Key highlights:
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has ended its long-running case against ex-Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky, securing a lifetime ban against the disgraced founder.
Under the ban, Mashinsky cannot trade in CFTC-regulated markets or register any entity with the commodities regulator.
CFTC bans Alex Mashinsky as Celsius case comes to a close
The CFTC has announced that the US District Court for the Southern District of New York has entered a consent order that effectively brings down the curtain on the long-running Celsius case.
According to the disclosure, the order permanently bans ex-Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky from trading in markets under the CFTC’s control.
Furthermore, the court granted the CFTC’s additional request to prevent Mashinsky from breaching key fraud sections of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and the commodities regulator’s rules. The CFTC’s annoucement reads:
“The consent order permanently enjoins Mashinsky from further violations of certain anti-fraud provisions in the CEA and CFTC regulations and imposes permanent trading and registration bans against him.”
In 2023, the CFTC instituted legal action against Celsius and Mashinsky, accusing them of misleading customers about the liquidity and profitability of the platform. The lawsuit came after the crypto lending platform crashed in 2022, triggering billions of dollars in losses for users.
Apart from the CFTC, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) launched parallel action against Mashinsky and Celsius.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also brought a lawsuit against the duo, with Mashinsky pleading guilty to commodities and securities fraud.
In May 2025, Mashinsky was sentenced to 12 years in prison, with the DOJ noting that he “deceived customers about Celsius’s financial stability and rigged the price” of CEL. Mashinsky was slammed with heavy fines and ordered to forfeit $48.3 million for committing commodities fraud.
Celsius collapse still haunts the crypto lending sector
The action against Alex Mashinsky adds to the long regulatory cleanup effort following the Celsius collapse.
At the time, the crypto lending market ballooned into a sector worth tens of billions of dollars as investors chased high yields on digital assets. The market unraveled following the implosions of Terra and Three Arrows Capital as Celsius, Voyager and BlockFi filed for bankruptcy. Meanwhile, Genesis halted withdrawals after suffering major exposure to Three Arrows Capital and collapsed exchange FTX.
Since then, centralized crypto lending activity has contracted, though firms like Nexo, Ledn, and Galaxy Digital continue their operations amid heightened regulatory scrutiny. The US SEC and state regulators now treat most interest-bearing crypto products as securities offerings, forcing them to register products properly or remove them from US markets.
Source:: Ex-Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky Gets Lifetime Trading Ban