Stream Finance, the collapsed DeFi yield platform behind the decoupled xUSD token, has telegraphed its first concrete steps toward a wind-down, more than six months after announcing a $93 million loss that caused one of DeFi’s most damaging contagions of the cycle.
In a post on
The team said it is weighing “several strategic alternatives,” all of which “will require customer and creditor participation in some form.” Further details are expected “likely in the coming weeks.”
According to a Delaware Division of Corporations filing, Stream Soft Holding Company was not incorporated until March 20, 2026, about seven weeks before the announcement. Creditor questions are referred to Jeremiah Ledwidge, a corporate restructuring and reorganization associate at Cooley LLP.
The setup has caught the attention of restructuring specialists, who say the structure resembles an Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors (ABC), a state law alternative to a Chapter 11 bankruptcy that liquidates and distributes assets more quickly and cheaply, but with less oversight of pre-collapse behavior.
“This sounds a lot like an ABC,” Thomas Braziel, founder and CEO of 117 Partners, an investment firm specializing in distressed crypto claims, said on
The announcement is the most substantive announcement from the Stream team since Stream Trading Corp. former operator Caleb McMeans in December, accusing the man known on-chain as “0xlaw” of mismanaging the protocol after acquiring it in early 2025. Braziel was among several analysts who raised questions about that filing at the time, noting that it “conspicuously avoids mentioning whether the transfer involved any depositor obligations.”
Stream’s implosion in November rippled through DeFi, with an estimated $285 million owed to lenders across protocols including Elixir, Euler and Morpho. xUSD, which Stream recursively devised to increase returns on leverage, never recovered its steady value.
This article was written using AI workflows. All of our stories are curated, edited, and fact-checked by a human.

