Bitcoin fever exposes crypto-market
frailties
Send a link to a friend
[December 14, 2017]
By Jemima Kelly and Anna Irrera
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - As bitcoin
raced to another record high on Tuesday, one of the biggest providers of
digital currency wallets, Coinbase, went down under the weight of
traffic, leaving many of its more than 10 million customers unable to
access their funds.
At the same time, Bitfinex, the world's biggest bitcoin exchange by
trading volume, said it was under a heavy denial-of-service (DDoS)
attack, meaning its servers had been intentionally flooded with junk
online requests, taking down its website and crippling its services.
The latest outages show how the market infrastructure for an immature
and volatile instrument that millions of investors have piled into may
be ill-equipped to cope with sudden shifts in demand, which is worrying
some investors.
During a particularly volatile period of trading on Dec. 7, bitcoin
surged from below $16,000 to $19,500 in less than an hour on Coinbase's
exchange GDAX, while it was changing hands at less than $16,000 on
another, Bitstamp. <BTC=BTSP>
As trading volume surged, GDAX and Coinbase went down at least 10 times
because of "record-high traffic", Coinbase said.
"More people are engaging with our platform than ever and that bodes
well for the future of the digital currency. At the same time, it does
create extreme volatility and stress on our systems," the company's
director of business operations, David Farmer, said.
"We can confirm that there has been no unusual or suspicious activity.
All we know right now is that there is a large amount of traffic," he
told Reuters.
Bitfinex said it had been under a sustained DDoS attack since last week.
"While last week the platform traded continuously, to effectively
perform emergency maintenance, we took the website down for a brief time
today (Tuesday) to mitigate further issues for customers," a spokesman
said.
"We are constantly improving our systems to ensure that we're able to
both accommodate the immense volume of trading that occurs on our
platform while also fending off sustained DDoS attacks," he said.
24/7 MARKET
Daniel Masters, founder of Global Advisors Bitcoin Investment Fund,
worries the exchanges would struggle to cope if there were a sudden rush
for the exit.
"The ability of these platforms to handle volume is yet to be tested
properly," he said. "What happens if this market turns into a lot of
sellers? The liquidity itself could be an issue."
Charles Cascarilla, chief executive of New York-based company Paxos,
which operates cryptocurrency exchange itBit, told Reuters that dealing
with spikes in volume was a problem faced by all exchanges, not just
cryptocurrency platforms.
"Clearly the reality is the world of cryptocurrency is growing at an
exponential rate right now and everyone is doing their best to expand
infrastructure, but it is hard to know what would happen in a
hypothetical scenario," he said.
Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder of the Gemini exchange, an early bitcoin
investor and an outspoken supporter of the cryptocurrency, said the risk
the wider market would suffer badly if one exchange went down no longer
existed, as trading volume had become more evenly spread.
"We are definitely beyond the too-big-to-fail situation," he told
Reuters. "That was a problem we had five years ago when Mt. Gox
accounted for 95 percent of volume."
"Most of the exchanges are doing a good job. This is a 24/7 market,
there is no session close and there is no downtime."
Mt. Gox, the world's biggest bitcoin exchange at the time, collapsed in
2014 after hackers stole 650,000 bitcoins, triggering a collapse in the
bitcoin price.
The demise of Mt. Gox left more than 24,000 customers unable to access
hundreds of millions of dollars of cryptocurrency and cash. More than
three years later none has recouped a cent.
BITCOIN FUTURES
Some investors had said they were worried the launch of bitcoin futures
by the world's biggest derivative exchanges could exacerbate volatility
by prompting some traders to take out large positions betting on a price
fall in the future.
The Chicago-based Cboe Global Markets Inc. <CBOE.O> futures launched a
futures contracts on bitcoin on Dec. 10 and CME Group Inc <CME.O> will
launch a rival contract a week later.
So far this week, the launch of futures by Cboe does not appear to have
created any additional volatility, with price moves less violent than
last week's wild trading.
[to top of second column]
|
A coin representing the bitcoin cryptocurrency is seen on computer
circuit boards in this illustration picture, October 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
But Tim Swanson, a bitcoin expert and founder of Post Oak Labs, a
technology advisory firm, said he was concerned that if the futures
liquidity increases there could be an incentive for someone with a
large bet against bitcoin to disrupt or attack the network to make
money from the ensuing price fall.
CME Group and Cboe declined to comment.
Flooding the bitcoin network with tiny transactions could
potentially send the price down sharply, said Swanson, as could
sending many sell-signals to the market that are not honored -
so-called spoofing, which is illegal in regulated markets.
A surge in bitcoin trades in recent weeks has also left the
blockchain network that the cryptocurrency relies on to process and
verify transactions struggling to keep up.
As of Wednesday at 1445 GMT, more than 125,000 bitcoin transactions
remained unconfirmed.
In the past week, more than half a million new users have opened
wallets with retail-focused bitcoin wallet provider Blockchain, the
firm said, taking the total number of users to more than 20 million,
from 10 million last year.
The London-based company has also been struggling to keep up, citing
"record traffic levels" last week.
VOLATILE TRADING
Created in 2008, bitcoin uses encryption and a shared blockchain
database that enables the anonymous transfer of funds outside of a
conventional centralized payment system.
But there is little evidence to suggest buyers are using bitcoin as
a means of exchange and payment. On the whole, they buy the
cryptocurrency as a speculative investment, attracted by massive
price gains, said Garrick Hileman, a research fellow at the
University of Cambridge's Judge Business School.
As a result, some banks say they are worried that a collapse in
bitcoin would have a knock-on effect on investments by individual
investors in other asset classes.
Deutsche Bank said in a report on Dec. 7 that a bitcoin crash - and
the impact it could have on retail investors' confidence - was one
of the biggest risks to markets in 2018.
Periods of high volatility are not uncommon in other currencies and
asset classes, particularly in commodities and emerging markets. But
bitcoin's volatility is extreme, and frequent: the one-day price
move has been more than 10 percent on nine days in the past three
months.
Moves of a similar magnitude for the U.S dollar, for example, are
extremely rare. Its biggest one-day move against a major currency
was in January 2015 when the Swiss central bank abandoned a cap on
the franc, sending the dollar down 18 percent.
Some bitcoin watchers, such as Swanson, also worry about the risk of
one of the big exchanges being suddenly shut by authorities.
In July, U.S. authorities shut down the website of the BTC-e
exchange, saying it had "facilitated transactions involving
ransomware, computer hacking, identity theft, tax refund fraud
schemes, public corruption, and drug trafficking".
BTC-e, which is no longer operating, could not be reached for
comment.
The top three exchanges out of more than 100 - Bitfinex, GDAX and
bitFlyer - are home to more than 60 percent of all trading,
according to data provider Bitcoinity.
Another issue specific to the market is the risk of hacking and
theft. More than 980,000 bitcoins have been stolen from exchanges,
Reuters has found, with the Mt. Gox heist accounting for the
majority.
Last week, a Slovenian cryptocurrency mining marketplace, NiceHash,
said it had lost about $64 million worth of bitcoin in a hack of its
payment system.
(Reporting by Jemima Kelly and Anna Irrera; additional reporting by
Amanda Cooper; editing by David Clarke)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |