Curve founder looks to unexpected counterparties to rescue sinking DeFi loans

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Curve Finance founder Michael Egorov is attempting to offload some of his DeFi positions to alleviate his mountain of debt, but some have highlighted his liquidity sources.

On Aug. 1, Nansen research analyst Sandra Leow posted a list of liquidity sources for Egorov’s Curve DAO (CRV) positions.

According to Leow, Egorov sold around 50 million CRV tokens over the counter to several buyers at a below-market rate of $0.40 per token. The sale includes a three to six-month vesting agreement or they can be sold should prices reach $0.80.

Some of the bigger players involved include Tron founder Justin Sun, who was recently sued by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.

Other notable buyers included tech entrepreneur Jeffrey Huang, better known as “MachiBigBrother” who Twitter personality ZachXBT accused of embezzling 22,000 Ether (ETH), currently valued at over $41 million, over several projects. Huang has denied the claims and sued ZachXBT for defamation.

DWF Labs, an investment firm that also engages in market making, also snapped up some discounted tokens.

Others include the DeFi lending protocol Cream Finance, “DCFGod” who is listed as part of a team for a nonfungible token (NFT) project and three other crypto wallets.

Wintermute CEO Evgeny Gaevoy suggested some of the people and entities Egorov is dealing with “are kind of questionable” adding Wintermute hadn’t onboarded Egorov as a counterparty.

The Curve founder took out a $100 million DeFi stablecoin loan using his own CRV stash as collateral. However, the protocol was exploited on July 30 resulting in a 30% crash in CRV prices.

As the price of CRV neared the liquidation price, which is $0.362 according to DeFiLlama, fears have mounted of a DeFi black swan event with so much CRV potentially flooding markets with limited liquidity.

However, since some of the debts have been repaid, the token has recovered over the past 24 hours and was trading at $0.597 at the time of writing.

Related: Ethical hacker retrieves $5.4M for Curve Finance amid exploit

Egorov has paid off more than $17 million in stablecoin loans increasing the health of the loan slightly, according to Debank.

However, the DeFi founder still has a mountain of debt to pay with $60 million in stablecoins on Aave, $12 million on Abracadabra and around $8 million on Inverse.

He also has a $9 million loan on Frax, which concerned some onlookers due to its 85% interest rate.

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