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Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»Bithumb Recovers Overpaid Bitcoin, Covers 1,788 BTC Shortfall
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Bithumb Recovers Overpaid Bitcoin, Covers 1,788 BTC Shortfall

News RoomBy News Room1 month agoNo Comments3 Mins Read915 Views
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Bithumb Recovers Overpaid Bitcoin, Covers 1,788 BTC Shortfall
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South Korean cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb says it has resolved an incident in which a promotional reward error credited certain user accounts with excess Bitcoin.

In a Sunday statement, the exchange confirmed it recovered 99.7% of the overpaid Bitcoin (BTC) on the same day the incident occurred. The remaining 0.3%, totaling 1,788 Bitcoin that had already been sold, was covered using company funds to ensure customer balances remained fully matched.

“Bithumb’s holdings of all virtual assets, including Bitcoin (BTC), are 100% equivalent to or exceeding user deposits,” the exchange wrote.

According to Bithumb, most of the excess Bitcoin was retrieved directly from accounts, while the portion already liquidated in the market required reimbursement from corporate reserves.

Bithumb incident response process. Source: Bithumb

Related: Bithumb flags $200M in dormant crypto assets across 2.6M inactive accounts

Bithumb rolls out compensation plan

The exchange also announced some compensation measures. Users connected to the platform at the time of the incident will receive 20,000 Korean won ($15) each. Traders who sold Bitcoin at unfavorable prices during the disruption will receive full reimbursement of their sale value plus an additional 10% payment. The platform will also waive trading fees for all markets for seven days starting Monday.

The incident began on Friday when a system issue during a promotional event credited some users with an unusually large amount of Bitcoin, briefly causing sharp price swings on the exchange when recipients began selling the funds. The platform quickly restricted affected accounts and stabilized trading within minutes, preventing broader liquidations.

The exchange said the incident was not related to hacking and that no customer assets were lost, with deposits and withdrawals continuing as normal. While the company did not disclose the total amount involved, some users claimed roughly 2,000 BTC had been credited.

Related: South Korean lawmaker faces scrutiny over family ties to crypto exchange: Report

Centralized crypto exchanges face operational issues

Centralized cryptocurrency exchanges have continued to encounter operational problems. In June, Coinbase said account restrictions had been a major issue and reported reducing unnecessary freezes by 82% after upgrading its machine-learning systems and internal infrastructure, following years of complaints from users locked out of accounts for months without any security breach.