Why Major Crypto Exchange OKEx Controversially Used User Funds to Liquidate Bitcoin Contract

Published on by Cryptoslate | Published on

OKEx, the second biggest crypto exchange by daily trading volume, officially announced the decision to engage in a forced liquidation to settle a massive long contract.

After four days since the partial liquidation of the $460 million order, the OKEx team released a formal statement, disclosing the company's final decision to initiate the "Societal loss risk management mechanism," or to conduct a haircut of the profits of its traders and users to pay out the contract.

To put it simply, the societal loss risk management mechanism can be described as a forced bailout of the exchange by its investors to save the exchange from the inability to pay out the remainder of the $460 million contract.

Controversy intensified when it was revealed that the OKEx insurance fund, which was established to cover losses recorded by the exchange in extreme situations as the July 31 liquidation, only had 10 BTC in it.

The remaining amount OKEx had to settle was 950 BTC and after subtracting the 10 BTC in its insurance fund, 940 BTC was still left for the exchange to cover.

In the cryptocurrency exchange space, $7.2 million is not a large sum of capital, and it is certainly not large enough to risk the reputation of a top three exchange whose market valuation could easily surpass a billion dollars given that Binance, the biggest exchange in the market, is said to be valued at around $10 billion.

It is clear to the investors of OKEx that the company was in a position to easily deal with the liquidation of the July 31 long contract because on August 3, the OKEx team announced that it will inject 2,500 BTC into its insurance fund, to prevent market manipulation.

If the exchange initially went ahead and liquidated the contract without initiating the societal loss risk management mechanism and covered it with corporate funds, it may not have affected the market in such an immense way in the first place.

The OKEx team stated that the company was alerted as soon as the contract holder placed an "Enormous" order, and it repeatedly asked the investor to reduce the position to ensure the market can still liquidate his order before a major price movement occurs.

In hindsight, while OKEx could have paid-off the contract without triggering the socializing the losses to minimize its impact on the market and salvage its reputation, given that the contract holder was warned repeatedly by the OKEx team, it is difficult to deny that OKEx attempted to keep the situation under control.

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