Weeks after converting customersโ assets into its Patricia Token (PTK), Patricia is hoping that its fundraising move will help its repayment plan but frustrated customers arenโt convinced.
Nigeria-focused crypto platform Patricia is attempting to raise new financing several weeks after admitting it lost $2 million worth of customer assets to a cyberattack last year. This represents the Lithuania-based companyโs latest move to repay customers.
Last month, Patricia converted the rest of its customersโ assets into a debt management tokenโthe Patricia token. The abrupt arrangement triggered an outcry from customers, forcing the company to issue a detailed explanation of the token. Despite the new token, Patricia admitted that its repayment plan is tied to its profitability as a platform, although it has no timeline for financial sustainability.
With the company’s new fundraising efforts, Patricia is hoping it can raise enough money to repay frustrated customers.
At a virtual town hall meeting with users Friday, Hanu Fejiro, the companyโs CEO, confirmed that Patricia has secured some funding but he didnโt provide further details of the investment. โWe have raised money [and] we have been working very hard to get the money back to you. And when we launch the application, the first set of customers will be able to get their money back immediately and in full.โ
Two months ago, Seun Dania, founder and CEO of crypto firm TradeFada announced on LinkedIn that he made an investment in Patricia. The value of the investment was undisclosed.
Hanu added that the Patricia Plus app โ billed for a relaunch soon โ is currently undergoing beta testing. But for frustrated customers, these explanations arenโt satisfactory. Patricia Plus first launched in April and immediately triggered a bank run, as customers raced to withdraw their funds after the company admitted to have lost funds due to the cyberattack. Patricia scrambled to control the panic by freezing withdrawals, effectively blocking customers from accessing their assets.
Patricia’s attempt to salvage the situation was to unilaterally convert its customer assets to tokens, an action it took without usersโ consent which raised legal concerns. The company is hoping that it can successfully use the debt management tokens to repay its customers taking a cue from Bitfinex, a foreign cryptocurrency exchange platform which lost around $72 million to hackers in 2016. Bitfinex offered customers a debt management token, a liability obligation by the company until it repaid them in full.
Although Patricia is looking to do something similar, an atmosphere of mistrust, partly stemming from its delay in disclosing the breach, remains a stumbling block in its efforts to get full buy-in from customers.
โJust let us know when we are getting our money,โ one angry customer wrote in the comment section of the virtual town meeting. Another customer suggested in the comments section that the affected customers stage a protest to the authorities. Others are considering taking legal action against the company. โIt is simple, just give us a date we will be able to withdraw,โ another frustrated customer wrote.
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