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CZ tweeted that a $1B recovery fund would be moved into ‘native crypto’ with ‘transparency.’ Then Binance stuck it in a corporate wallet

Founder and CEO of Binance Changpeng Zhao, known as CZ.
Founder and CEO of Binance Changpeng Zhao, known as CZ.
Antonio Masiello—Getty Images

In the wake of FTX’s collapse in November, the newly crowned kingpin of crypto, Binance CEO and cofounder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, announced that his exchange would create an industry recovery fund to “help projects who are otherwise strong, but in a liquidity crisis.”

Binance committed $1 billion of its own capital, seeded into a public address with its self-branded stablecoin, BUSD, and invited other companies to participate. Binance also boasted that it intended to ramp up its own contribution to $2 billion.

After BUSD came under fire from U.S. regulators and Binance partner Paxos stopped issuing the token, Zhao tweeted on March 13 that Binance would convert the $1 billion left in the “Industry Recovery Initiative” to “native crypto,” including Bitcoin, Ether, and Binance’s own cryptocurrency, BNB.

“Some fund movements will occur on-chain,” he wrote. “Transparency.”

In a single transaction on March 13, Binance moved just over $985 million BUSD to one of its corporate exchange wallets, called Binance 14. Despite Zhao’s promise of transparency, there have been no subsequent movement of the funds, and a Binance spokesperson told Fortune that the company intends to keep the capital in its corporate wallets, rather than a public address, without specifying how the BUSD will be converted.

“We remain committed to supporting the industry—although given the fact that crypto prices have recovered well above post-FTX levels, there are not as many companies in need of help,” the spokesperson said. “We will keep funds available, as needed, but they will sit in our corporate wallets rather than in the IRI wallet.”

As Binance faces increasing pressure from regulators amid allegations of misappropriated funds, the mismatch between public rhetoric and private behavior regarding the recovery initiative doesn’t help the company’s optics.

After Zhao announced the crypto recovery fund on Nov. 14, the initiative quickly drew praise—and participation—throughout the industry. It also attracted top partners, with leading companies such as Jump Crypto, Polygon Ventures, Aptos Labs, and Animoca Brands agreeing to contribute around $50 million in aggregate.

Ten days after announcing the fund, Binance said it had received over 150 applications from companies seeking support. By February, the exchange announced that the fund had grown to $1.1 billion—meaning the commitment from other firms had grown by just $50 million—and that it had supported 14 projects, including the South Korean exchange GOPAX.

Because Binance listed a public address for its portion of the recovery initiative, it’s possible to see transactions into and out of the fund. Until Binance moved out its BUSD in March, the address only registered two outgoing transactions—one on Nov. 24, for just over $50 in BUSD, and the other on Feb. 3 for just under $15 million in BUSD. The Binance spokesperson confirmed the latter transaction was for GOPAX.

BUSD has been a target of criticism. Even though the New York-based Paxos issued the stablecoin, which is backed one-to-one with the dollar, Binance issued its own “wrapped” version of the token that would function on its proprietary blockchain, Binance Smart Chain. BUSD is only operable on Ethereum.

In early January, the blockchain analytics firm ChainArgos revealed that the wrapped version of BUSD—called Binance-peg BUSD—was often undercollateralized, or not backed one-to-one—and Bloomberg later reported that Binance was commingling collateral for the Binance-peg BUSD token with customer exchange funds in a corporate wallet called Binance 8. A spokesperson said that the collateral assets had been moved into the wallet “in error.” Fortune reported that a similar dynamic occurred with a different wrapped token, Binance-peg USDC, in a corporate wallet named Binance 14.

Commingling different types of assets in the same corporate wallets has been a persistent management issue for Binance, including with the recovery fund. The $1 billion in BUSD initially came from the corporate wallet Binance 14, which also stores customer funds, raising the eyebrows of onlookers on crypto Twitter.

With its recent decision to move the recovery initiative fund back to a corporate wallet, Binance is repeating the same dynamic. After the New York Department of Financial Services ordered Paxos to stop issuing BUSD amid allegations of Binance’s improper management of wrapped tokens, BUSD’s market cap fell sharply, spurring Binance to declare it would convert its $1 billion of BUSD in the recovery initiative to Bitcoin, Ether, and BNB.

Even though Zhao publicly said this process would be happening with “transparency,” the company spokesperson confirmed that the fund instead would be stored in Binance 14—where the capital initially came from—rather than in a publicly viewable and separate address. The spokesperson did not clarify the discrepancy between Zhao’s public statement and the private management decision.

With crypto markets rebounding, applications to the initiative have “dropped significantly,” the spokesperson added. The funds remain available, but with them back in a corporate wallet it’s impossible to track whether Binance indeed converted the BUSD into “native crypto” or whether it will continue to disseminate the funds.

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