Why FTX ruling on China payouts matters: Global precedent at stake
2025-07-18 12:13:00
Main Idea
The FTX bankruptcy case in the US could set a global precedent by allowing the FTX estate to label certain countries as 'restricted jurisdictions,' potentially enabling the seizure of users' assets and refusal of repayment, which has sparked significant objections from creditors.
Key Points
1. The US Bankruptcy Court in Delaware is expected to rule on whether the FTX estate can label certain countries as 'restricted jurisdictions,' affecting creditor payouts.
2. A potential approval could allow future bankruptcies to unilaterally label countries like China as 'restricted,' seizing assets and refusing repayment without judicial determination.
3. The motion has drawn around 40 objections, with Chinese creditors citing up to 69 objections, as China accounts for 82% of potentially affected claims.
4. Objections have also been filed by creditors from Saudi Arabia and other jurisdictions, criticizing the motion for discriminatory categorization.
5. The motion has caused volatility in FTX creditor claims, with prices dropping 20-30% for affected jurisdictions, and over $5.8 billion in claims have been sold to credit-focused funds.
Description
A US bankruptcy court is set to decide whether to block creditor payouts to certain countries after receiving at least 40 objections from creditors in China, Saudi Arabia and more.
Latest News
- Bitcoin’s lower support retests shift traders’ focus to XLM, LTC, ETC, BNB2025-07-18 20:47:20
- Crypto Biz: Wall Street giants bet on stablecoins2025-07-18 20:16:59
- Donald Trump signs stablecoin bill into law2025-07-18 19:48:18
- Bitcoin’s rise with Wall Street comes at a potential philosophical cost2025-07-18 19:19:37
- Senate to consider Trump's CFTC pick as crypto oversight hangs in the balance2025-07-18 19:17:15