 individuals and has facilitated 9.8 million crypto earn payouts. During last week’s Delio investor meeting, Sang-ho alleged that Haru is currently facing bankruptcy:

“It is difficult to guarantee the rate of return that was initially promoted in the deposit product, but it is explained that there will be a plan to recover the loss."

On June 14, Haru filed a criminal complaint against its service operator, B&S Holdings, and said it plans to proceed with civil litigation as well. The company stated:

“Once again, we apologize for causing concerns and inconveniences to our investors and customers. We will continue to work on the issue in a faithful manner."

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