Creditor Takes Crypto Startup London Block Exchange to Court
A law firm has taken the London Block Exchange to court saying it's owed money, but the startup's CEO has denied it is going out of business.
Update (12:30 UTC, April 29, 2019): This article has been added to after new information was received from LBX CEO Benjamin Dives
A creditor has taken the London Block Exchange (LBX) to court in a bid to wind up the cryptocurrency exchange, but the startup's CEO has denied it is going out of business.
Law firm Squire Patton Boggs (UK) LLP served the petition to LBX on March 19 in London’s High Court of Justice. A hearing on the matter is scheduled to take place Tuesday, according to London Block Exchange CEO Benjamin Dives.
Russell Hill, a partner at Squire Patton Boggs, told CoinDesk:
Typically a creditor asks a solicitor to wind the debtor company up to recover debts, or to stop the company from making its debts worse. This can be done by any creditor with debts over 750 British pounds (about $968) and is generally seen as a serious action to take against a firm, as it means the firm’s directors could face personal liability for the debts if they don't act quickly.
However, Dives told CoinDesk that the debt in question is only £9,900 (around $12,787). Squire Patton Boggs drafted terms and conditions for LBX's website and provided some other legal services, Dives said. The bill wasn't paid on time, so the law firm got angry and demanded a higher fee, he claimed.
"The bill didn’t come to my attention until it was very late," Dives said. According to him, LBX sent the money to the law firm "within 24 hours of the petition being issued." However, he said he's sure the court will decide in LBX's favor, adding:
Subsequent to that conversation, Peter McCormack, host of the popular podcast "What Bitcoin Did," alleged on his Twitter feed that LBX was insolvent and owed creditors "millions," and that staff had not been paid since last year. He did not identify the sources of this information.
Dives told CoinDesk: “We have been advised not to comment on Peter's claims by our lawyers.”
Funding rumors
LBX had been based in the iconic Level39 tech space in London’s Canary Wharf, which had been home to a number of crypto and blockchain firms, including the CEX.IO exchange, eToro and Revolut.
However, a representative for Level39 said LBX no longer occupied a shared workspace there and had not since 2018. (The cost of a hot desk in Level39 starts at about £400 per month, with fixed office space desks starting at about £700 per month.)
Regarding the company leaving Level39, Dives said: "We found L39 to be an unsuitable location for security given the high level of intimacy hotdesking brings."
One industry source told CoinDesk there had been rumors the firm was trying to raise capital in recent months. Data and APIs that would define LBX trading volumes had not been forthcoming, added the source.
Dives also pointed out that LBX has been raising capital since mid-2018 and has two "substantial" investments confirmed since then.
The London Block Exchange (LBX) launched in November 2017 having raised 2 million pounds (about $2.6 million) from investors, according to Business Insider.
With former Credit Suisse banker Adam Bryant as executive chairman, the company had ambitious plans for a prepaid card by which users could hold and spend crypto. That turned out to be a case of bad timing, since telco services provider WaveCrest (which worked with all the U.K. firms offering crypto-linked prepaid cards) violated its terms with Visa, essentially putting an end to this business model in the U.K.
However, LBX pivoted to become a mobile-first crypto exchange on iOS and Android, courting U.K. customers looking to trade crypto for pounds sterling. Towards the end of 2018, LBX announced it was “minting” a digital pound via a partnership with another blockchain company, AlphaPoint.
In addition, Reuters reported a deal between LBX and ClearBank to provide the exchange with banking services.
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The company had also planned an LBX token sale towards the end of 2018, but later canceled it, stating: “it’s clear that the market appetite for a public token sale will not support our growth plans alone and, in fact, is likely to be detrimental to our regulatory and investment roadmap.”
London High Court of Justice image via Shutterstock.