Don't Delude Yourselves: Even If Binance Dies, The Industry Won't Be Better
Title: Don't Fantasize: The Industry Won't Be Better Even If Binance Dies
Amid a weakening BTC price and a critical point for market confidence and liquidity, a wave of intense criticism is directed at Binance, with some blaming it for the market's woes and suggesting that its downfall would benefit the industry. However, a thought experiment exploring Binance's potential collapse concludes that the crypto industry would not improve but instead face severe consequences.
Binance, as the largest global exchange with robust profitability and resilience, is unlikely to fail due to operational issues or competition. Potential collapse scenarios include catastrophic asset loss from hacks or unexpected events (e.g., similar to FTX or Bybit incidents) or severe regulatory crackdowns, particularly from U.S. authorities amid political shifts.
If Binance were to fall, the aftermath would be devastating:
1. Users would suffer massive asset losses, with Binance's 307 million users (nearly half the crypto industry's estimated population) becoming creditors in a prolonged recovery process, akin to FTX's collapse.
2. Market instability would escalate: if assets are stolen, large-scale sell-offs could cause crashes worse than post-FTX; if assets are locked/destroyed, short-term spikes might occur, but institutional assets (e.g., Binance holds 3% of BTC supply) frozen would trigger chain reactions and multi-year liquidations.
3. Industry confidence would collapse, leading to stricter regulations (e.g., enforced KYC, proof-of-reserves), halted institutional adoption, and a shrinking ecosystem. Smaller exchanges might fail due to compliance costs and user loss, negating any "one falls, others rise" outcome.
The narrative that Binance's demise would improve the industry is an emotional "blame-shifting" response to structural challenges like narrative exhaustion and liquidity issues. Binance's dominance results from long-term user and market choice, not chance. Its absence would likely cause more chaos and fragility, not progress. The real question isn't about removing Binance but finding new narratives to advance the industry forward.
Odaily星球日报Yesterday 06:28