Kuwait Times

Cryptocurr­encies tumble after S Korea hack

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HONG KONG: Cryptocurr­encies plunged in Asia yesterday after a hack on a South Korean exchange sparked fresh concerns about the safety of the digital units. The attack on Coinrail comes months after Japanese firm Coincheck said it had lost more than $500 million in a January hack. Coinrail did not specify the value of the currency that was taken in the attack at the weekend but said it was working with authoritie­s and other coin developers to track down the culprits.

The firm, which trades more than 50 cryptocurr­encies, added that it had frozen all exposed coins-Fundus X, Aston, and Enper-and other units had been taken offline in a “cold wallet”. The news sent cryptocurr­encies tumbling, with bitcoin losing about 13 percent, ethereum down 12 percent and ripple almost 20 percent lower as traders fret over the safety of their investment­s. “This is ‘If it can happen to A, it can happen to B and it can happen to C,’ then people panic because someone is selling,” said Stephen Innes, head of AsiaPacifi­c trade at OANDA. “The markets are so thinly traded, primarily by retail accounts, that these guys can get really scared out of positions,” he said. “It actually doesn’t take a lot of money to move the market significan­tly.”

Cryptocurr­encies have plunged since the end of 2017, when bitcoin hit a record high near $20,000, having surged from less than $1,000 just 11 months earlier. The unit is now worth around $6,780. South Korea is one of the biggest markets for trading in digital currencies but the boom in their popularity has forced the government to tighten regulation­s, following similar moves in other countries. Japan in February carried out raids on a number of exchanges following the Coinbase hack, which exceeded the $480 million in virtually currency stolen in 2014 from another Japanese exchange, MtGox.

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