Trading Giant BlockFills Suspends Deposits and Withdrawals: Can the Liquidity Crisis Find a Turning Point?

marsbitОпубліковано о 2026-02-12Востаннє оновлено о 2026-02-12

Анотація

BlockFills, a major cryptocurrency trading and lending firm, has temporarily halted all client deposits and withdrawals due to recent extreme volatility and financial conditions. The company, which serves over 2,000 institutional clients across 95 countries, emphasized that the move is aimed at protecting both clients and the firm. Clients can still open and close positions in spot and derivatives trading. The suspension comes amid a sharp market downturn, with Bitcoin dropping to around $60,000 before slightly recovering. BlockFills, backed by investors including Susquehanna Private Equity and CME Ventures, reported over $61.1 billion in trading volume in 2025. Unlike retail-focused platforms that collapsed in 2022, BlockFills’ liquidity issues highlight mounting pressure even within core institutional crypto services. The company is now working with investors and clients to restore liquidity, though its future remains uncertain.

Compiled by: Felix, PANews

After the sharp decline in the cryptocurrency market, speculation has been rife about which major institution would be "sacrificed" in this round. On the evening of February 11th, a major whale in the crypto circle officially ran aground.

On February 11th, cryptocurrency trading and lending company Blockfills issued a statement, announcing that due to recent extreme market volatility and financial conditions, it had temporarily suspended all client deposit and withdrawal services last week. However, clients can still open and close positions for spot and derivative trades, as well as engage in other specific transactions.

Blockfills emphasized that this move is to protect both clients and the company, stating that management is closely communicating and collaborating with investors and clients to strive for a swift restoration of liquidity. Throughout this process, the company is maintaining active communication with clients and will provide regular updates on developments as the situation evolves.

Market Turbulence Sparks Concerns of a Chain Reaction

Blockfills' statement comes at a time when the cryptocurrency market has been declining for several months, culminating in a full-blown crash last week. Bitcoin once fell to a low of $60,000 before rebounding to the current $66,000, but it is still down approximately 45% from the all-time high set last October.

As a liquidity giant serving over 2,000 institutional clients globally, its suspension is reminiscent of the crypto winter of 2022, when as the bear market intensified, numerous platforms were forced to halt withdrawals, ultimately leading to the collapse of many and triggering a chain reaction.

In 2022, Celsius Network, one of the largest crypto lending platforms at the time, suspended all withdrawals citing extreme market conditions. Weeks later, the platform formally filed for bankruptcy restructuring. That same year, FTX Exchange halted withdrawals after facing a bank run, and subsequently, its affiliated lending institution Genesis also stopped redemptions due to liquidity pressures. Additionally, Voyager Digital announced the suspension of trading and withdrawals after defaulting on a massive loan to Three Arrows Capital. This series of collapses further exacerbated the already sluggish market.

Unlike the aforementioned platforms that primarily targeted retail investors, Blockfills' crisis directly impacts professional institutions and miners. Its suspension of deposit and withdrawal services indicates that liquidity pressures in the crypto market have spread to core infrastructure.

Annual Trading Volume Exceeds $61 Billion, Backed by Giant Institutional Investments

As a crucial piece of underlying infrastructure in the crypto industry, Chicago-based Blockfills acts as a bridge connecting traditional finance with crypto assets.

Founded in 2018, Blockfills provides cryptocurrency liquidity, trade execution, and lending services to over 2,000 institutional clients across 95 countries, including hedge funds, asset management companies, family offices, liquidity providers, and cryptocurrency mining enterprises. It does not serve retail investors directly.

According to official Blockfills data, the platform's trading volume in 2025 surpassed $61.1 billion, a 28% increase from 2024. Of this, spot trading volume exceeded $17.9 billion, while derivative trading volume exceeded $40.8 billion.

Furthermore, the platform boasts strong shareholder backing. Blockfills raised $6 million in 2021 and an additional $37 million in 2022. Investors include global quantitative trading giant Susquehanna Private Equity Investments LLLP and CME Ventures (the venture capital arm of CME Group).

Susquehanna Private Equity Investments LLLP is the private equity investment entity under Susquehanna International Group (SIG). SIG is a quantitative trading and market-making firm with businesses spanning equities, energy, digital assets, and other fields. According to Q3 2025 filings, SIG's public securities investment portfolio managed approximately $874.9 billion.

CME Ventures, as the strategic investment department of CME Group—the world's largest derivatives exchange—held cash and cash equivalents balances of approximately $4.6 billion as of early 2026. Full-year 2025 revenue reached $6.5 billion (a record high), with operating profit around $4.2 billion. This signifies that CME Ventures has stable and substantial capital support.

Blockfills' suspension of deposits and withdrawals marks the first major liquidity crisis amid this year's severe market volatility. Whether Blockfills can achieve a "soft landing" through capital injection or will head towards bankruptcy liquidation remains unknown. However, it is somewhat reassuring that Blockfills, backed by powerful shareholders, may still have hope of overcoming the crisis.

Related reading: The Triple Resonance of Bitcoin's Bottom: The Ultimate Direction of Macroeconomics, On-Chain Data, and Miner Economics

Пов'язані питання

QWhat is the main reason BlockFills suspended deposit and withdrawal services?

ABlockFills suspended all client deposit and withdrawal services due to recent extreme market volatility and financial conditions, aiming to protect both clients and the company.

QHow does BlockFills' client base differ from platforms like Celsius or Voyager that faced issues in 2022?

AUnlike Celsius or Voyager which primarily served retail investors, BlockFills caters exclusively to over 2000 institutional clients globally, including hedge funds, asset managers, and crypto miners, not retail investors.

QWhat significant investors back BlockFills, and what are their profiles?

ABlockFills is backed by major investors including Susquehanna Private Equity Investments LLLP (a quant trading giant with an $874.9B public portfolio) and CME Ventures (the venture arm of CME Group, which had $4.6B in cash and generated $6.5B revenue in 2025).

QWhat was BlockFills' total volume in 2025, and how did it break down between spot and derivatives trading?

AIn 2025, BlockFills' total volume exceeded $61.1 billion, with spot trading accounting for over $17.9 billion and derivatives trading exceeding $40.8 billion.

QWhy is BlockFills' situation particularly concerning for the crypto market's infrastructure?

ABlockFills' suspension of services signals that liquidity pressures have spread to core institutional infrastructure, raising fears of a chain reaction similar to the 2022 crypto winter, but now impacting professional entities rather than just retail-focused platforms.

Пов'язані матеріали

Gensyn AI: Don't Let AI Repeat the Mistakes of the Internet

In recent months, the rapid growth of the AI industry has attracted significant talent from the crypto sector. A persistent question among researchers intersecting both fields is whether blockchain can become a foundational part of AI infrastructure. While many previous AI and Crypto projects focused on application layers (like AI Agents, on-chain reasoning, data markets, and compute rentals), few achieved viable commercial models. Gensyn differentiates itself by targeting the most critical and expensive layer of AI: model training. Gensyn aims to organize globally distributed GPU resources into an open AI training network. Developers can submit training tasks, nodes provide computational power, and the network verifies results while distributing incentives. The core issue addressed is not decentralization for its own sake, but the increasing centralization of compute power among tech giants. In the era of large models, access to GPUs (like the H100) has become a decisive bottleneck, dictating the pace of AI development. Major AI companies are heavily dependent on large cloud providers for compute resources. Gensyn's approach is significant for several reasons: 1) It operates at the core infrastructure layer (model training), the most resource-intensive and technically demanding part of the AI value chain. 2) It proposes a more open, collaborative model for compute, potentially increasing resource utilization by dynamically pooling idle GPUs, similar to early cloud computing logic. 3) Its technical moat lies in solving complex challenges like verifying training results, ensuring node honesty, and maintaining reliability in a distributed environment—making it more of a deep-tech infrastructure company. 4) It targets a validated, high-growth market with genuine demand, rather than pursuing blockchain integration without purpose. Ultimately, the boundaries between Crypto and AI are blurring. AI requires global resource coordination, incentive mechanisms, and collaborative systems—areas where crypto-native solutions excel. Gensyn represents a step toward making advanced training capabilities more accessible and collaborative, moving beyond a niche controlled by a few giants. If successful, it could evolve into a fundamental piece of AI infrastructure, where the most enduring value in the AI era is often created.

marsbit14 год тому

Gensyn AI: Don't Let AI Repeat the Mistakes of the Internet

marsbit14 год тому

Why is China's AI Developing So Fast? The Answer Lies Inside the Labs

A US researcher's visit to China's top AI labs reveals distinct cultural and organizational factors driving China's rapid AI development. While talent, data, and compute are similar to the West, Chinese labs excel through a pragmatic, execution-focused culture: less emphasis on individual stardom and conceptual debate, and more on teamwork, engineering optimization, and mastering the full tech stack. A key advantage is the integration of young students and researchers who approach model-building with fresh perspectives and low ego, prioritizing collective progress over personal credit. This contrasts with the US culture of self-promotion and "star scientist" narratives. Chinese labs also exhibit a strong "build, don't buy" mentality, preferring to develop core capabilities—like data pipelines and environments—in-house rather than relying on external services. The ecosystem feels more collaborative than tribal, with mutual respect among labs. While government support exists, its scale is unclear, and technical decisions appear driven by labs, not state mandates. Chinese companies across sectors, from platforms to consumer tech, are building their own foundational models to control their tech destiny, reflecting a broader cultural drive for technological sovereignty. Demand for AI is emerging, with spending patterns potentially mirroring cloud infrastructure more than traditional SaaS. Despite challenges like a less mature data industry and GPU shortages, Chinese labs are propelled by vast talent, rapid iteration, and deep integration with the open-source community. The competition is evolving beyond a pure model race into a contest of organizational execution, developer ecosystems, and industrial pragmatism.

marsbit15 год тому

Why is China's AI Developing So Fast? The Answer Lies Inside the Labs

marsbit15 год тому

3 Years, 5 Times: The Rebirth of a Century-Old Glass Factory

Corning, a 175-year-old glass company, is experiencing a dramatic revival as a key player in AI infrastructure, driven by surging demand for high-performance optical fiber in data centers. AI data centers require vastly more fiber than traditional ones—5 to 10 times as much per rack—to handle high-speed data transmission between GPUs. This structural demand shift, coupled with supply constraints from the lengthy expansion cycle for fiber preforms, has created a significant supply-demand gap. Nvidia has invested in Corning, along with Lumentum and Coherent, in a $4.5 billion total commitment to secure the optical supply chain for AI. Corning's competitive edge lies in its expertise in producing ultra-low-loss, high-density, and bend-resistant specialty fiber, which is critical for 800G+ and future 1.6T data rates. Its deep involvement in co-packaged optics (CPO) with partners like Nvidia further solidifies its position. While not the largest fiber manufacturer globally, Corning's revenue from enterprise/data center clients now exceeds 40% of its optical communications sales, and it has secured multi-year supply agreements with major hyperscalers including Meta and Nvidia. Financially, Corning's optical communications revenue has surged, doubling from $1.3 billion in 2023 to over $3 billion in 2025. Its stock price has risen nearly 6-fold since late 2023. Key future catalysts include the rollout of Nvidia's CPO products and the scale of undisclosed customer agreements. However, risks include high current valuations and potential disruption from next-generation technologies like hollow-core fiber. The company's long-term bet on light over electricity, maintained even through the telecom bubble crash, is now being validated by the AI boom.

marsbit16 год тому

3 Years, 5 Times: The Rebirth of a Century-Old Glass Factory

marsbit16 год тому

Торгівля

Спот
Ф'ючерси
活动图片