FTX, in the process of fulfilling obligations to creditors, issues a cautionary warning to the public on unauthorized bid solicitation.
In its initial monthly communication to its community, FTX utilized X to apprise its creditors that the court-authorized investment manager, Galaxy Asset Management, is solely responsible for overseeing the sale of Digital Assets by the FTX Debtors by the bankruptcy court order.
Therefore, the group would exclusively consider offers to sell or solicitations of offers to purchase submitted by Galaxy Asset Management. Interested parties who are institutional purchasers or otherwise in compliance with applicable law are advised to take note, according to the firm.Â
Certain unauthorized third parties have already initiated bidding on behalf of specific FTX Debtors, the firm disclosed. Evidently, the FTX team is similarly prepared for such situations and may have established infrastructure to accommodate any exploitation.
(1/4) The FTX Debtors’ sale of Digital Assets pursuant to Bankruptcy Court Order no. 2505 is exclusively being handled by the FTX Debtors’ court-authorized Investment Manager, Galaxy Asset Management ([email protected]).
— FTX (@FTX_Official) March 1, 2024
Furthermore, FTX clarified that it would not affect the terms and conditions regulating the schedule for unlocking the holdings even if FTX Debtors sold locked digital assets.
Efforts to Claw in Every Asset Grow More Intense
FTX has been on a mission to restructure and repay its creditors over the past few months. It has recouped assets worth a maximum of $7 billion, intended to be used as client repayments.
The Supreme Bankruptcy Court of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware permitted FTX a week ago to divest its more than $1 billion stake in artificial intelligence firm Anthropic.Â
It is highly probable that the proceeds from the stake sale in the AI company will significantly mitigate the financial strain surrounding FTX. Its achievement could result in the complete reimbursement of FTX customers’ and creditors’ claims.
The trading platform has been in dialogue with various government agencies in preparation for the repayment. They have agreed that the platform will only pursue the collection of approximately $9 billion in claims once all customers have been refunded in full.