Embattled Asia-Pacific crypto exchange Zipmex has been granted protection from its creditors until December 2, with the Singapore High Court allowing it three months to come up with a funding and restructuring plan:
The moratorium amounts to half the period sought by Morgan Lewis Stamford, lawyers for Zipmex, who had applied for six monthsâ protection under Singaporeâs insolvency law across the exchangeâs outlets in Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia and Australia after they abruptly suspended withdrawals last month.
Court Orders Town Hall Meeting for Creditors
According to a statement this week from Zipmex, the court also directed that the exchange convene a town hall-style meeting with its creditor and customer base within one month from the date of the courtâs moratorium decision:
[At this meeting], it will minimally be explained what the proceedings in Singapore mean for creditors and customers, the state of proposed investments, the likelihood for the completeness of investorsâ proposals and how serious they are, and when customers will be able to access their Z Wallets.
Zipmex statement, August 16
Last week, Zipmex announced its Z Wallet customers would be able to âpartially withdrawâ some of their Bitcoin and Ether holdings, naming August 11 and 16 as respective dates for releasing âa specific amountâ of ether and bitcoin. These amounts turned out to be 0.08 ETH and 0.0045 BTC (about US$150 and US$110, respectively).
Earlier this month, Zipmex said it was âexploring multiple avenuesâ to secure funding, adding that it was expediting due diligence after signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with two investors.
CEO Pressured to Step Down
Meanwhile, Zipmex shareholders and potential investors have reportedly urged CEO Marcus Lim to step down over management decisions they believe led to Zipmexâs liquidity crisis:
Zipmex is not the only Singapore-based firm to secure a moratorium against its creditors. Crypto lender Vauld was granted a three-month protection order by the same court earlier this month after it, too, froze withdrawals without notice in July.
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