Barry Silbert defends DCG in response to Gemini's Winklevoss

Quick Take

  • Silbert’s letter comes on the heels of the latest salvo of accusation from Gemini’s Cameron Winklevoss.
  • Silbert reiterated that DCG doesn’t comingle funds, defends involvement with Three Arrows Capital.

Barry Silbert laid out a point by point rebuke of accusations made by Gemini President Cameron Winklevoss in an open letter earlier today that demanded the removal of the Digital Currency Group chief executive.

There is an ongoing spat over the frozen funds of Gemini's Earn users, with Winklevoss saying 340,000 of them “have been defrauded by Genesis Global Capital LLC, together with its parent company Digital Currency Group." He alleged that Genesis had misled the company, Earn users and the public about the com.

Before delivering specifics on DCG and Genesis’s activities in the form of a strange Q&A where whomever is responsible for the responses is not identified, Silbert tried to shine a light on DCG’s many investments and successes. After which, however, he candidly explains that not only has the past year “been the most difficult” of his life but also having his “integrity and good intentions questioned” is particularly challenging.

Silbert said DCG has never comingled funds with any of its subsidiaries, nor that it had a relationship with Three Arrows Capital but "Genesis had a trading and lending relationship with Three Arrows Capital, and Three Arrows Capital defaulted on its loans from Genesis. Separately, Three Arrows Capital was an investor in various Grayscale products," Silbert wrote.

Winklevoss had said that Genesis was willing to "recklessly lend to 3AC because 3AC was using the money for the kamikaze Grayscale net asset value (NAV) trade."

He also said DCG never had a relationship with Alameda Research, though Genesis did have a trading and lending relationship with them. DCG made a small equity investment of $250,000 in FTX’s Series B in July 2021. DCG held a trading account with FTX with less than 1% of all of its trading volume transacted on that platform.

Promissory note

DCG agreed to assign and exchange Genesis’s $1.1B unsecured loan receivable from Three Arrows Capital, the recovery on which was “highly uncertain,” with a promissory note from DCG.

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"DCG did not receive any cash, cryptocurrency, or other form of payment for the promissory note. DCG effectively assumed Genesis’s risk of loss on the Three Arrows Capital loan with no obligation to do so," Silbert wrote. "Of note, during the period following Three Arrows Capital’s default, DCG contributed approximately ~$340M of new equity across Genesis entities to provide it with additional capital."

DCG did borrow capital from Genesis Capital, the lending arm of Genesis. 

"These loans were always structured on an arm’s length basis and were priced at prevailing market interest rates,” Silbert said. “In addition to the promissory note discussed in question 14 below, DCG currently owes Genesis Capital (i) $447.5M* in USD and (ii) 4,550 BTC (~$78M), which matures in May 2023."

Updates: Story updated to remove repeated paragraph. 


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Christiana is a long-time journalist who has written about markets in the Americas, politicians who stashed cash in their underwear and high-end heels, to name just a few. She previously spent six years at Bloomberg, and her work has appeared in the WSJ, LA Times, Insider, Vogue Business and more. Christiana has a bachelor's degree in English from Pace University and a master's degree in journalism from New York University. She completed a master's degree in media psychology for fun.
RT Watson is a senior reporter at The Block who covers a wide array of topics including U.S.-based companies, blockchain gaming and NFTs. Formerly covered entertainment at The Wall Street Journal, where he wrote about Disney, Netflix, Warner Bros. and the creator economy while focusing primarily on technological disruption across media. Previous to that he covered corporate, economic and political news in Brazil while at Bloomberg. RT has interviewed a diverse cast of characters including CEOs, media moguls, top influencers, politicians, blue-collar workers, drug traffickers and convicted criminals. Holds a master's degree in Digital Sociology.

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