Founders of Bankrupt Crypto Hedge Fund 3AC Mocked After Pitching New Venture

The founders of cryptocurrency hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, which saddled investors and lenders with potentially billions of dollars of losses when it imploded last year, are seeking money for a new venture. Judging by reactions on Crypto Twitter, they face an uphill battle.

(Bloomberg) — The founders of cryptocurrency hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, which saddled investors and lenders with potentially billions of dollars of losses when it imploded last year, are seeking money for a new venture. Judging by reactions on Crypto Twitter, they face an uphill battle. 

Su Zhu and Kyle Davies are seeking to raise about $25 million for a crypto exchange called GTX that will focus on trading in crypto claims, according to a pitch deck for the proposed business seen by Bloomberg News. They’re teaming up with the founders of CoinFLEX, a digital-asset exchange that filed for restructuring in the Seychelles in August. 

The irony that Zhu and Davies — who spent months publicly sparring with 3AC liquidators working to recover assets for creditors — want to get into the business of crypto claims wasn’t lost on detractors. Many tweets centered on the similarity between GTX’s proposed name and FTX, the crypto exchange that collapsed in November and whose founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, has been charged with crimes including fraud. 

Zhu and Davies’ proposed venture “is akin to arsonists returning to the scene of the crime and offering to charge their victims for buckets of water,” Nic Carter, a partner at crypto venture capital firm Castle Island Ventures, said in an email. 

The founder of Wintermute, one of the largest crypto market makers, went as far as to suggest that any investors in the planned fundraising might jeopardize their relationship with his firm. 

Davies and Zhu declined to comment. “We are focused on building, adding new products and asset classes so that more people have access to financial markets,” CoinFLEX co-founder Sudhu Arumugam said. 

As news of the fundraising began spreading online on Monday, the outpouring of vitriol was such that CoinFLEX released a statement to “clarify misconceptions” about the proposed venture. Among points it stressed: The firm won’t be called GTX, which was chosen as a “placeholder name,” according to the release. 

3AC’s failure was one of the most damaging events in a year marked by crypto implosions, from the TerraUSD stablecoin meltdown in May to the FTX bankruptcy in November. Its creditors include Digital Currency Group, the parent company of crypto brokerage Genesis, which filed a $1.2 billion claim against the hedge fund.

After wrong-way leveraged bets on digital tokens toppled 3AC in June, Zhu and Davies initially went quiet, and their current whereabouts remain unknown. 

But over the past few months, the two have become increasingly vocal on Twitter, often using the social-media platform to duel with 3AC’s liquidators at Teneo, who accuse them of failing to cooperate with the unwinding process. A Teneo representative declined to comment. 

  • Read more: 3AC Liquidators Demand Documents From Founders Via Twitter (1)

Zhu and Davies are offering some of 3AC’s creditors the option of converting their claims into equity in the new venture, according to minutes from a Jan. 11 creditors’ meeting seen by Bloomberg News. Zhu himself submitted a claim in 3AC’s bankruptcy, while Davies’s wife is listed as a creditor. 

“We expect many institutional investors will be unwilling to invest in a new venture from the co-founders of 3AC until all pending legal and regulatory matters with 3AC, within and outside Singapore, are resolved,” said Chris Holland, partner at Holland & Marie.

–With assistance from Emily Nicolle.

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