XRP

The Luna saga continues. In a Twitter thread, the team behind the failed algorithmic stablecoin UST and the token LUNA shared precisely how much Bitcoin and crypto assets they had disposed of.

The Luna Foundation Guard (LFG) also shared a promise to “compensate remaining users of UST, smallest holders first,” with the remaining assets.

In summary, 80,081 Bitcoin (BTC) or 99.61% of the Bitcoin that LFG guarded, has exited the fund. The group confirmed a sale of “33,206 $BTC for an aggregate 1,164,018,521 $UST” in a tweet. The remaining 47,188 BTC is not accounted for, while 313 BTC remains in reserve.

Interestingly, LFG has not sold a single Binance Coin (BNB) or Avalanche (AVAX), holding circa 40,000 and 2,000,000 of each token, respectively.

The below graphic makes clear the remaining tokens in the LFG reserve:

The reason behind the disposal and sale of cryptocurrency in the LFG reserve was to support the health of the Terra ecosystem:

The counterparty that the group used has not been named. Cointelegraph experts have compiled an analysis on the Terra ecosystem implosion, questioning the “long-term viability of algorithmic stablecoins.” The current makeup of the LFG reserve is the following:

Related: LUNA meltdown sparks theories and told-you-sos from crypto community

Meanwhile, crypto enthusiasts with staked LUNA tokens should see LUNA returned to their wallets in the next 20 days. However, it will be worth less: LUNA’s price has fallen over 99% since its highs, currently sitting at $0.0002.

What was once a $50 billion ecosystem now has a total reserve balance of $82 million, prompting popular crypto influencer Cobie to simply respond to the thread with: “Bruh.”

Articles You May Like

Bitcoin’s rise to $81,000 may trigger rally in ETH, SOL, SUI, AAVE
Bitcoin looks ripe for a rebound, and so do ETH, DOGE, LTC, and XMR
Bitcoin to be ‘political imperative,’ owning none ‘a liability’ — NYDIG
Bitcoin ripe for ‘major leg down’ as BTC price nears $80K — Trader
Norway supports MiCA, considers CBDC for financial stability