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Liquid Exchange Cancels Sale of Telegram's Gram Tokens

With the SEC lawsuit holding up the launch of Telegram's TON network, the Japan-based exchange has cancelled its sale of gram tokens and refunded investors.

Updated Dec 12, 2022, 12:51 p.m. Published Jan 16, 2020, 10:30 a.m.
Credit: Shutterstock
Credit: Shutterstock

Japan-based Liquid exchange has cancelled its sale of Telegram's not-yet-launched gram tokens.

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Originally announced in June, the limited sale of tokens sourced from Gram Asia – said to be one of the biggest investors in Telegram's $1.7 billion initial coin offering – took place in July.

However, the tokens were not to be released until Telegram's TON network – the blockchain supporting the tokens – had gone live. That had been expected by the end of October.

Sale proceeds were held in escrow pending the issuance.

Now, Liquid says in a blog posthttps://blog.liquid.com/cancellation-of-gram-sale dated Jan. 10 its sale terms specified TON must have launched by Nov. 30, 2019; since that was not the case, the sale had to be cancelled.

Telegram's blockchain project has been held up by a lawsuit brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in October claiming that grams are in fact an unregistered security and ordering the company to halt the launch of the TON network.

The SEC is set to meet Telegram in court on Feb 18-19, as per recent filings.

Seth Melamed, Liquid's head of business development, told CoinDesk: "100 percent of client funds were returned to participants. No fees or charges." The escrow wallet made public by Liquid is now empty.

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