Share this article

FDT Welcomes Dubai’s $456M Freeze as Techteryx Seeks to Recover TrueUSD Reserves from Aria

In a statement to CoinDesk, FDT's Vincent Chok said his company "welcomes any steps that assist Techteryx in pursuing recovery of its funds from the Aria entities."

Updated Nov 18, 2025, 4:57 a.m. Published Nov 18, 2025, 12:49 a.m.
FDT's Vincent Chok Speaks at Consensus 2025 in Hong Kong (CoinDesk)
FDT's Vincent Chok Speaks at Consensus 2025 in Hong Kong (CoinDesk)

What to know:

  • A Dubai court has frozen $456 million linked to TrueUSD's reserves, which became illiquid after being transferred to complex investment structures.
  • First Digital Trust supports Techteryx's efforts to recover the funds, which were tied up in trade-finance positions with Aria Commodities DMCC.
  • FDT is pursuing a defamation case against Justin Sun, who claimed the trustee was insolvent, affecting the stability of FDT's stablecoin.

With a Dubai court freezing $456 million tied to TrueUSD’s reserves, First Digital Trust said it backs Techteryx’s effort to recover the funds after they became illiquid in 2023 following transfers into complex investment structures associated with the Aria Group, a shortfall that required an emergency bailout from Justin Sun to keep the stablecoin running.

"We welcome any steps that assist Techteryx in pursuing recovery of its funds from the Aria entities," First Digital's Vincent Chok said in an email to CoinDesk. "We understand the Court has ordered Aria to provide disclosure regarding the assets, and we look forward to seeing the results of that process."

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

FDT was not a party to the case in Dubai.

The connection between FDT and Aria stems from FDT’s former role as fiduciary custodian for TrueUSD’s reserves, which it held on behalf of Techteryx.

As CoinDesk reported earlier this year, Techteryx said it instructed FDT to place the funds into the Aria Commodity Finance Fund, a Cayman Islands vehicle. Court filings in Hong Kong later alleged that roughly $456 million was instead transferred to Aria Commodities DMCC, a separate Dubai-based Aria entity, where the assets became tied up in illiquid trade-finance positions.

The court order from Dubai's Digital Economy Court froze these funds.

FDT CEO Vincent Chok told CoinDesk the firm acted solely as a fiduciary intermediary and executed all transactions exactly as instructed by Techteryx and its representatives.

Separately, FDT continues to pursue a defamation case against Sun, who, in April, claimed that the trustee is "effectively insolvent," which caused FDT's stablecoin, FDUSD, to become briefly unpegged.

"There are no public updates to share at this stage," Chok told CoinDesk.


More For You

More For You

UAE sits on $344 million unrealized profit from its bitcoin mining operations

Flag of the United Arab Emirates

Royal family-linked mining rigs are producing about 4 BTC a day, turning state-backed infrastructure into a steady sovereign bitcoin machine

What to know:

  • The United Arab Emirates is sitting on an estimated $344 million in unrealized profit from the 6,782 bitcoin ($454 million) it has produced.
  • The country’s mining operations, tied to Abu Dhabi’s royal family and major partnerships like Marathon Digital’s 250-megawatt project, continue to produce about 4.2 BTC a day.
  • Unlike Western governments, which tend to acquire bitcoin through seizures, the UAE is building a strategic digital reserve by retaining most of the bitcoin it mines.