The Texas State Securities Board has issued an emergency cease-and-desist order against crypto lender Abra, claiming that it has been insolvent since at least March 31, 2023.
In a , the Texas regulator unveiled enforcement actions against Abra and its founder William Barhydt for allegedly committing securities fraud as well as engaging in deception regarding the sale of investment products through its affiliates Abra Earn and Abra Boost.
Abra “made offers of investments in Abra Earn in Texas containing statements that were materially misleading or otherwise likely to deceive the public,” the filing said, making similar claims about other Abra products.
“The alleged misconduct includes the intentional concealment of financial information reflecting the capitalization of parties, defaults on loans, and the transfer of assets to Binance.”
The regulator claimed that the company secretly transferred assets to Binance, which by the US Securities and Exchange Commission and accused of running an unregistered crypto exchange.
It alleged that as of February 2023, Abra Trade and Respondent Plutus Lending had more than $118 million worth of digital assets held at Binance.
Moreover, the filing claimed that Abra had previously asserted that it would “cease selling investment in Abra Earn in October 2022,” which it failed to do.
In October, Abra and its affiliates “began offering and selling investments in Abra Boost, a digital asset depository account, to accredited and institutional investors in the United States.”
Founded in 2014, Abra is one of the oldest crypto lenders in the market with over $116 million of assets under management for Abra Earn and Abra Boost investors in the United States as of May this year.
Abra Has Been Insolvent Since Late March
In its filing, the Texas State Securities Board claimed that Abra was insolvent or nearly insolvent in late March when the regulator interviewed Barhydt.
The regulatory body claimed that Abra held just under $30 million in Babel Finance, another $30 million in , and $10 million in .
At the time of reporting, all of these entities are undergoing liquidation or bankruptcy procedures.
“At least as of the date of the interview, parties collectively operating as Abra were or were nearly insolvent,” the filing said.
It is worth noting that aside from Abra, a number of other major crypto lenders have also collapsed over the past two years, which include , BlockFi, and the crypto lending unit of Genesis.
Nexo, which is one of the few crypto lending companies that hasn’t gone out of business, a total of $45 million to settle charges that it violated investor-protection laws.