More

    Dutch crypto exchange collapses exposing customer balances’ true value amid multi-million-euro hole

    Dutch crypto exchange Knaken’s operating company and its affiliated payments foundation entered court-controlled bankruptcy on July 16 after the Rotterdam District Court found that the exchange could not repay customers in full.

    The court said customers were locked out, payments had stopped, and a substantial coverage deficit had not been disclosed.

    The Dutch Public Prosecution Service told the court that about €7 million was missing from customer balances. The order confirms that management will not control the wind-down. Trustee C.F.W.A. Hamm now has authority over both Knaken Cryptohandel B.V. and Stichting Knaken Payments.

    Millions of EU crypto users face exchange cutoff as MiCA deadline hits in daysMillions of EU crypto users face exchange cutoff as MiCA deadline hits in days
    Related Reading

    Millions of EU crypto users face exchange cutoff as MiCA deadline hits in days

    Around three in four of the crypto companies registered across Europe are expected to lose their license this summer in the most aggressive thinning the industry has probably ever seen.

    Jun 14, 2026 · Andjela Radmilac

    Court control replaces Knaken’s payout plan

    Knaken argued that bankruptcy was unnecessary. It said criminal asset seizures, the service shutdown, and its custody structure already protected customers, and proposed an independent verification process followed by its own distribution protocol. The court rejected that route and put an outside trustee in charge.

    The public-interest petition took an unusual route. Prosecutors stepped in after blocked accounts and poor disclosure left customers unable to determine where they stood or to file a meaningful bankruptcy petition. Court control gave them a process outside the exchange’s own books and proposed payout system.

    The Dutch bankruptcy trustee works for the collective body of creditors under a supervising judge. The trustee inventories assets and claims, examines records and possible irregularities, protects and liquidates the estate, and proposes distributions according to claim priority, as set out in Dutch judiciary guidance and the Bankruptcy Act.

    For Knaken, that mandate supports reconciling platform ledgers with wallets, access controls, bank accounts, and other property across the company and the foundation. It also establishes which entity owes each customer and whether property described as a customer asset was actually held outside the exchange’s own estate. The appointment provides independent verification, but it neither fills the deficit nor determines a recovery percentage on its own.

    The Fiscal Intelligence and Investigation Service, known as the FIOD, was examining possible criminal conduct and carried out searches on June 29, according to prosecutors. Investigators seized digital data carriers and company assets, and no arrests had been made as of the June 30 statement.

    Separate teams handled the civil petition and criminal investigation, and neither the investigation nor the seizures amount to a finding of guilt. The legal treatment of seized property and its coordination with the bankruptcy estates remain to be clarified through the two processes.

    Infographic showing the Knaken bankruptcy order, the prosecutors’ allegation of about €7 million missing, the trustee’s asset, record and claim reconciliation, and the difference between segregated assets and guaranteed recovery.Infographic showing the Knaken bankruptcy order, the prosecutors’ allegation of about €7 million missing, the trustee’s asset, record and claim reconciliation, and the difference between segregated assets and guaranteed recovery.

    Custody protection depends on assets being there

    The bankruptcy of Stichting Knaken Payments makes the custody structure central to customer recovery. A separate foundation creates legal distance between an operating company and client property, but does not prove that sufficient assets were held, correctly recorded, or available for return when the platform failed.

    The Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets says Dutch law has no automatic statutory segregation regime for custodied crypto comparable to the protections for securities held by banks and investment firms. Crypto providers therefore often use a separate entity, usually a foundation, to create legal separation.

    Effective protection still requires the provider to hold client crypto and client funds, keep accurate position records, use separate client and proprietary wallets, maintain appropriate recovery-key controls, confine the foundation’s activities to client custody interests, and operate a workable return procedure.

    MiCA’s July 1 deadline is Europe’s first crypto user-migration test – OKX interviewMiCA’s July 1 deadline is Europe’s first crypto user-migration test – OKX interview
    Related Reading

    MiCA’s July 1 deadline is Europe’s first crypto user-migration test – OKX interview

    MiCA can force unlicensed exchanges out of Europe on paper. OKX Europe’s CEO says the real test is whether offshore apps are still one tap away.

    Jul 1, 2026 · Gino Matos

    Neither the court nor prosecutors have disclosed which Knaken assets remain, where they are held, whether the platform ledger matches the foundation’s records, or whether each balance was legally and operationally separated. Because both entities are bankrupt, the trustee must first establish those facts before an account entry can be connected to identifiable property or an accepted claim.

    Knaken had not obtained the required AFM authorization, according to prosecutors. The Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, or MiCA, is now the benchmark for the safeguards that an authorized custody provider should operate under.

    MiCA Article 70 requires authorized providers holding client crypto or access means to safeguard client ownership rights, especially in insolvency. Subject to institutional exceptions, eligible client funds must generally be placed in a separately identifiable account at a credit institution or central bank by the next business day.

    CryptoSlate Daily Brief

    Daily signals, zero noise.

    Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.