# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Exchange

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Exchange", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Fallen Blossoms, Alone in the End: The Facade, Backdoor, and Settler of the Crypto World

"Flowers Fall, One Remains: The Facade, Backdoor, and Bill-Payer of the Crypto World" This article uses the allegory of 1990s Shanghai's Huanghe Road—a street of lavish restaurants and fierce competition, reminiscent of the hit TV series "Blossoms Shanghai"—to analyze the current predicament of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance and the broader crypto industry. The core argument is that exchanges, like the show's restaurant "Zhi Zhen Yuan," profit from "taking a cut" (transaction fees) during bull markets, which is tolerated when everyone is making money. However, following a major market crash (a fictional "1011" event where $20B evaporated), this practice becomes a target for blame. The author posits that the subsequent regulatory scrutiny and public outcry against Binance are an inevitable "settling of accounts," where散户 (retail investors) need a scapegoat, competitors see an opportunity, and regulators demand a high-profile sacrifice. The piece argues that while the attack appears political, it is fundamentally about business and survival in a harsh new climate. The industry's "Zhi Zhen Yuan" (Binance) is targeted not necessarily because it did something wrong, but because it is the biggest and most visible success story. The author warns that the industry's infighting and desire to see a giant fall is short-sighted; if the leading light (Binance) is extinguished, the entire street (the crypto ecosystem) loses its luster and could regress. Ultimately, the crisis is framed as a painful but necessary rite of passage for the entire industry. The true "宝总" (a successful character from the show) is not a single savior but every believer who holds onto their conviction (e.g., "one person, one Bitcoin") even after the "flowers have fallen" and the prosperity is gone. The conclusion is a call for unity, suggesting that without it, the industry risks collapsing into irrelevance, leaving behind only "scraps of paper and a cold wind."

marsbit02/03 08:40

Fallen Blossoms, Alone in the End: The Facade, Backdoor, and Settler of the Crypto World

marsbit02/03 08:40

Old Case Resurfaces: The 1011 Crash Sparks a Mixed Battle of Public Opinion Between Exchanges and Ecosystems

A wave of criticism targeting Binance resurfaced on social media, reignited by ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood's comments blaming a past "system glitch" at the exchange for the crypto market's prolonged stagnation. She referred to the October 11th ("1011") event, a major market crash that saw over $190B in liquidations, as a key reason crypto wasn't rallying with other assets. Binance co-founder He Yi quickly countered, suggesting Wood, a Coinbase investor, was not a user and misinformed. The 1011 event itself was a "black swan" where a sharp market downturn was exacerbated by a liquidity anomaly on Binance, triggering its Auto-Deleveraging (ADL) mechanism and causing massive, cascading liquidations. Binance later paid $283M in compensation but maintained the sell-off was market-driven. The criticism evolved into a broader industry debate. Key figures leading the charge included Leonidas, a Bitcoin Ordinals proponent, who accused Binance of extracting value from the ecosystem via high token listing fees. OKX founder Star (Xu Mingxing) presented a more technical critique, arguing Binance's high-yield USDe promotion allowed systemic risk to accumulate, fundamentally altering the market's microstructure post-1011. Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko indirectly supported critics, leading CZ to unfollow him—highlighting underlying competition between the BSC and Solana ecosystems. In Binance's defense, some analysts like Dragonfly's Haseeb Qureshi argued the crash lacked a single cause, citing pre-existing market stress from Trump's tariff comments, API issues affecting market makers, and a lack of circuit breakers. Amid the FUD, Binance announced it would convert its $1B SAFU insurance fund from stablecoins to Bitcoin. The incident underscores the immense scrutiny Binance faces as the industry's largest exchange, raising questions about its role in maintaining systemic stability in a leveraged and narrative-driven market.

Odaily星球日报02/02 03:12

Old Case Resurfaces: The 1011 Crash Sparks a Mixed Battle of Public Opinion Between Exchanges and Ecosystems

Odaily星球日报02/02 03:12

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