Crypto
Cryptocurrency exchange MyCryptoWallet collapses, appoints liquidators

Cryptocurrency exchange MyCryptoWallet collapses, appoints liquidators
Liquidators have been called in to wind up an Australian cryptocurrency exchange, which could see investors losing everything due to a lack of regulation.
Melbourne-based cryptocurrency exchange MyCryptoWallet’s chief executive, Jaryd Tyson Koenigsmann, appointed liquidators SV Partners on Friday December 3, according to ASIC documents.
MyCryptoWallet was established in 2017 and has previously claimed it had signed up 20,000 customers.
The trading platform allowed people to buy and sell cryptocurrency such as bitcoin, ethereum, XRP and litecoin.
In April, ASIC was also understood to be investigating multiple complaints about the MyCryptoWallet.
The company’s accounts were frozen in 2019 after a dispute with NAB.
SV Partners will release its first creditors’ report on 17 December. The administrators are also looking for a buyer to purchase the company’s “technological infrastructure”.
MyCryptoWallet is the second cryptocurrency exchange to fail in two months. In October, Blockchain Global Limited collapsed, owing investors $21 million.
Unlike banks there is no government guarantee for cryptocurrency exchanges.
“I think that’s one of the things that a lot of consumers don’t understand, that the cryptocurrency held on the exchange is not theirs in the same way. They don’t have direct control over it,” said RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub’s Aaron Lane.
“They don’t have custody over those assets. It’s the exchange that has the custody over it.”
Many amateur investors spend a great deal of time researching which stocks to buy, but few spend any time thinking about who is actually holding their shares.
A Senate inquiry has recommended changes to taxation laws, licensing and regulatory regimes to encourage digital and crypto-asset businesses to set-up in Australia.
The global leader, digital transformation practice at Norton Rose Fulbright, Nick Abrahams, said it was critical for the government to act swiftly to regulate exchanges and protect Australians.
“Because the digital currency exchange space is largely unregulated, it is difficult for people to assess which exchanges are trustworthy,” Mr Abrahams said.
He said the only way to be certain that your crypto was safe was to take it off the exchange and store it in a “cold wallet”.
“A cold wallet is a small piece of hardware [that] is not connected to the internet, [such as] a USB drive. Of course, the problem is that you can lose your cold wallet or the password to access your cold wallet,” he said.
“This transaction friction and risk will be eliminated as crypto gets broader adoption and the industry matures.”
Bitcoin slid 8.3 per cent to $US49,166 — after hitting a low of $US41,967 over the weekend — as profit-taking and macro-economic concerns prompted nearly $US1 billion worth of selling across cryptocurrencies.
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