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(Bloomberg) — The crypto industry started its Friday in a jubilant mood, with Coinbase Global Inc.’s announcement that US securities regulators were poised to dismiss a legal case against the nation’s largest digital-asset exchange.
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The happy vibe didn’t last long, however: Less than three hours later and halfway around the world, the exchange Bybit disclosed that it had been hacked in what analysts say was the biggest-ever theft in the industry with almost $1.5 billion worth of tokens looted.
The ensuing whiplash in market prices — not to mention the moods in the crypto trading trenches – served as yet another stark reminder of the unique and ever-present risks lurking in this market. And it also emboldened critics of President Donald Trump’s fervent efforts to reverse his predecessor’s regulatory scrutiny of an industry that’s become more and more entwined with the traditional financial system.
“Deregulated markets sound good until you have this type of attack,” said Hilary Allen, a professor at American University’s Washington College of Law who studies crypto markets. “In the short term, we are seeing a lot of cheering for the peeling away of a lot of regulations. But be careful what you wish for.”
Traders booting up their computers on Friday morning were greeted by news that the Trump-era Securities and Exchange Commission, pending commissioner approval, was poised to permanently dismiss its lawsuit against Coinbase for running an unregistered exchange, brokerage and clearing agency.
Shares of the largest US crypto exchange shot up on the news, surging almost 6% in premarket trading. The crypto market went along for the ride, pushing Bitcoin toward the $100,000 level for the first time in more than two weeks. Ether, the second largest token, jumped more than 4%.
The gains proved to be fleeting.
Vigilant crypto market observers soon began noticing huge, suspicious withdrawals of Ether from another, Dubai-based exchange called Bybit, one of the largest in the world with more than $36 billion in daily average trading volume.
Bybit quickly confirmed that it had been robbed. CEO Ben Zhou explained the caper in crypto jargon undecipherable to most of the world, but all too clear to digital-asset enthusiasts: “Hacker took control of the specific ETH cold wallet we signed and transfered all ETH in the cold wallet to this unidentified address.”