Articles
Bitcoin

Bank of Korea floats crypto ‘circuit breakers’ after Bithumb blunder

User Image

Por Anônimo

Criado April 13, 2026|2 mins de leitura
Main Image

Bithumb accidentally sent customers 620,000 Bitcoin instead of 620,000 Korean won in February. The Bank of Korea wants lawmakers to make it so it doesn't happen again.

South Korea’s central bank says crypto exchanges should have their own “circuit breakers” that halt trading to prevent a repeat of the market fallout after Bithumb mistakenly sent more than $40 billion in Bitcoin to its customers in February.

The Bank of Korea said in a payments report on Monday that lawmakers should consider introducing mechanisms similar to the Korea Exchange’s trading curbs to suspend trading if crypto prices suddenly fluctuate.

“Currently, the virtual asset industry lacks internal control mechanisms and faces lower regulatory intensity compared to established financial institutions,” the bank said.

“Consequently, as similar incidents could occur at other virtual asset exchanges, it is necessary to strengthen relevant regulations to prevent them in advance,” the report added.

It comes as South Korean lawmakers are currently looking to pass laws to further regulate crypto, which the Bank of Korea said should include its suggested measures “to enhance the safety and transparency of virtual asset exchange operations.”

In early February, Bithumb erroneously sent customers 620,000 Bitcoin (BTC), worth around $42 billion at the time, instead of 620,000 Korean won, worth $400.

The price of Bitcoin on Bithumb fell as users rushed to sell, causing others to panic-sell and further driving down its price, according to the bank’s report.

Bithumb halted trading and reversed its Bitcoin sends within minutes, but the exchange said that 1,788 BTC, worth around $125 million, had been sold before it could act, and it covered the shortfall using company reserves.

Related: South Korea tightens crypto withdrawal-delay exemptions after scam losses

The Bank of Korea suggested that crypto exchanges should be required to have systems capable of detecting and preventing “erroneous payments caused by human error.”

It added that exchanges should also have systems to automatically verify a platform’s internal assets compared to those on the blockchain to flag discrepancies.

Magazine: South Korea gets rich from crypto… North Korea gets weapons

Source: CoinTelegraph


Outros artigos publicados recentemente

Bitcoin’s BIP 110 fork deadline nears with miner support at zero
Bitcoin’s BIP 110 fork deadline nears with miner support at zero

Bitcoin

The BIP 110 proposal would cap arbitrary data on Bitcoin for a year, but Saylor, Adam Back and other...

Empery Digital shares rise after selling Bitcoin to fund AI data center project
Empery Digital shares rise after selling Bitcoin to fund AI data center project

Bitcoin

The sales come months after a major Empery shareholder demanded the firm ditch its Bitcoin treasury ...

Bitcoin bulls Michael Saylor, Adam Back slam BIP-110 Ordinals proposal
Bitcoin bulls Michael Saylor, Adam Back slam BIP-110 Ordinals proposal

Bitcoin

The ongoing debate comes despite a broad downturn in Ordinals transaction activity over the last two...

Lending protocol Bonzo loses 77% of value locked as $9 million oracle exploit rattles Hedera
Lending protocol Bonzo loses 77% of value locked as $9 million oracle exploit rattles Hedera

Crypto Market Analysis

Bonzo Lend lost approximately $9.05 million after an attacker exploited a verification flaw in a thi...

AI found an Ethereum bug that could take validators offline, but humans had to prove it
AI found an Ethereum bug that could take validators offline, but humans had to prove it

Ethereum

The Ethereum Foundation pointed coordinated AI agents at the software its validators run and got a r...

Bitcoin treasury company Empery Digital sold about half of its BTC stack
Bitcoin treasury company Empery Digital sold about half of its BTC stack

Bitcoin

It's a sign of the times as the troubled company swaps its bitcoin treasury ambitions for AI data ce...