1. Home
  2. three arrows capital liquidation

three arrows capital liquidation

WOO Network to sever ties with Three Arrows Capital after share buyback

WOO Network said it had agreed to repurchase all the tokens and equity previously held by collapsed hedge fund Three Arrows Capital.

Crypto exchange WOO Network is set to sever all remaining ties with bankrupt Three Arrows Capital, after reaching a settlement to buy back shares and tokens previously acquired by the crypto hedge fund.

According to an Oct. 11 blog post, WOO reached a settlement agreement with Teneo — the firm tasked with liquidating the 3AC estate — to purchase more than 20 million WOO tokens and additional shares that the hedge fund had acquired during WOO’s series A funding round in Nov. 2021.

"We are pleased to clear the uncertainty related to 3AC from the WOO ecosystem. We proactively collaborated with the liquidators to secure a fair deal to repurchase our shares and both vested and vesting tokens from 3AC’s estate,” said WOO co-founder Jack Tan.

WOO's announcement of the repurchasing agreement on X. Source: WOO 

WOO said the repurchase of shares and tokens is “at an attractive discount” — a move that will sever all remaining ties to the collapsed hedge fund and its creditors.

As part of the deal, WOO also agreed to cancel 3AC’s shares and increase the ownership of all other shareholders in proportion to the canceled shares.

Additionally, WOO claimed that the 20 million tokens it repurchased would be sent to a burn address, removing them from the circulating supply forever.

“The past 18 months have seen a concentration of bad news hit our industry from large-scale failures to more overzealous regulators. A thorough cleansing of the system has taken place and we are looking forward to rebuilding with our partners and team,” Tan added.

Related: Su Zhu’s $36M mansion transformed into eco-farm post-3AC collapse: Report

3AC was the largest investor in WOO’s 2021 fundraising round, purchasing 25 million WOO tokens and equity in the crypto exchange. The crypto hedge fund collapsed in July last year after making a series of outsized, highly-leveraged bets on Do Kwon’s Terra Money ecosystem, which came crashing down two months earlier in May.

The repurchasing agreement comes less than two weeks after Su Zhu, one of 3AC’s co-founders was arrested in Singapore. Zhu will spend the next four months in a Singaporean prison for failing to comply with a local court order.

3AC liquidators Teneo told Cointelegraph that while Zhu is serving time in prison, “liquidators will seek to engage with him on matters relating to 3AC, focusing on the recovery of assets that are either the property of 3AC or that have been acquired using 3AC’s funds.”

Magazine: Blockchain detectives — Mt. Gox collapse saw birth of Chainalysis

$526,714,000,000 Bank Reveals Data Breach As Hacker Claims Personal Information of 65,000 Account Holders For Sale: Report

Kyle Davies to donate future OPNX earnings to 3AC creditors for ‘karma’

Three Arrows Capital co-founder Kyle Davies called it a “shadow recovery process” during a July 3 Twitter Spaces.

The co-founders of collapsed crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC) have pledged to donate a portion of earnings from their newest crypto venture to creditors who lost money in the fund’s 2022 collapse.

In a July 3 Twitter Space, 3AC co-founder Kyle Davies said it would be “good karma” to “donate” the potential earnings from Open Exchange (OPNX) to 3AC's creditors.

Davies described the proposed payback scheme as a “shadow recovery process," which would be independent of the official liquidation process currently being managed by global consulting firm Teneo.

Touting the process as the “first” of its kind, Davies claimed it would allow himself and Su to donate funds to 3AC creditors, but only if they were “early and supporting” of OPNX.

He claimed there are already a “number of creditors” that have been made whole. “If there are some that don’t want to deal with us, then they don’t have to,” he added.

“We very much believe that if we do good and we say to creditors who lost money, they have a way to make more back. If we do bad and they do well, then that's great. And that's good karma, or whatever you want to call it."

When pressed on how he could be working on a new venture while his now-bankrupt hedge fund was still in the midst of a liquidation process, Davies claimed that creditors only stand to “benefit” from the new company.

OPNX shrouded in controversy

Davies and Su courted controversy when they announced the launch of OPNX on April 4, with some members of the crypto community criticizing the pair for coming up with a new venture while seemingly shirking their responsibilities in relation to the collapse of their hedge fund.

3AC filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection on July 1, 2022, with subsequent court documents revealing that the collapsed fund owes some $2.8 billion to more than 20 different firms.

The pair’s location remains unconfirmed, with liquidators even forced to serve them with subpoenas through Twitter on Jan. 5 due to difficulties tracking them down. A recent New York Times report claims that Davies and Su had been spending the majority of their time surfing in Bali.

Most recently, on June 27, liquidators announced they are seeking to recover a total of $1.3 billion in lost funds from Davies and personally.

Magazine: How smart people invest in dumb memecoins — 3-point plan for success

$526,714,000,000 Bank Reveals Data Breach As Hacker Claims Personal Information of 65,000 Account Holders For Sale: Report