One reason for the souring conditions of domestic exchanges is that hundreds of smaller ones cannot open real-name virtual accounts, which means, traders cannot convert digital assets into fiat, or won.
The country's four largest exchanges, Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone, and Korbit, allow traders to swap digital assets for fiat. Still, traders have to use their legal name on the account as part of Anti-Money Laundering regulations enacted in 1Q18. Crypto traders tell BusinessKorea that investors cannot benefit from anonymity, one of the fundamental characteristics of cryptos, so many have shied away from the major exchanges in the country.
^^ pretty dubious analysis. you can't trade anonymously on domestic exchanges in the USA either. are american exchanges on the verge of collapsing left and right?
Indeed, what the f word?
So they flee from the SK exchanges to.....what?
Ok, no KYC on some Congo based exchange, how are you sending money or withdrawing money because no matter what you do one side will be fiat. Though...a bank, that has all your details already.
It's like trying to purchase anonymously a pizza and have it delivered at your doorstep.
Now:
BusinessKorea warned: "It is no exaggeration to say that 97 percent of domestic exchanges are in danger of going bankrupt due to their low volume of transactions."
Upbit $91,687,322 USD per day
Bithumb $323,599,326 USD
Coinone $26,331,255 USD
Korbit $4,365,209 USD
If that means bankruptcy...how are bitstamp and bitfinex doing?
Not even talking about smaller exchanges in Europe.
The real problem is that the whole volume is fake. Probably they only have 1% of it and now they realized they fucked up pretty bad as they are becoming targets of investigations and probably some people have started asking some really interesting questions.
You make 0.1 %, let's say, of 300million$ in fees daily yet at the end of the year your revenue is a hundred $?
Why all big exchanges (on paper) flee the country immediately as the authorities start to investigate?