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Genesis granted court permission to sell $1.6b Grayscale GBTC shares

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Grayscale’s GBTC may experience new sell pressure and outflows following a ruling in the Genesis bankruptcy case on Feb. 14.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane ruled that Digital Currency Group (DCG) subsidiary Genesis has been approved to offload shares from Grayscale crypto products, including its converted Bitcoin ETF GBTC, its Ethereum Trust (ETHE), and its Ethereum Classic Trust (ETCG). 

Judge Lane’s verdict allows the defunct lender to liquidate 35 million GBTC shares worth around $1.6 billion. Each share traded at around $46 when the ruling was issued. The bankrupt lender can also sell $182 million in ETHE and $3 million in ETCG.

Part of the ruling also permits Genesis to liaise with a broker of its choice for the sales. The firm has options to liquidate for Bitcoin or convert to cash. No deadline or timeframe was set for this process. 

Furthermore, Judge Lane barred the parent company, DCG, from consulting. DCG cannot be expected to field unbiased opinions regarding the GBTC shares, said Judge Lane. However, the court found no fault with Barry Silbert’s firm filing the request due to its obvious interests.

This comes after a judge ruled against DCG altering ownership amid bankruptcy proceedings. 

Genesis settles lawsuits

The beleaguered crypto lender reportedly settled lawsuits within the year’s first two months.

Shortly after receiving a $700 million short-term loan pay from DCG, Genesis reached an agreement with New York’s Department of Financial Service, fining the company $8 million and repossessing its BitLicense. This license permitted business operations with the state. The lender also agreed to a $21 million settlement with the U.S. SEC in a lawsuit involving Gemini Earn. 

A major lawsuit remains pending with New York Attorney General Letitia James. The suit alleges convoluted fraud by Genesis, Gemini, DCG, and its affiliates before crypto’s 2022 contagion. According to recent filings, James initially sued the entities for $1 billion, but this figure was raised to $3 billion. 


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