Bankrupt crypto brokerage Voyager Digital filed documents in United States court Jan. 8 in response to objections raised to the Binance US proposal to buy out its debt. Voyager announced it had approved the offer Dec. 19. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), four states, the U.S. Trustee and Alameda Research filed objections to it.
Voyager stated in one document that objections to the Binance US offer “fail to put forward any factual or legal support” in their arguments, while Binance US offered creditors higher recovery rates than other proposals and expeditious recovery.
Voyager’s decision to accept the Binance.US plan was an exercise of sound business judgment, it argued. The “business judgment rule” is a legal doctrine that describes how courts should respect the decisions of a company’s executives. The document stated:
Voyager also pointed out that the agreement preserved its “’fiduciary out’ should a higher or better alternative transaction be proposed.”
Objections from the U.S. Trustee and the states of Vermont, New York, Texas and Hawaii were dismissed in the document as “premature.”
A second, longer reply, dated Jan. 8, detailed the purported adequacy of the information provided in the Binance.US plan and argued in detail that other objections are premature and, in the case of Alameda Research, frivolous.
Related: Investors seek to sell FTX, Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager claims
The SEC had filed a limited objection to the Binance US plan Jan. 4 claiming the plan was insufficiently detailed. Alameda claimed the plan did not respect its loan facility claims, which Voyager said it only entered into the loan agreement “based on AlamedaFTX’s fraudulent and false representations.” Voyager entered into a $500 million
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