Binance lifts temporary block on bitcoin withdrawals
Cryptocurrency exchange Binance halted bitcoin withdrawals for several hours yesterday, citing heavy volumes and a surge in processing fees, before clearing them at a higher cost.
Late on Sunday and again early yesterday, the world’s biggest crypto exchange shut bitcoin withdrawals, saying there was a glut of pending transactions because it had not offered so-called miners a high enough reward to log the trades on the blockchain.
The halt pushed bitcoin lower though its losses were marginal, with the cryptocurrency last down about 1% to $28,162 (about R515,830), its lowest in nearly a week.
“Our set fees did not anticipate the recent surge in [bitcoin] network gas fees,” Binance said in a tweet.
“We’re replacing pending bitcoin withdrawal transactions with a higher fee so they get picked up by mining pools.”
Gas fees refer to payments made to crypto miners whose computing power processes transactions on the blockchain.
“If the withdrawal amount is large, the gas fee required to process the transaction may also be large, especially during times of high network congestion,” Joshua Chu, group chief risk officer at blockchain technology group XBE, Coin llectibles and Marvion, said.
“We need more information as to what has led to the large withdrawals.”
After an hour-long stoppage late on Sunday and several hours yesterday, Binance said withdrawals resumed.
“To prevent a similar recurrence ... our fees have been adjusted.”
In a separate tweet, Binance denied there had been large outflows from the platform.
In March, Binance had suspended deposits and withdrawals citing tech issues.
Twenty-four hour trading volume on Binance was $6.9bn (R126.3bn), according to analytics site CoinMarketCap, more than eight times the next-largest venue, Coinbase.