The Japanese government has vowed that it will do all it can to protect customers of FTX’s Japanese subsidiary, FTX Japan. But the exchange has announced that its clients’ funds are safe.
Nikkei quoted the nation’s Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki as explaining that regulators had hit FTX Japan with a business suspension order, but that the government was taking steps to help the exchange’s customers.
Suzuki was speaking at a press conference held after a cabinet meeting, where he said:
“We need to take all possible measures to ensure that the interests of [FTX Japan] users are not harmed.”
The regulatory Financial Services Agency (FSA) reacted to the collapse of FTX Japan’s parent company, FTX, by issuing the exchange with a business suspension order. FTX Japan has also been ordered to submit a business improvement plan by November 16.
While FTX Japan did not initially halt all transactions on its platform, it did follow suit with FTX’s decision to halt customer withdrawals.
The FSA stepped in with its order shortly after. The agency castigated FTX Japan for failing to “specify a schedule” for the resumption of withdrawals.
But FTX Japan has responded by announcing on its website that its customers funds are safe. The company wrote that it “manages customer assets separately” in accordance with the “strict rules stipulated by the FSA and Japanese law.” It claimed that it has access to an “amount that exceeds” the value of total customers’ assets in custody on cold wallets and trust bank accounts.
While the firm again refused to state when it would resume customer withdrawals, it published a breakdown of its own finances – and the coins held by its customers. The company wrote that it had net assets worth $72.6 million and was
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