ADVERTISEMENT

Cryptocurrencies Fall as Korean Exchange Says $32 Million Stolen

Cryptocurrencies dropped after the second South Korean exchange in as many weeks said it was the victim of a theft.

Cryptocurrencies Fall as Korean Exchange Says $32 Million Stolen
A monitor displays the status of cryptocurrency mining at a mining facility in Incheon. (Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Cryptocurrencies dropped after the second South Korean exchange in as many weeks said it was hacked, renewing concerns about the safety of digital-asset trading venues.

Cryptocurrencies Fall as Korean Exchange Says $32 Million Stolen

Bithumb, ranked by Coinmarketcap.com as the world’s seventh-largest crypto exchange by traded value, said on Wednesday that hackers stole about 35 billion won ($32 million) and that Ripple was among the coins taken. The exchange halted cryptocurrency deposits and withdrawals, said it will compensate victims and moved investor assets to a so-called cold wallet, which is disconnected from the Internet and less vulnerable to theft.

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, dropped as much as 2 percent and was trading at $6,624 as of 7:24 a.m. in New York, bringing this year’s decline to 54 percent, according to Bloomberg composite pricing. Ripple, Ethereum and Litecoin also retreated, along with some Asia-listed stocks with exposure to digital currencies.

Cryptocurrencies Fall as Korean Exchange Says $32 Million Stolen

Enthusiasm for virtual currencies has waned this year partly due to a string of cyber heists, including the nearly $500 million theft from Japanese exchange Coincheck Inc. in late January. Last week, a South Korean venue called Coinrail said that some of the exchange’s digital coins appeared to have been stolen by hackers, though it didn’t disclose how much.

While the latest theft has weighed on sentiment, investor reactions have been relatively subdued, said Ryan Rabaglia, head trader at cryptocurrency dealing firm Octagon Strategy Ltd. in Hong Kong. “The market has sort of become a bit more battle-hardened. It can weather the storm on these negative reports.”

Read more on crypto, hacks and South Korean exchanges

Cryptocurrency Markets Are Juicy Targets for Hackers: Timeline
On New Crypto Exchanges and Where Coins Go When They’re Stolen
Why the Cryptocurrency World Is Watching South Korea
Crypto’s Wild West Traders Get Some Pointers From Financial Pros

The crypto-mania that spread worldwide last year was particularly intense in South Korea, with Bitcoin prices in the country at one point climbing to a 50 percent premium over those in America.

The fervor has since cooled amid a government crackdown, but South Korean exchanges are still among the world’s most active. The country’s policy makers are debating comprehensive regulations for cryptocurrencies, with proposals ranging from shutting down local exchanges to allowing them to operate under increased supervision.

The South Korean government said it started an investigation into the Bithumb hack and that it will review the security systems at 21 of the nation’s crypto exchanges.

The hacks in South Korea show “how ill-prepared a lot of the exchanges still are across large markets,” said Vijay Ayyar, the Singapore-based head of business development at Luno, a cryptocurrency exchange. “The overall market is seeing a lot of regulatory action and incidents like these will only hasten the process.”

--With assistance from Kyungji Cho and Andrea Tan.

To contact the reporter on this story: Eric Lam in Hong Kong at elam87@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Michael Patterson, Todd White

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.