The creator of a now-defunct lending platform agreed to pay more than $10.5 million to settle US Securities and Exchange Commission claims that he used investor funds to buy millions worth of the stablecoin TerraUSD before it collapsed.
Huynh Tran Quang Duy, also known as Duy Huynh, told customers of his firm, MyConstant, that their money would go into a loan matching service backed by crypto that would yield 10%, the SEC said in an order on Tuesday.
The agency claimed that in reality, Huynh used $11.9 million of his customers’ money to buy TerraUSD (UST), a stablecoin tied to the Terra blockchain that collapsed in mid-2022 and wiped out billions of dollars in value.
MyConstant was one of several crypto-linked businesses hurt by Terra’s collapse, which is estimated to have flushed half a trillion dollars from the crypto market.
The company has faced regulatory action since late 2022, when California’s finance regulator accused it of violating the state’s securities laws and ordered it to cease operations.
Huynh to pay millions to MyConstant customers
The SEC said that Huynh, a citizen of Vietnam and the US, agreed to pay disgorgement of over $8.3 million along with prejudgment interest of $1.5 million to pay back MyConstant customers.
He also must pay a civil penalty of $750,000 within 14 days, though he did not admit or deny the SEC’s findings.
MyConstant lost nearly $8 million on Terra bet, says SEC
According to the SEC, MyConstant started in 2018 and claimed to offer returns of between 6% to 10% by pooling and lending customer funds, all backed by crypto.
It advertised the investment as being “low risk,” and between September 2020 and November 2022, MyConstant raised over $20 million from more than 4,000 investors, the agency said.
Huynh allegedly spent $11.9 million buying TerraUSD and misappropriated about $415,000 of investor funds for his personal use. He lost over $7.9 million on the TerraUSD buys when the token’s price plummeted in May 2022.
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The SEC claimed Huynh then sought to “falsely assure investors of the safety of their funds and to incentivize them to reinvest in MyConstant,” emailing summaries showing fake loans the firm had made.
MyConstant ceased operations in mid-November 2022, citing the collapse of multiple crypto companies that year. It has since returned $1.8 million to investors,…
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