Troubled Hong Kong crypto exchange JPEX has applied for deregistration in Australia.
According to a filing seen by Cointelegraph on Sept. 20, Jieyi Chen, director of JP-EX Crypto Asset Platform PTY LTD (JPEX), has filed a deregistration application with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. In the filing, JPEX claims that all members of the company agree to the deregistration, the company is no longer carrying business, its assets do not exceed $1,000 Australian dollars, and it carries no liabilities.
On Sept. 13, during the Token2049 conference in Singapore, the JPEX team allegedly abandoned its corporate booth after Hong Kong police arrested six JPEX employees on charges of fraud for operating an unlicensed crypto exchange. The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) said on the same day that it received over 1,000 complaints regarding the JPEX platform, with claims of losses amounting to over 1 billion Hong Kong dollars ($128 million).
As the issue became publicized, JPEX reportedly raised its withdrawal fees to 999 USDT (USDT) to prevent transfers out of the exchange. Previously, JPEX had offered yields as high as 30% per year on stablecoin staking.
The website is currently inaccessible at the time of publication. Shortly before its takedown, JPEX published a compensation plan for users, claiming that users would be reimbursed on a “one-to-one” basis with their assets exchanged for a stake in the JPEX decentralized autonomous organization by Sept. 21. The exchange also wrote that third-party custodians have “maliciously frozen” platform assets due to the SFC investigation, which has led to an “unprecedented catastrophe.”
Magazine: ‘AI has killed the industry’: EasyTranslate boss on adapting to change