Problems at Celsius appear to have been simmering for years before the crypto lender filed for bankruptcy.
The crypto company saw a range of internal missteps leading up to its recent turmoil, according to former employees and internal documents CNBC reviewed. Multiple employees painted a picture of risk-taking, disorganization and alleged market manipulation.
“The biggest issue was a failure of risk management,” Timothy Cradle, Celsius’ former director of financial crimes compliance, told CNBC in an interview. “I think Celsius had a good idea, they were providing a service that people really needed, but they weren’t managing risk very well.”
The Hoboken, New Jersey-based company made headlines a month ago after it froze customer accounts, blaming “extreme market conditions.” It had attracted 1.7 million customers and $11.8 billion in deposits as of June. Celsius customers have told CNBC they were drawn in by a 17% yield the company was offering on crypto deposits.
Behind the scenes, Celsius would lend that money out to hedge funds and others willing to pay an even higher yield. It would also invest in other high-risk cryptocurrency projects, according to internal documents. Celsius would later split those profits with the customer. The model came crashing down along with the price of cryptocurrencies, which caused multiple companies to freeze assets and at least three to file for bankruptcy.
Cradle said he was part of a three-person compliance team between 2019 and 2021. The role required him to apply international finance laws to Celsius’ business. But resources were limited, he said.
“The compliance team was too small,” Cradle said. “Compliance was a cost center — basically we were sucking out money and not bringing any back in. They didn’t want to spend on compliance.”
One of the internal company documents CNBC obtained echoed this claim. It said when it came to assessing fraudulent cryptocurrency platforms, “there is not adequate compliance staff for the amount of users on Celsius’s platform as there are only 3 full-time individuals.”
‘Banks are not your friends’
The former employee’s allegations echo a recent lawsuit brought by a former investment manager, Jason Stone. Stone alleges that Celsius artificially inflated the price of its own token and was “actively using customer funds to manipulate crypto-asset markets to their benefit.” The suit also claimed Celsius failed to hedge risk and engaged in activities that amounted to fraud.
Details within internal documents
Cradle also said that many Celsius users likely didn’t have a good grasp of the company’s terms of use, which contradicted the messaging that Celsius communicated through its marketing.
But the risks associating with depositing funds with Celsius were “hiding in plain sight,” Cradle said. Section 13 of the company’s terms of use says that once a customer deposits funds, the funds belong to Celsius.
Cradle also said he saw evidence of the company trading customer funds without disclosing that it was doing so. Celsius’ CEO has said explicitly on Twitter that the company did not trade customer funds.
Cradle said that based on his firsthand experience with the company’s risk appetite he wouldn’t keep his own money with Celsius.
“I didn’t feel comfortable leaving them on the platform,” Cradle said, referring to his own crypto funds. “I frequently read the terms of use — once you deposit your assets with Celsius, they belong to Celsius, and Celsius can keep them if they need to or want to.”
Internal documents also show evidence of disorganization across multiple teams. One document shows policies written by a team without the head of that team knowing. In one instance, a top risk officer writes that he was “surprised” by a document written by another team overseas.
“He was probably surprised that the document even existed — that’s just the way things were at Celsius. It’s left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing,” Cradle said. “It’s just another example of mismanagement or sort of sloppy management on Celsius’ part.”
Lacking transparency
The day before the withdrawal freeze, in response to a tweet that questioned the company’s financial health, Mashinsky wrote: “do you even know one person who has a problem withdrawing from Celsius? why spread FUD and misinformation,” referring to fear, uncertainty and doubt. The following day, June 12, customers were no longer permitted to withdraw funds from their accounts.
Public records indicate Celsius may have had financial problems long before this.
Data from the federal government shows Celsius received a Paycheck Protection Program loan worth $281,502 in April 2020. The federal government awarded these loans to businesses negatively affected by the Covid pandemic.
“That raised my eyebrows a bit, and I was curious if we were profitable,” Cradle said.
The loan was forgiven by the federal government, meaning that Celsius met the requirements needed to avoid repayment.
Background checks
She told CNBC that executives specifically told the chief human resources officer not to run a background check on Yaron Shalem, the incoming chief financial officer. In November 2021, Shalem was arrested in Israel and charged with money laundering in connection with his previous company. Shalem did not respond to requests for comment.
CNBC also made an attempt to find out the status of the case, but it does not appear to be publicly available in the Israeli court system. The chief human resources officer who Goodstein said was told not to run a background check did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
Goodstein, who worked at publicly traded Fortune 500 companies before Celsius, said she was “surprised” someone in an executive role wouldn’t face a background check.
“It was definitely a gap in process at that time,” she said. “Everyone was [upset] that he wasn’t background checked, because then it wouldn’t have brought such embarrassment to the company if that was a process that we had in place — we all were kind of like, what the heck just happened?”
Cradle said he’s not planning to go back to the cryptocurrency industry after Celsius and a stint at another start-up. Celsius set out to make a good product at a time when banks paid near zero interest on savings, he said.
“I think it was good people with poor planning — they didn’t hire at the right times, they didn’t staff up at the right times, they didn’t scale with the growth of the company,” he said. “It was just a bunch of mistakes that are ending up very tragically.”
— Érica Carnevalli and Margaret Fleming contributed to this article.
Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/19/former-employees-say-issues-plagued-crypto-company-celsius-years-before-bankruptcy.html