- KuCoin’s market share of daily trading volume has declined by 50% following charges by the U.S. Department of Justice and Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- KuCoin users have been withdrawing funds from the platform, with over $843 million worth of digital assets withdrawn in the past week alone
- The DOJ charged KuCoin and two of its founders for violating anti-money laundering laws, while the CFTC accused KuCoin of operating an unlawful digital asset derivatives exchange
The crypto exchange KuCoin has experienced a dramatic 50% decline in its daily trading volume and user assets after facing legal action from U.S. authorities. The charges have shaken confidence in the platform and triggered an exodus of funds and market makers. However, KuCoin claims its reserves remain fully collateralized. This article will examine the details behind KuCoin’s fall from grace and the impacts on its operations.
DOJ and CFTC Allegations Against KuCoin
In late March 2024, the Department of Justice (DOJ) filed criminal charges against KuCoin and two of its founders for violating U.S. anti-money laundering laws. The DOJ accused KuCoin of illegally operating in the U.S. while evading regulations.
Specifically, the DOJ cited over $32 million in suspicious transactions from Tornado Cash that flowed through KuCoin from August 2022 to November 2023. Tornado Cash is an Ethereum mixing service sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury for facilitating money laundering.
In a parallel civil action, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) claimed KuCoin unlawfully ran a derivatives exchange without proper registration and oversight. The CFTC is seeking penalties, disgorgement of profits, and permanent injunctions against KuCoin.
Plummeting Volumes and Outflows
In the weeks following the charges, KuCoin saw its daily trading volumes plunge 75% from $2 billion to around $500 million per day. According to blockchain analytics firm Kaiko, KuCoin’s market share of global exchange volumes crumbled from 6.5% to 3%.
Mass withdrawals also hammered KuCoin’s hot wallets. On-chain data shows over $843 million exited the exchange for rival platforms and self-custody wallets. Bitcoin holdings dropped 25% to 12,114 BTC in March. Ethereum and Tether reserves fell 22% and 21% respectively.
The rapid outflows forced KuCoin to slow down withdrawals and initiate an $895 million airdrop program to appease users. Market makers also abandoned the exchange, further reducing liquidity.
KuCoin’s Response
Despite the turmoil, KuCoin claims its reserves remain fully backed. The exchange published a proof-of-reserves report showing 109-115% collateralization across assets.
KuCoin maintains its operations fully comply with the law. The exchange criticized the DOJ and CFTC’s actions as overreach while asserting U.S. users represent only a tiny fraction of its business.
Nonetheless, rebuilding trust and trading volumes after the reputational damage will prove challenging for KuCoin. For now, the exchange remains mired in legal limbo as its fortunes continue to deteriorate.
Conclusion
The DOJ and CFTC allegations initiated a snowball effect of plunging volumes, asset outflows, and loss of market makers for KuCoin. While the exchange downplays the impacts, data shows its standing diminished by nearly every metric. KuCoin faces an uphill battle to regain its status as regulators scrutinize its operations and users flee to competitors. The coming months will determine whether KuCoin can stabilize and rehabilitate its image.