NY AG Secures $5M From Uphold to Compensate Crypto Investors

NY AG Secures $5M From Uphold to Compensate Crypto Investors

Uphold will provide over $5 million in compensation to customers who lost money through CredEarn, a crypto investment service. As part of a New York agreement, Uphold must also improve how it reviews products like CredEarn, properly register as a broker, and distribute any funds recovered from Cred’s bankruptcy to those affected.

Key Takeaways:

  • Uphold will pay more than $5 million to customers tied to CredEarn losses.
  • Regulators said CredEarn was presented like savings while relying on risky lending activity.
  • Next, Uphold must strengthen due diligence, register as a broker, and distribute recoveries.

Uphold Settlement Raises Crypto Investor Protection Stakes

New York Attorney General (NY AG) Letitia James announced on April 29, 2026, that Uphold HQ Inc. will pay more than $5 million in customer compensation tied to CredEarn, a third-party crypto investment product from Cred LLC. The settlement centers on investor repayment, product-review standards, and registration requirements for platforms offering outside digital asset products.

Uphold made CredEarn available through its platform and mobile app from January 2019 to October 2020. The product offered annual interest to customers who placed cryptocurrency with Cred. The Office of the NY Attorney General found that customers were given a savings-style presentation, while Cred generated returns through risky lending activity. Those loans went to video game players in China with low monthly incomes, no credit histories, and no access to traditional Chinese credit. Uphold also stated that Cred had “comprehensive insurance,” although no coverage protected retail investors from digital asset investment losses. James said:

People who invest their money deserve to have confidence in the advice they get, and my office is committed to taking action against anyone who puts their customers’ financial well-being at risk.

The investigation revealed that Uphold advertised CredEarn without being properly registered as a broker or commodity firm in New York, as required by law.

New York Crypto Enforcement Pushes Stronger Compliance

The case underscores how third-party crypto products can create regulatory exposure when they are offered through customer-facing platforms. CredEarn was available inside Uphold’s own digital channels, making product review and risk assessment central to the settlement. Cred later suffered losses beginning in March 2020 after risky lending practices and mismanagement. The company filed for bankruptcy in November 2020, and thousands of Uphold customers worldwide lost millions of dollars. Under the settlement, Uphold must maintain and improve its due diligence policies before partnering with or recommending third-party investment products. The company will also register as a broker with the Office of the Attorney General.

The Uphold settlement also fits into a broader New York Attorney General’s office enforcement record that has treated crypto as a financial market subject to investor protection rules. The office has used the Martin Act of 1921 to pursue financial fraud cases without proving intent. Its crypto activity began as early as 2014 with inquiries into the “shadow” market, then expanded through the 2018 Virtual Markets Integrity Initiative, the 2019 Ifinex, Bitfinex, and Tether case, the 2021 Coinseed shutdown, and lending platform actions, including Blockfi. From 2023 to 2026, larger cases included Genesis Global, Gemini, and DCG; Novatechfx; Galaxy Digital; Uphold; and April 2026 lawsuits against Coinbase and Gemini over prediction markets. Those actions secured more than $2.5 billion in restitution and penalties, while pushing major firms to adjust compliance for New York market access.

Uphold will return $5 million to customers who lost money, which is over five times the amount the company earned from the problematic arrangement. Additionally, any money Uphold recovers from the bankruptcy case of Cred will also go to those affected. Uphold is currently owed $545,189 in that bankruptcy. Investors will receive an email detailing how the funds will be distributed to their accounts, according to James.

“When crypto companies break the law and mislead investors, the consequences can be devastating to New Yorkers’ livelihoods.”

The resolution closes the matter with customer repayment, broker registration, and stronger review standards for third-party crypto investment offerings.

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2026-05-03 02:58