Crypto-market infrastructure creaks amid volatility test
Send a link to a friend
[March 19, 2020] By
Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - As worries over the
economic hit from the coronavirus outbreak spread from stocks, oil and
bonds to cryptocurrencies late last week, bitcoin crashed to its worst
day in seven years. But plummeting prices weren't the only problem for
investors.
As volatility and volumes spiked, the infrastructure underpinning
digital coin trading creaked under the strain.
Futures exchanges saw a rash of electronically-triggered liquidations of
leveraged positions, fuelling pressure on prices. Spreads between
exchanges jumped. And at least two major exchanges went down, leaving
investors locked out of the market for well over an hour.
Bitcoin prices collapsed nearly 40% on March 12, the biggest one-day
drop since spring 2013, before jumping 16% a day later.
Volatility raced to its highest in seven years, with volumes across
major cryptocurrency exchanges soaring to $30.8 billion on March 12-13,
data from industry website CryptoCompare shows -- among the four highest
two-day totals on record.
As the turmoil gripped markets, New York exchange Gemini said it fell
offline for less than 90 minutes. Seychelles-based BitMEX, one of the
world's biggest platforms for leveraged derivatives trading, went down
twice, for a total of 45 minutes.
A spokeswoman for Gemini said the exchange "observed a technical issue
impacting a subset of our customers."
"In an abundance of caution, and to protect the integrity of our
marketplace, we paused the market to resolve the issue and ensure all
market services were back online in a healthy state prior to reopening,"
she said.
Gemini declined to detail the problem, or comment on whether it was
caused or exacerbated by market moves.
BitMEX said its outages were due to denial-of-service cyberattacks that
stopped messages from reaching its trading engines. The unidentified
attackers "waited for the moment their attack would make the most market
impact" and overwhelmed the platform "during a moment of peak
volatility", it said.
The outages were a reminder of the fragility of key components in crypto
markets, underscoring the dangers of a high-risk asset that large
investors typically steer clear of.
And while most exchanges continued as normal during the turbulence, the
Gemini and BitMEX episodes may also fuel doubts that bitcoin's
infrastructure is solid enough for it to work as an alternative to
traditional currencies.
"There's no way to say it's good for the ecosystem when exchanges go
down," said Richard Galvin of crypto fund Digital Asset Capital
Management.
(GRAPHIC: Bitcoin plummets -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-CRYPTOCURRENCIES/
0H001R8H9CE4/eikon.png)
FRAGILE INFRASTRUCTURE?
As bitcoin struggles to evolve from rebel technology into mainstream
asset, the outages underscore the fragility of the sector at times of
stress, industry figures said.
"Volatility is not an issue -- it's whether the technology can deal with
the volatility." said Denis Vinokourov at crypto exchange BeQuant.
Most crypto exchanges have bolstered their capacity to deal with high
volatility and volumes, and the majority of major exchanges continued
operating normally late last week.
But with crypto markets having been dogged by cyberattacks since their
birth 12 years ago, exchanges should be better prepared, said Tim
Swinson, head of market intelligence at Clearmatics, a London-based
blockchain startup that designs peer-to-peer payment platforms.
[to top of second column] |
Illumination of the
stock graph is seen on the representations of virtual currency
Bitcoin in this picture illustration taken taken March 13, 2020.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
"The fact that exchanges are still being taken down is par for the course, but
it shouldn't be an excuse," he said. "It shouldn't be normal."
(GRAPHIC: Volatile times -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-CRYPTOCURRENCIES/
0H001R8H6CDY/eikon.png)
CIRCUIT BREAKERS
As bitcoin fell on Thursday, positions on major derivatives exchanges such as
BitMEX, which offers highly leveraged trading, were automatically liquidated.
That stoked pressure on prices, amplifying moves and accelerating bitcoin's
fall, traders said.
Yet unlike major stock exchanges that use circuit breakers to slam the brakes on
trading during disruption or panic selling, crypto exchanges generally lack
devices to arrest extraordinary price moves.
And in contrast to foreign exchange markets, in which central banks sometimes
intervene, the mostly unregulated crypto sector is left to its own devices in
times of unruly trading.
Last week's moves raised questions over whether circuit breakers are needed in
crypto.
"The tech is important," said Vinokourov at BeQuant. "You're inviting
traditional, big firms to trade on platforms that may not be able to withstand
the amount of trading."
Circuit breakers do already exist at some exchanges.
Deribit, a Panama-based derivatives exchange, in November brought in circuit
breakers to counter erratic price swings, said Chief Commercial Officer Luuk
Strijers. They were triggered on Thursday "to protect the market and our clients
from extreme price volatility," he added.
Yet many in the crypto sector say circuit breakers would be impractical for
digital coin trading, which takes place across multiple exchanges, without
coordinated introduction.
Asked whether it operates or plans to introduce circuit breakers, Gemini said:
"The cryptocurrency market does not have circuit breakers."
BitMEX said it does not operate circuit breakers. "To prevent negative feedback
loops, we do not use the last price of our derivatives to trigger liquidations,"
it added.
Others cite likely opposition to controls on crypto markets, rooted in the
technology's libertarian roots.
"If you put circuit breakers in, you also give up the freedoms of markets to
find prices on their own," said Galvin of the fund DACM.
"If you're playing markets so that you can get super-high returns, you also need
an approach that can sustain the bad sides."
(GRAPHIC: Volume overload? -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-CRYPTOCURRENCIES/
0H001R8H5CDV/eikon.png)
(Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Catherine Evans)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |