Liquidators of the defunct crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC) are reportedly seeking to amend their claim against FTX, increasing it from $120 million to $1.53 billion.
According to Bloomberg, 3AC’s liquidators allege that two weeks before the hedge fund collapsed, FTX liquidated and seized their assets on the platform to settle a $1.33 billion debt. The hedge fund claims the transactions were “avoidable and unfair” and caused harm to 3AC creditors.
3AC argues the liquidations should be invalidated, accusing FTX of undervaluing the transactions and breaching both trust and contract.
The bankrupt hedge fund also claims FTX delayed providing necessary information, forcing 3AC to parse raw data to calculate losses. As a result, 3AC said it could only confirm the liquidated amount in August.
FTX, however, responded by stating that an unnamed individual connected to 3AC initiated the asset liquidation. FTX has not yet determined the identity of the person. The court will hold a hearing on Nov. 20 to discuss 3AC’s motion to amend the claim.
3AC liquidators want $1.3 billion from Terraform Labs
Beyond FTX, 3AC is also pursuing claims against another collapsed crypto firm, Terraform Labs. On Aug. 9, 3AC’s liquidators filed a $1.3 billion claim in Terra’s bankruptcy case in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
The liquidators alleged that Terra misled 3AC about the stability of crypto assets in the Terra ecosystem. This includes the collapsed algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST) and Luna (LUNA).
According to the liquidators, Terra promoted these tokens in ways that artificially inflated their value, which led 3AC to make significant investments. Liquidators are now seeking damages for the direct purchases of UST and LUNA.
FTX file lawsuits to recover crypto
FTX, which filed for bankruptcy two years ago, has intensified its own recovery efforts in November to reclaim assets.
On Nov. 8, FTX’s bankruptcy estate filed a $100 million lawsuit against SkyBridge Capital and its founder, Anthony Scaramucci. FTX aims to recover funds its former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried spent on investment deals with Scaramucci and SkyBridge in 2022.
On Nov. 10, FTX filed a lawsuit against crypto exchange Binance and its former CEO, Changpeng Zhao. The FTX bankruptcy estate claimed that Bankman-Fried’s $1.75 billion repurchase deal with Binance was fraudulent because FTX was insolvent.
On Nov. 11, FTX’s trading arm, Alameda Research, filed a lawsuit against Waves founder Aleksandr Ivanov as part of its attempts to recover crypto assets. According to a court filing, the company aims to recover about $90 million in crypto from Waves.