Curveball: Egorov’s $100M Mansion Splurge and Crypto Debacle

Verdict: Mostly True – But let’s not pretend the community didn’t spend a few panicked hours wondering if they’d just become accidental co-signers on a crypto oligarch’s real estate hobby.

The claim

Viral X threads have turned Michael Egorov into crypto’s version of a midlife crisis, alleging he borrowed $100 million in stablecoins (backed by nearly half of Curve’s tokens) to buy two Melbourne mansions for his wife, then left the community with a $10 million bad debt “thank you” note. The narrative also claims he sold CRV in suspiciously large batches and liquidated in June 2024 like a man who’d just watched the plot twist in The Wolf of Wall Street.

CryptoTimes, armed with on-chain sleuthing, Australian property records, and Egorov’s own tweets, decided to see if this was a cautionary tale or just another crypto drama.

What checks out

The $100M borrow? Yep. Egorov’s wallet, 0x7a16ff8270133f063aab6c9977183d9e72835428, pledged roughly 427-460 million CRV (47% of supply) across Aave, FraxLend, and other platforms. By June 2024, that had dwindled to ~$95.7M in loans, but hey, who needs collateral when you’ve got a mansion?

The mansions? Oh, they’re real. Verona (a 1,412 m² villa) and Avon Court (a 4,251 m² Victorian mansion with eight kitchens) were purchased for a combined AUD 59.25 million. Lookonchain helpfully noted Egorov sent $31M in borrowed USDT to Bitfinex just one month before the second purchase-timing is everything, apparently.

The June 2024 liquidation? A 24% CRV drop caused a cascade of liquidations. Curve’s LlamaLend accrued $10M in bad debt, which Egorov admitted was due to “positions too big for the market.” Classic: “Oops, my bad, here’s a temporary tax on the community.”

What needs context

The “106M + 159M” OTC sales? That’s like saying you ate a sandwich twice and calling it four meals. Egorov sold 158.65 million CRV cumulatively in August 2023, not two separate batches. The 106M figure was an early snapshot; the 159M was the grand total. Double-counting, anyone? Wintermute and Justin Sun were among the buyers-because nothing says “trust” like crypto oligarchs investing in each other’s token sales.

The $10M bad debt? Full repayment happened within days, thanks to a $6M USDT injection from Christian Seale, who later bought 30M CRV from Egorov. So, the community didn’t “absorb” the debt permanently-it was a 72-hour panic before the cavalry arrived in the form of a private equity-style rescue package.

The broader governance question

Critics’ deeper concern isn’t Egorov’s mansions but the veCRV concentration. Swiss Stake AG (Egorov-aligned), Convex, and Yearn control most of the voting power. In 2025, a proposal routing crvUSD liquidity to Egorov’s venture passed with flying colors. Then, in December 2025, Egorov asked for a 17.45M CRV grant (~$6.6M) for Swiss Stake. Convex and Yearn pushed back-proof that even crypto’s most powerful oligarchs can’t always ignore basic manners.

Meanwhile, Curve’s TVL sits at ~$2.08B, and CRV trades at $0.21 (down 98% from its peak). Egorov’s financial escapade has left the protocol with a lingering structural overhang, like a hangover after a crypto bender.

Verdict

Mostly True. The borrowing, mansions, and liquidation all check out, but the “community absorbed the loss” line is a bit of a stretch-unless you count the collective blood pressure spike. Governance remains a hot potato, and CRV’s price suggests investors are still deciding whether Egorov’s antics are genius or a warning label. Either way, it’s a tale that reads like a bad screenplay written by a drunk economist.

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2026-04-27 18:47