Meanwhile, equities closed up as traders continued processing the latest round of fourth-quarter earnings reports from companies including General Electric. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) was up 0.31% while the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite were down 0.07% and 0.27%, respectively.
The exchange issued 94 so-called Binance-peg tokens (B-Tokens), and reserves for almost half of those are stored in a cold wallet called Binance 8, Bloomberg said. The wallet contains more tokens than required for the number of B-Tokens issued. Since the tokens are supposed to be backed 1:1, the excess indicates the collateral is being mixed with customers’ tokens, according to Bloomberg.
“Collateral assets have previously been moved into this wallet in error and referenced accordingly on the B-Token Proof of Collateral page,” the spokesperson told Bloomberg. “Binance is aware of this mistake and is in the process of transferring these assets to dedicated collateral wallets.” Assets held with the exchange “have been and continue to be backed 1:1,” the spokesperson said.
When collateral is pooled together and used for trading, it’s locked up and clients or holders of assets may not be able to withdraw if the pool is reduced, Laurent Kssis, a crypto trading adviser at CEC Capital, said in a note to CoinDesk.
“In essence this means that there is no segregation of assets between clients’ funds and any collateral used,” Kssis said. “This could lead to the owner(s) not being able to withdraw due to lack of funds or liquidity by the exchange.
Token Roundup
Ether (ETH): ETH slid 0.8% to recently trade at $1,615. Ether turned deflationary again, with nearly one-fourth of ETH burned stemming from non-fungible token trades over the past seven days, according to data from ultrasound.money. Moving on to on-chain data, remember the Wormhole network exploiter that stole 80,000 ETH last year? It reappeared this week. According to data from Etherscan, the exploiter swapped 95,360 ETH worth roughly $157 million on decentralized finance aggregator OpenOcean and then transacted smaller amounts of capital through several DeFi protocols Monday.
Bitcoin and ether’s trading range has begun to narrow as the two largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization look to establish new areas of support. Following last week’s 8% and 5% gains, BTC and ETH’s price movement has yet to exceed a percentage point over the past four days.
BTC rose 0.4% on Saturday, declined slightly on Sunday and inched upward 1% and .09%, respectively, over the first two days of this week. Ether has traveled similarly during the same period.
Bitcoin’s chart implies new support levels forming near $22,900. The volume profile visible range (VPVR) tool, shows increasing levels of activity and price agreement at this mark. Often these are called high volume nodes, and can indicate where the market sees an asset as fairly priced, at least for the moment.
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