The token would exist to repay creditors, and would represent a claim against Celcius' assets.
Celsius is currently in Chapter 7 liquidation bankruptcy, the idea is that it would change to Chapter 11 bankruptcy and would resume operations.
That is trickery from Celsius.
Creditors don't want to be paid with this token. Creditors want another plan for Chapter 7, so this company can be finally liquidated, all the assets held sold and the profit given to creditors (in bitcoin, preferentially, or dollar) proportionally to their holdings on the platform.
The tokens allow creditors to trade their claim against Celsius in a transparent way via an open market. The tokens would
eventually be redeemed either for cash in the event of a liquidation, or for equity in the event that Celsius emerges via Chapter 11.
There isn't a reason for Celsius to resume their operations, since it was proven it's not a legit business. What happened previously would happen again futurely, if they resumed operations.
This isn't something for creditors to decide, nor for you to decide. If management can show the bankruptcy court that it can operate on a profitable operational basis, the bankruptcy court will likely allow for the case to be converted into a Chapter 11 reorganization case. My understanding is that Celsius had a small number of one-time events that caused it to become insolvent. I also understand that it mispriced both interest on deposits, and interest charged on loans, although this was likely to prevent a run on the bank.
There are presumably already hedge funds, and other entities buying up claims from former customers, this token would make the pricing of the debt more transparent.
I still don't understand what is the point of having a worthless token as middleman on this negotiation, besides it being sole trickery from Celsius.
Hedge funds and other entities pay in btc, and btc is transferred to creditors. No tokens are needed on the process.
As it stands now, anyone buying up claims from creditors can do so without the creditors knowing with certainty what others are receiving for their claims. It may be hypothetically possible for someone to be willing to offer $0.25 on the dollar for claims, but will initially offer $0.20 on the dollar, and will make a subsequent offer of $0.22 before finally offering $0.25. An open market for tokens will allow creditors to have more information about how much others are receiving for claims.