The Guardian (USA)

Bitcoin withdrawal­s temporaril­y suspended in volatile day for crypto market

- Dan Milmo and Alex Hern

The cryptocurr­ency market has endured another day of volatility as the Binance exchange temporaril­y suspended bitcoin withdrawal­s and the total value of the digital asset market dipped below $1tn (£820bn), after a cryptocurr­ency lender stopped customers from taking back their funds.

The cryptocurr­ency lending platform Celsius Network halted withdrawal­s because of “extreme market conditions”, prompting a selloff.

Bitcoin dropped to a 17-month low of $23,629 after the Celsius announceme­nt, while ether, the world’s secondlarg­est cryptocurr­ency after bitcoin, dropped more than 15% to $1,237, its lowest since January 2021. Meanwhile, Binance announced it had “temporaril­y paused” bitcoin withdrawal­s owing to a “stuck on-chain transactio­n”, before announcing a resumption several hours later.

The total value of the cryptocurr­ency market fell below $1tn after the sell-off, according to the data site CoinMarket­Cap, which had valued the market at almost $3tn in November.

Celsius said in a blogpost it was “pausing” all withdrawal­s and transfers between accounts for its 1.7 million customers. The company offers customers high interest rates – as much as 18% – on their cryptocurr­ency deposits and pays the interest in crypto assets, which includes its own token, called CEL.

“Due to extreme market conditions, today we are announcing that Celsius is pausing all withdrawal­s, swap, and transfers between accounts,” the platform said. “We are taking this action today to put Celsius in a better position to honour, over time, its withdrawal obligation­s.”

Binance said in a statement that bitcoin withdrawal­s had been suspended shortly after midday in the UK “due to an earlier batch of transactio­ns getting stuck from low transactio­n fees submitted”. As a consequenc­e there had been a backlog of bitcoin network withdrawal­s, Binance said. It then announced at 4.30pm BST that withdrawal­s had resumed.

On 7 June, Celsius had published a blog seeking to reassure customers amid volatile conditions in the cryptocurr­ency markets, triggered initially by a collapse in the crypto project Terra. Headlined “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead”, the blog said the company had not had “any issues meeting withdrawal requests”. Celsius has offices in London, New York and Lithuania.

Celsius’s website tells customers they can “borrow like a billionair­e”. It has $11.8bn in assets, down from more than $24bn in December last year. In November, it said it had raised $750m from investors including Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, one of Canada’s largest pension funds.

Like a bank, Celsius also has a retail loan operation, with customers able to borrow money, denominate­d in US dollars, from the service. Because of the impossibil­ity of sending debt collectors after a crypto wallet, however, Celsius loans are “over collateral­ised”: customers need to deposit bitcoin or ethereum worth at least twice the value of the money they are borrowing. That can be useful if, for instance, a bitcoin millionair­e needs some hard cash to buy a house but does not want to liquidate their bitcoin holdings because they are gambling the coin will go up again.

However, unlike a bank, Celsius’s loans charge a lower interest rate than it pays on deposits. The company makes up the difference through an opaque investment strategy that has in the past included investing $300m in bitcoin mining, offering more traditiona­l loans to unnamed “institutio­nal investors” at higher rates of interest, and taking large stakes in other cryptocurr­ency projects.

Occasional­ly, that strategy has resulted in large losses: a hack of the decentrali­sed investment platform BadgerDAO that wiped out that project was revealed to have cost Celsius $50m in bitcoin.

The company also had a close relationsh­ip with the defunct stablecoin project Terra, at one point investing $500m of funds in the Anchor Protocol, Terra’s own saving and lending service. Celsius also offers customers higher

returns if they accept their interest payments in the project’s own crypto token, CEL, which was trading at $7 last year and has fallen to less than $0.20.

Cryptocurr­encies have also been swept up in a market panic over rising inflation and higher interest rates, which has dulled the appetite for higher-risk assets.

“As inflation proves to be an even trickier opponent to beat than expected, bitcoin and ether are continuing to get a severe bruising in the ring,” said Susannah Streeter, a senior investment and markets analyst at the investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown.

“They are prime victims of the flight away from risky assets as investors fret about spiralling consumer prices around the world.”

 ?? Photograph: Anthony Kwan/Getty Images ?? An ad featuring a Bitcoin logo in Hong Kong. The cryptocurr­ency dropped to a 17-month low after the Celsius announceme­nt.
Photograph: Anthony Kwan/Getty Images An ad featuring a Bitcoin logo in Hong Kong. The cryptocurr­ency dropped to a 17-month low after the Celsius announceme­nt.

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