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Bankrupt Crypto Lender Celsius Seeks to Raise $14M From Bitmain Mining Vouchers

The company joins mining firm Core Scientific in trying to offload the assets before they expire, with funds used to repay creditors

(alvarez/Getty Images)
(alvarez/Getty Images)

Bankrupt crypto lender Celsius Network is hoping to raise more than $14 million by selling discount vouchers for mining company Bitmain before they expire as it seeks to restore funds to creditors.

The deal includes coupons that offer buyers of mining rigs a 10%-30% discount on future purchases from Bitmain, the maker of the Antminer range, as well as the credits that accrue when purchasers pay by installment.

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Celsius filed for bankruptcy in July as crypto winter set in, and is now rushing to agree a winding-up plan that could include setting up a recovery corporation that offers creditors liquid crypto. The voucher sale proposal follows a similar deal by bankrupt bitcoin miner Core Scientific, which received approval from a judge in the Southern District of Texas on Feb. 1 to sell Bitmain coupons in an attempt to raise $1 million.

“Current market conditions and the time to expiration offer the Debtors the greatest likelihood of obtaining maximum value for the Bitmain Coupons and the Bitmain Credits,” said a legal filing made on behalf of Celsius on Thursday. “The market value of the Bitmain Coupons decline as their expiration dates near until they are worth nothing.”

Celsius’ vouchers have a combined face value of over $48 million. The company reckons it can sell the coupons for $7.4 million and credits for $7 million on secondary markets, according to a statement by interim CEO Christopher Ferraro. The company said it was in discussions with six potential buyers for the coupons, sourced via mining broker Bitooda, Bitmain and Celsius’ own contacts.

A hearing in the Celsius case is due Feb. 15 in the Southern District of New York.

Read more: Celsius’ Proposed Extension for Restructuring Opposed by Creditors, US Government

Jack Schickler

Jack Schickler was a CoinDesk reporter focused on crypto regulations, based in Brussels, Belgium. He previously wrote about financial regulation for news site MLex, before which he was a speechwriter and policy analyst at the European Commission and the U.K. Treasury. He doesn’t own any crypto.

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