Crypto lending platform BlockFills has become the latest to succumb to a harsh crypto winter that has claimed several firms.
Reliz Ltd., the operating entity behind BlockFills, filed a voluntary petition on Sunday to restructure under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code in the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
Three other relevant entities also filed for Bankruptcy.
According to the official statement, the decision to seek protection follows extensive discussions with investors, clients, creditors, and other stakeholders.
The firm believes this path would preserve the value of the business and maximise recoveries for stakeholders.
“This filing will allow the firm to implement an orderly restructuring while maintaining transparency and oversight through the court-supervised process,” the company said.
It added that the move was intended to “stabilize the business, pursue additional sources of liquidity and recovery, and explore potential strategic transactions,” while maintaining that protecting client interests “remains a priority.”
The filing doesn’t come as a surprise, as the firm has been visibly struggling over the past months, and signs of insolvency have been showing.
BlockFills had recently suspended customer deposits and withdrawals, which it said was the result of “recent market and financial conditions” that led to severe liquidity shortages and stakeholder negotiations.
At the same time, it was also revealed that a US federal judge issued a temporary restraining order freezing over 70 BTC held by the company.
However, the current market conditions can be identified as the main reason behind the collapse.
Why are crypto companies going down?
BlockFills joins a long list of casualties that span various sectors within the crypto space that have folded over the past three months alone.
Last month, NFN8 Group, an industrial-scale Bitcoin miner based in Texas, filed for protection after failing to recover from high operational costs following the 2024 Bitcoin halving, which had already compressed its profit margins.
Nifty Gateway, the curated NFT platform owned by Gemini, officially ceased all operations on February 23, 2026.
The closure followed a long-term decline in the NFT market, which saw global trading volumes drop from billions to just a fraction of their peak.
Meanwhile, Arkham Exchange met a similar fate due to sustained low trading volumes.
The current trend is mainly due to the prolonged crypto winter that began in late October, right after Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $126,000.
Typically, crypto winters are periods of bearish sentiment during which crypto assets lose significant value and trading volumes remain stagnant.
This time around, since reaching its peak, Bitcoin went into a multi-month downtrend as hype around the pro-crypto promises of President Donald Trump faded and attention shifted elsewhere towards more pressing matters around sticky inflation.
Stalled regulatory progress further dampened sentiment as bankers and the crypto industry clashed over stablecoin yields.
Ultimately, the Market Clarity Act, which was supposed to provide a definitive legal framework, stalled in the Senate.
Recent tensions between the US and Iran became the latest trigger that increased volatility and pushed capital further away from risk assets, especially Bitcoin.
With no significant retail demand and a lack of institutional activity, overleveraged firms are bound to be affected.
However, there are signs that the market may be stabilising.
Bitcoin has recently recovered above the $74,000 mark after several weeks of downturn, and market pundits believe the selling pressure may be finally cooling.
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