November 24, 2024

Jump Trading faces lawsuit over alleged $1.3B profit from TerraUSD

Jump Trading and its CEO Kanav Kariya are accused of violating United States regulations and unjust enrichment in the lawsuit.

A lawsuit filed in a district court in Illinois details Jump Trading’s alleged involvement with Terra Labs in manipulating the price of algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST). According to court documents from May 9, the firm purchased millions of UST tokens in 2021 hoping to manipulate its value to reach $1. 

Plaintiff Taewoo Kim is accusing Jump and its CEO Kanav Kariya of violating both the Commodity Exchange Act and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) regulations, as well as common law unjust enrichment.

According to the lawsuit, Jump Trading was an early partner and primary financial backer of Terraform Labs. Between November 2019 and September 2020, Jump entered into several agreements with Terraform and its affiliates “to borrow tens of millions of LUNA tokens” from Terra and “provide market-making services for transactions in LUNA, UST and aUST.”

In exchange, the agreements would grant Jump Trading “the opportunity to purchase LUNA tokens at a steep discount, which could then be resold into the market to further Jump’s own profit.”

According to the filing, in May 2021 — exactly one year before Terra’s ecosystem collapsed – the UST stablecoin algorithm failed to keep its $1 peg, leading Terraform and its CEO Do Kwon to coordinate trades to prop the token price:

“Rather than publicly acknowledging the inability of TFL’s algorithm to maintain UST’s advertised peg price (which was fundamental to the perceived market value of UST and aUST), TFL and Kwon secretly schemed with Defendant Jump to manipulate the market prices for UST and aUST by making secret, coordinated trades to prop up UST to its $1 peg.”

The purported scheme involved Jump purchasing more than 62 million UST tokens between approximately May 23 and May 27, 2021, causing UST’s price to artificially rise to $1, further increasing aUST’s price as well.

To incentivize and reward Jump for its alleged manipulation of the markets, Terra and Kwon “agreed to modify the parties’ prior agreements and instead unconditionally convey to Jump more than 61.4 million LUNA tokens at a greater than 99% discount from their then-current market price. Jump later resold those LUNA tokens into the market at a staggering profit of over $1.28 billion,” claims the court filing.

Cointelegraph reached out to Jump Trading regarding the lawsuit, but did not receive an immediate response.

Bloomberg reported on March 13 that U.S. prosecutors are examining a chat group discussion on Telegram involving Jump Trading, Alameda Research and Jane Street Group regarding a potential TerraUSD stablecoin bailout.

The U.S. Justice Department is also investigating the stablecoin collapse, which contributed to a $40 billion wipeout in the Terra ecosystem last May. Two agencies within the department — the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York — have interrogated former staff at Terraform Labs in recent weeks.

Kwon was arrested in March in Montenegro for allegedly using false documents. South Korean and United States authorities are seeking his extradition. He is currently under house arrest after being released on bail for 400,000 euros on May 12.

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