# Exchange Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Exchange", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Bitcoin Has Yet to Hit Bottom, While Exchange AscendEX Has Already "Run Away"

On July 6, 2026, cryptocurrency exchange AscendEX officially announced it is ceasing operations, with a complete shutdown scheduled for July 1, 2026. The platform cited the full implementation of the EU's MiCA regulation alongside market, financial, and operational challenges. Users can no longer perform most functions, with accounts limited to withdrawal purposes only. Prior to the announcement, on-chain investigator ZachXBT had issued warnings about significant withdrawal delays and a severe lack of high-liquidity assets (like ETH, USDT, SOL) in AscendEX's public hot wallets. Following the news, ZachXBT confirmed that the exchange lacks sufficient liquid assets to process multiple verified seven-figure withdrawal requests. AscendEX acknowledged that all withdrawals now require manual review, with no guarantees on processing times. Chain analysis via Arkham Intelligence shows the platform's marked wallets hold minimal readily accessible funds, with most recent activity being small withdrawals. One highlighted wallet reportedly contains only $13.46 million in altcoins. AscendEX, formerly known as BitMax, launched in 2018 and raised $50 million in a 2021 funding round. However, it suffered a major security breach in December 2021, losing approximately $77.7 million from hot wallets. The exchange compensated users but never fully recovered. The current crisis underscores the inherent risks of centralized exchanges, where poor liquidity management, regulatory pressure, and bear market conditions can trigger a collapse. The event is seen as part of a broader industry shakeout, highlighting the importance for users to prioritize non-custodial wallets or exchanges with transparent proof-of-reserves.

Foresight News07/09 03:48

Bitcoin Has Yet to Hit Bottom, While Exchange AscendEX Has Already "Run Away"

Foresight News07/09 03:48

Lost 10 Billion, Yet Valued at 46.7 Billion? The True Value Revelation of Japan's Crypto Exchange 'Doomsday License'

**Summary: The Priceless "Doomsday License" – Why Japan's SBI Paid $289M for a Losing Exchange** In mid-2026, Japanese financial giant SBI Holdings acquired cryptocurrency exchange Bitbank for ¥46.7 billion (~$289 million). This valuation is puzzling on paper: Bitbank, while a long-established, licensed exchange, reported a ¥970 million loss in 2025 on shrinking revenues. The key lies not in profitability, but in a regulatory "franchise scale." SBI's purchase was for Bitbank's scarce, irreplaceable assets: its Japanese FSA license, 960,000 user accounts, and a fully compliant yen on-ramp. This acquisition came just two weeks after Japan passed a landmark amendment reclassifying crypto assets as "financial instruments" under stricter laws, dramatically raising penalties for unlicensed operations. Analysts predict up to half of Japan's ~30 licensed exchanges may exit, transforming existing licenses into non-renewable strategic resources. The deal's ~8x revenue multiple mirrors a global trend of "compliance arbitrage," where acquiring regulated entities is faster and cheaper than navigating complex, years-long licensing processes. The Japanese narrative is part of a worldwide pattern. In 2026 alone, the crypto sector saw $11.8 billion in M&A, with giants like Mastercard and Bullish acquiring regulated digital asset firms. As jurisdictions like the US, Singapore, and Hong Kong solidify frameworks, regulatory compliance shifts from a cost center to the most durable moat. The core lesson is that in maturing markets, the true value shifts from trading volume to "licensed scale." For early, compliant platforms, stringent regulation becomes a defensive asset, not a constraint. SBI's strategy of consolidating licensed Japanese exchanges illustrates this. The window to acquire such "tickets to the future financial world" at a reasonable cost is rapidly closing as global capital recognizes that in the regulated era, the license itself is the ultimate prize.

marsbit07/03 06:08

Lost 10 Billion, Yet Valued at 46.7 Billion? The True Value Revelation of Japan's Crypto Exchange 'Doomsday License'

marsbit07/03 06:08

活动图片