Celsius Reorganizes Board of Directors Amid Liquidity Issues

Crypto lender adds David Barse and Alan Jeffrey Carr, terminates three others

article-image

blockworks exclusive art by axel rangel

share

key takeaways

  • The two executives join Celsius co-founders Alex Mashinsky and Shlomi Daniel Leon as directors
  • Carr is the CEO of a fiduciary services firm that leads restructurings and litigations

Crypto lender Celsius Network has reorganized its board of directors as it works to stabilize its liquidity and operations amid the ongoing crypto bear market.

Finance executives David Barse and Alan Jeffrey Carr were appointed as directors on June 28 and June 29, respectively, according to a Wednesday filing

Barse is the founder and CEO of index company XOUT Capital and founder of private family office DMB Holdings. Carr is the CEO of Drivetrain, a fiduciary services firm that leads complex restructurings and litigations and manages portfolios in distressed investments.

The executives are now directors alongside Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky and Shlomi Daniel Leon, Celsius’s co-founder and chief strategy officer.

Barse and Carr did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

The Wednesday filing also revealed that Celsius Network terminated Gilbert Nathan, John Stephen Dubel and Laurence Anthony Tosi as directors at the end of last month.

Dubel’s termination follows his appointment just one week earlier, the filing indicates. Dubel is the founder of Dubel & Associates, a provider of restructuring services to underperforming companies. He was named the chief restructuring officer of SunEdison in 2016.

Tosi is the founder of growth equity firm WestCap. He was previously the chief financial officer of Airbnb and The Blackstone Group, as well as the chief operating officer and a managing partner at Merrill Lynch.

It appears that Nathan is a managing member of consulting and advisory firm Jackson Square Advisors. 

Celsius did not immediately return Blockworks’ request for comment. 

The director changes come after Celsius paused withdrawals and transfers on its platform on June 12. The platform’s native token, CEL, had sunk more than 60% — from $2 to $0.77 — throughout May, as markets reeled from the collapse of algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST).

CEL reached a two-year low of $0.28 after it suspended withdrawals but has since rebounded almost 200% to $0.836 as of 1:00 pm ET.

 In a blog post on June 30, the firm said it was working to stabilize liquidity and operations.

“We continue to take important steps to preserve and protect assets and explore options available to us,” the company wrote in the post. “These options include pursuing strategic transactions as well as a restructuring of our liabilities, among other avenues.”

Celsius has also let go of 150 employees, news outlet Calcalist reported on Sunday. 

The company is not the only firm seeking outside assistance to improve its situation. 

Crypto lender Babel Finance was reportedly set to hire Houlihan Lokey — a US investment bank specializing in financial restructuring — a few weeks after suspending withdrawals amid liquidity issues.

Meanwhile, Voyager Digital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Wednesday, following crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital’s move into Chapter 15 bankruptcy on Saturday.


Don’t miss the next big story – join our free daily newsletter.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Salt Lake City, UT

WED - FRI, OCTOBER 9 - 11, 2024

Pack your bags, anon — we’re heading west! Join us in the beautiful Salt Lake City for the third installment of Permissionless. Come for the alpha, stay for the fresh air. Permissionless III promises unforgettable panels, killer networking opportunities, and mountains […]

recent research

ao cover.jpg

Research

Arweave recently launched the testnet for AO computer, a new messaging protocol that will sit atop a PoS network and aims to become a scalable global compute platform through parallel processing and modularity.

article-image

Regulators in South Korea, Japan and Singapore could follow Hong Kong’s lead as Asia responds to spot bitcoin ETF approval in the US

article-image

Martin Grant worked with the Fed for roughly 30 years before leaving his position in 2022

article-image

BitGo CEO Mike Belshe shared his thoughts on the halving and bitcoin ETFs in an interview with Blockworks

article-image

Crypto markets were largely the only ones open over a tense weekend, and they took a beating for it

article-image

Though some expect most public miners to survive the halving, the segment’s most vulnerable could fall victim to consolidations and defaults

article-image

The US spot bitcoin fund category has notched negative net flows over the course of a week just three times since coming to market in January