Singapore is about to get its first bitcoin dispute trial

As the virtual currency market is currently unregulated in Singapore, B2C2 says there is no legislation which constrains the buying and selling of virtual currencies or their trade prices.


BEAM Team

6 Dec, 2017

Singapore is about to get its first bitcoin dispute trial | BEAMSTART News

- From our Sponsors -

A legal dispute involving bitcoin will soon head for trial at the Singapore International Commercial Court (SICC), a first for the city-state.

The Straits Times (ST) reported on Tuesday (Dec 5) that the dispute was between electronic market maker B2C2 and bitcoin exchange operator Quoine.

In May, B2C2 had reportedly sued Quoine over trades that the former alleged were wrongfully reversed, resulting in proceeds being deducted.

Related: Build a Business, Not a Financial Machine

The trade proceeds had a value of $3.78 million (S$5 million), which has now potentially ballooned to $30 million, ST reported.

On Tuesday, B2C2 sought to recover 3,084.78582325 bitcoins from Quoine but the case will go to trial as a judge declined to grant summary judgment.

According to ST, B2C2 is accusing Quoine for breach of trust, claiming the latter “acted fraudulently” and “deprived it of the opportunity to sell the proceeds on the date of their highest intermediate value”.

B2C2 says that it had placed orders on Quoine’s platform to sell ethereum for bitcoins at the price of 10 bitcoins for one ethereum. Although the orders were filled and bitcoins were subsequently credited into B2C2’s account, the trades were reversed the next day.

Quoine then argued it was entitled to do so because there was a “huge mark-up over fair global market price”, and that the average market price was way below at about 0.03929075 bitcoin for one ethereum.

As the virtual currency market is currently unregulated in Singapore, B2C2 says there is no legislation which constrains the buying and selling of virtual currencies or their trade prices.

Quoine, however, is alleging that B2C2 is “seeking to profit from a technical glitch”.

“It is the defendant’s case that the plaintiff deliberately placed the orders at the abnormal rate in bad faith and for the purpose of manipulating the market,” Quoine was quoted by ST as saying.

Related: Join Entrepreneurs and Investors at Entrepreneurs Retreat 2018  


Article Info:
This article was first published by Jessica Lin on Business Insider Singapore

- From our Sponsors -

Latest Jobs

Account Executive (London)

Kula

London, United Kingdom, United States

Full Time

USD 50000 — USD 70000 yearly

Environmental Health & Safety Specialist

Blockstamp

Los Angeles, CA, United States

Full Time

USD 87000 — USD 100000 yearly

Staff / Lead Product Designer

Nimble

Oregon City, OR, United States

Full Time

USD 152000 — USD 178000 yearly

Founding Technical Product Owner

Agave

San Francisco, United States

Full Time

USD 75000 — USD 140000 yearly

Senior Frontend Engineer

QuestDB

London, United Kingdom, United States

Full Time

USD 100000 — USD 120000 yearly

Inbound SDR

Runway

New York, United States

Full Time

USD 80000 — USD 125000 yearly

Sales Development Representative

Cogram

Berlin, Germany, United States

Full Time

USD 40000 — USD 70000 yearly

Full Stack Engineer

Mintlify

San Francisco, United States

Full Time

USD 110000 — USD 170000 yearly

Product Designer

GitStart

San Francisco, United States

Full Time

Salary Undisclosed

Product Manager/BizOps #1

Studdy

San Francisco, United States

Full Time

USD 100000 — USD 180000 yearly

BEAMSTART is a hub for everything Startups, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation. Connect with a global community of people, and stay updated with the latest startup jobs, news, and discussions.

 
© 2016 - 2024 BEAMSTART. All Rights Reserved (Legal).