Avalanche Foundation buys back $52 million worth of AVAX tokens from Do Kwon's defunct 'Luna Foundation Guard'


From theblock by Daniel Kuhn

The Avalanche Foundation is closing the book on its relationship with collapsed blockchain Terra  LUNA +5.07% tokens from the Luna Foundation Guard, the organization spun up by Terraform Labs creator Do Kwon to prevent exactly the type of death spiral that eventually did in the failed algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST). 

In 2022, Kwon launched LFG (a play on the internet slang “Let's Freaking Go!”) as an intermediary that would buy upwards of $10 billion worth of bitcoin and other crypto assets, including AVAX, to act as a strategic reserve for his then popular — though ultimately unstable — stablecoin. 

Part of that strategy involved two deals that put $100 million worth of AVAX tokens on LFG’s balance sheet and $200 million worth of UST and its associated token LUNA on the Avalanche Foundation’s. UST was supposed to maintain a peg to the U.S. dollar via a mechanism that either burned or bought LUNA, which had a free-floating price.

Although the relationship was meant to “strategically align incentives” between the blockchain ecosystems, Avalanche, like nearly everything that touched Terra, got burned. Since the demise of Kwon’s UST, the Avalanche Foundation has been working to buy back its tokens.

The non-profit was only recently granted permission to do the repurchases by the bankruptcy court, enabling it to buy back 1.97 million AVAX tokens valued at around $52 million at today’s prices, it said in a statement. AVAX was changing hands at around $26.5 Wednesday, according to The Block’s price page.

“We’re pleased to finalize this repurchase, which underscores our ongoing commitment to the development of the Avalanche ecosystem,” said Aytunç Yildizli, CEO and executive director of the Avalanche Foundation. He noted the funds would go to support grants, incubators and events to drive community and technological development. 

An Avalanche spokesperson echoed this point, telling The Block that the token buyback is “an important step in [the foundation’s] ongoing efforts to support the growth and sustainability of the Avalanche ecosystem.”

In June 2024, Kwon and Terraform Labs agreed to a $4.47 billion civil settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission after a jury found the two liable for defrauding investors. The collapse of TerraUSD is often cited as the beginning of the market contagion event in 2022 that brought down firms such as hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, lending app Celsius and the FTX crypto exchange.