The trustee of the controversial failed cryptocurrency trade QuadrigaCX, Ernst & Younger (EY), has revealed that it solely has roughly $29.8 million in funds to distribute to claimants, regardless of receiving $171 million price of claims.

In a Nov. 6 update filed with the Ontario Superior Court docket of Justice, EY revealed it has obtained 17,053 claims from prospects who had entrusted their funds with the Canadian trade.

The claims embody almost $90.2 million in Canadian {dollars}, and greater than $6 million price of cryptocurrency together with 24,427 Bitcoin (BTC), 65,457 Ethereum (ETH), 87,031 Litecoin (LTC), 7,723 Bitcoin Money (BCH), 17,934 Bitcoin Gold (BTG), and seven,098 Bitcoin SV (BSV).

EY notes that QuadrigaCX’s founder, Gerald Cotten — who drew worldwide media consideration for reportedly dyi with the one keys to the trade’s wallets — traded utilizing his 76,000 prospects’ funds, possible contributing to the discrepancy between property and liabilities:

“Mr. Cotten proceeded to commerce these account balances with Affected Customers that had deposited actual property, as such, Quadriga’s property possible by no means matched the liabilities owed to Affected Customers.”

Cotten died in December 2018, with the trade dealing with escalating solvency points within the months prior. Later investigations revealed that a lot of the trade’s funds seem to have been within the palms of the infamous shadow-bank to the crypto sector, Crypto Capital.

EY has thus far discovered $29.8 million by way of promoting property from Cotten’s property, settling with Cotten’s widow, and retrieving funds from a third-party funds agency utilized by the trade.

The trustee plans to transform all recovered property into Canadian {dollars}, and allocate funds to customers based mostly on cryptocurrency costs from both April 15, 2019 — when QuadrigaCX declared chapter, or Feb. 5, 2019 — when customers have been blocked from accessing the trade.

EY has requested the court docket to find out the date to make use of for the conversion charge.