As Bitcoin sold off sharply, both Binance and Bybit briefly suspended withdrawals, not because liquidity vanished, but because trading systems were pushed to their limits during one of the most volatile sessions in months.
According to the information from CryptoPolitan, the pauses were short-lived, yet their timing amplified anxiety across a market already on edge.
Bitcoin’s drop of more than 13%, briefly pushing price below $64,000 for the first time since October 2024, created a surge in order flow and withdrawal requests across major venues.
At Binance, withdrawals were paused for roughly 20 minutes, with the exchange attributing the disruption to technical strain rather than funding pressure.
Despite online speculation about users rushing for the exits, flows told a different story. During the turbulence, Binance recorded net inflows, while total reserves held firm near $155.6 billion, suggesting users were repositioning rather than abandoning the platform.
Bybit also temporarily halted withdrawals as volatility spiked. The exchange offered fewer specifics, but pointed to system-wide stress caused by an abrupt increase in trading activity. As conditions normalized, withdrawal functionality was restored.
Bybit later announced a separate, scheduled 12-hour maintenance window for its TradFi services beginning at 2:00 AM UTC on February 7, temporarily limiting account transfers and balance visibility. The distinction between emergency pauses and planned maintenance became important as users tried to separate technical issues from solvency concerns.
The withdrawal suspensions quickly revived memories of past exchange failures, particularly FTX, even though the underlying circumstances differed. Executives at Binance moved to counter the narrative. He Yi and Changpeng Zhaodescribed the chatter as coordinated fear, uncertainty, and doubt, arguing that the data did not support claims of distress.
They pointed to Binance’s Netflow-to-Reserve ratio, which remained around 0.6%, indicating that withdrawals represented only a small fraction of total holdings, even at peak stress.
The episode underscored a recurring dynamic in crypto markets: extreme price moves test operational resilience before they test balance sheets. Temporary withdrawal pauses can occur when infrastructure is strained by sudden activity, especially during sharp, synchronized sell-offs.
For now, both exchanges are operating normally again. The more important signal lies not in the brief suspensions themselves, but in how quickly systems stabilized and whether future volatility produces similar stress, or confirms that this was an isolated reaction to an unusually violent market move.
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