Bitcoin Mining Firm CoinTerra Files for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Bitcoin mining company CoinTerra has filed for bankruptcy. CoinTerra has between $10m and $50m in assets, with liabilities within the same range, according to court documents. The firm has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, meaning it is likely to liquidate all assets in its bid to repay secured creditors. CoinTerra stated that it would be unable to repay unsecured investors and named hundreds of creditors in its filing, which was submitted on 24th January. The move comes soon after CoinTerra became the target of a lawsuit launched by C7 Data Centers, a data center colocation....
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Following a string of recent problems including massive debts, the inability to pay customers, and a $5 million lawsuit from C7 Data Centers, bitcoin mining company CoinTerra has filed chapter 7 bankruptcy in a likely move to avoid any additional payouts. The bankruptcy was filed on January 24th, and the company has stated that it would be unable to pay several unsecured investors. CoinTerra is also listing hundreds of creditors in its filing, some of which are US-based bank Wells Fargo and CenturyLink, a data services provider that entered into an agreement with CoinTerra in July of last....
Bitcoin mining firm Compute North filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Texas on Thursday as the crypto winter continues to put pressure on crypto mining operations. The bankruptcy petition filed on September 22, indicates the company looks to stabilize operations in order to repay creditors.
Compute North Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection
Five months ago last April, Compute North revealed the company was building a 300 megawatt (MW) data center in Texas. Months before that at the end of 2021, Compute North entered a deal with Marathon Digital Holdings (Nasdaq:....
Compute North’s hosting partners Compass Mining have stated that the firm will continue to operate business as usual at this stage. Bitcoin (BTC) mining hosting firm Compute North has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy, amid growing pressure on the firm due to the effects of crypto winter and rising energy costs. The firm’s CEO Dave Perrill has also stepped down but will remain on the board. The company submitted a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas on Sept. 22, which is now pending before Judge David Jones. Under a Chapter 11 filing,....
Bitcoin mining hardware manufacturer HashFast has formally entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy following a court ruling. The US bankruptcy court granted the company's request on 7th June after it filed for bankruptcy protection two days earlier. The move closes a turbulent chapter in HashFast's history, nearly a month after laying off half of its workforce and publicly denying that it was filing for bankruptcy. According to a 10th June blog post, the company is now in the process of reorganizing under Chapter 11. Most notably, CEO Eduardo DeCastro has resigned from his position as part of a....
Another crypto lender, Celsius Network, has sought bankruptcy protection in the U.S. “Customer claims will be addressed through the Chapter 11 process,” the company said. Two other crypto firms recently filed for bankruptcy protection: Voyager Digital and Three Arrows Capital (3AC). Celsius Follows Voyager, Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Crypto lender Celsius Network announced Wednesday that it has “filed voluntary petitions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New....