Bithumb
Bithumb is a centralized cryptocurrency exchange headquartered in Seoul, South Korea, founded on January 5, 2014, by BTC Korea.com Co., Ltd., initially operating as Xcoin before rebranding to Bithumb in 2015.[1][2] It facilitates spot and margin trading of over 400 digital assets, primarily paired with the Korean won (KRW), and supports fiat deposits via local banking channels.[3][4] As one of South Korea's dominant trading platforms, Bithumb commands roughly 25% of the domestic cryptocurrency market share as of mid-2025, with daily trading volumes frequently surpassing $1 billion and a reported net profit of $110 million in 2024 amid a resurgence in user activity and marketing investments.[5][3][6] The exchange has pursued international expansion, including a global version launched in 2019 and entry into markets like Vietnam in 2025, while preparing for a landmark initial public offering by year-end, potentially valuing it at over $1 billion despite persistent regulatory challenges from South Korean authorities.[7][8][5] Bithumb's history includes significant security incidents, such as a 2018 hack that resulted in the loss of about $31 million in cryptocurrencies, alongside operational disruptions like a 100-minute outage in September 2025 that prompted user compensation pledges.[6][9] Further defining its profile are legal controversies, notably a 2024 case where a former executive faced imprisonment over allegations of illicit payments to secure cryptocurrency listings on the platform.[10]Overview
Company Profile
Bithumb is a centralized cryptocurrency exchange (CEX) established in 2014 by BTC Korea.com Co., Ltd., with headquarters in Seoul, South Korea.[11] [12] The platform primarily caters to retail and institutional traders by enabling spot trading of digital assets, focusing on high-volume pairs paired with the Korean Won (KRW).[3] [13] Bithumb mandates real-name verification for users, requiring linkage to verified bank accounts in compliance with South Korean regulations aimed at enhancing security and preventing illicit activities.[13] [14] As of May 2025, it holds the position of the second-largest exchange in South Korea by trading volume, commanding about 25% of the domestic market.[5] The parent company, Bithumb Corporation, extends beyond exchange operations into blockchain ventures, investing in innovative early-stage firms leveraging blockchain and fintech technologies.[15]Market Position
Bithumb maintains a strong domestic presence in South Korea's cryptocurrency exchange sector, commanding approximately 37% of the nation's trading volume as of October 2025, second to Upbit's dominant 72%.[16] This position reflects a substantial recovery from single-digit market shares in early 2023, fueled by aggressive zero-fee trading promotions that elevated its share to a peak of 36% following implementation.[17] Temporary spikes occurred later, including a 46% share in early September 2025 amid competitive listing activities, though Upbit retained overall leadership through superior liquidity and user base of around 8.9 million active accounts compared to Bithumb's 8 million.[18][19] Internationally, Bithumb's influence is constrained, with nearly all platform traffic—over 99%—deriving from South Korean users as of 2024 data, limiting its global competitiveness.[20] The exchange's Bithumb Global subsidiary aims to expand overseas but has faced operational challenges, including regulatory scrutiny over order book sharing and user restrictions that effectively prioritize Korean clientele.[21] Relative to global giants like Binance, Bithumb offers empirical strengths in Korean won (KRW) fiat liquidity, facilitating efficient domestic trading under South Korea's strict capital controls and investor protection rules, where international platforms struggle with local compliance.[22] Binance's formal entry into the South Korean market in October 2025, leveraging its vast infrastructure, poses emerging pressure on Bithumb's localized advantages, though Bithumb's entrenched KRW pair depth continues to underpin its appeal for retail Korean traders.[22]History
Founding and Early Operations (2014–2016)
Bithumb was established in January 2014 as Xcoin, one of South Korea's pioneering cryptocurrency exchanges, amid growing domestic interest in Bitcoin following its price surge in late 2013.[1][2] The platform, founded by Kim Dae-sik, initially concentrated on facilitating spot trading of Bitcoin against the South Korean won (KRW), providing a direct fiat on-ramp that catered to local users seeking accessible entry into digital assets.[23][24] This setup leveraged South Korea's high internet penetration and tech enthusiasm, positioning Xcoin as a key alternative in a market with few competitors like Korbit.[25] In 2015, the exchange rebranded to Bithumb, reflecting its expanding scope while maintaining a focus on straightforward KRW-based trading pairs, primarily BTC/KRW, which drove initial user adoption.[26] Trading volumes grew rapidly, with Bithumb capturing significant market share by offering low fees and user-friendly interfaces tailored to retail traders, amid Bitcoin's volatility that attracted speculative interest from South Korea's young, digitally native population.[27][2] Early operations faced foundational hurdles, including rudimentary security measures typical of nascent platforms, such as limited multi-factor authentication and reliance on basic wallet infrastructures, which exposed vulnerabilities in an unregulated environment.[1] Regulatory oversight was minimal prior to 2017, with no mandatory licensing or anti-money laundering requirements, fostering ambiguity that allowed unchecked growth but heightened risks of illicit activity and operational instability.[25] Despite these constraints, Bithumb's emphasis on liquidity and KRW integration enabled it to establish a foothold, handling increasing daily trades without major disruptions during this period.[28]Expansion and Peak Growth (2017–2019)
During the 2017 cryptocurrency bull market, fueled by the ICO boom, Bithumb saw explosive growth as it rapidly expanded altcoin listings to accommodate surging demand for new tokens, contributing to a 171-fold revenue increase from 2016 levels.[29] Trading volumes escalated dramatically, with Bitcoin pairs alone achieving the highest global levels that year prior to the emergence of competitors like Upbit.[30] The platform introduced a mobile trading system (MTS) app early on, enabling retail users to execute trades conveniently on smartphones and further boosting accessibility amid widespread market hype.[2] By early 2018, Bithumb reached its peak as one of the world's top exchanges by daily trading volume, often exceeding $10 billion on aggregate in December 2017 and sustaining high levels into the new year, surpassing even South Korea's major stock exchanges.[31] This dominance was amplified by the "Kimchi Premium," where local cryptocurrency prices traded at premiums of up to 55% over global benchmarks, drawing arbitrage activity and intensifying onshore volume.[32] Operational income for the first quarter of 2018 alone neared $170 million, reflecting the platform's capture of retail speculation during the market's zenith.[33] In tandem with this expansion, Bithumb navigated emerging regulatory pressures by adopting real-name verification systems effective January 30, 2018, in compliance with South Korea's crackdown on anonymous trading and speculation, which mandated bank-linked identity checks to curb money laundering risks.[34] These measures, while initially voluntary in rollout by exchanges, aligned with government directives to stabilize the overheated market without halting growth trajectories at the time.[35]Recovery and Adaptation (2020–2023)
Following the 2019 security incidents that diminished its trading volume ranking, Bithumb focused on regulatory compliance to stabilize operations. In response to South Korea's 2021 amendments to the Act on Reporting and Using Specified Financial Transaction Information, which mandated virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to implement robust anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) measures under Financial Action Task Force (FATF) guidelines, Bithumb enhanced its verification processes, including real-name account registration and transaction monitoring.[36] This compliance effort aligned with requirements from the Korea Financial Intelligence Unit (KoFIU), enabling the exchange to resume full operations amid heightened scrutiny on VASPs.[37] The 2021 cryptocurrency bull market facilitated a volume rebound for Bithumb, as South Korean exchanges collectively processed elevated transaction levels driven by retail investor influx and assets like Bitcoin reaching peaks.[38] Bithumb's daily volumes contributed to periods where it ranked among global leaders, reflecting partial recovery from prior setbacks, though it trailed dominant local competitor Upbit.[39] To adapt during subsequent bear markets, Bithumb diversified beyond spot trading by introducing staking services, such as support for ORBS tokens, allowing users to earn rewards directly on the platform and bolstering passive income options amid declining spot activity.[40] It also ventured into non-fungible tokens (NFTs) via subsidiary Bithumb Meta, targeting metaverse and digital collectibles, though this initiative yielded limited success and eventual restructuring.[41] These pivots aimed to retain utility for users facing market downturns, but competition intensified, causing Bithumb's domestic market share to contract to single digits by early 2023.[42] User retention efforts included promotional incentives tied to compliance and new features, helping maintain a core base through volatility and positioning the exchange for later growth.[1] By emphasizing verified accounts and diversified yields, Bithumb demonstrated resilience, though empirical metrics like sustained but reduced volumes underscored ongoing competitive pressures in Korea's regulated environment.[43]Services and Operations
Trading Platform and Features
Bithumb operates a web-based trading interface and dedicated mobile applications for Android and iOS, enabling spot trading primarily in Korean Won (KRW) pairs with features including real-time order books, trade history, and integrated price charts for market analysis.[13] The platform supports limit, market, and stop orders, alongside automated trading tools such as auto-trading bots that execute repeated low-price buys and high-price sells within user-specified ranges to pursue stable returns.[44] These functionalities emphasize straightforward execution for retail users, with the mobile app additionally offering price alerts, lock screen notifications, and widgets for on-the-go monitoring.[45] Advanced trading capabilities include public APIs for algorithmic strategies, facilitating low-latency order placement suitable for high-frequency operations on KRW-denominated pairs, where Bithumb's liquidity in domestic markets supports rapid execution.[46] TradingView integration provides enhanced charting options, including technical indicators, while the exchange's order book depth data aids in assessing market liquidity and bid-ask spreads.[47] User access to withdrawals requires mandatory KYC verification, with Level 2 authentication or higher needed to process cryptocurrency outflows, a measure implemented to comply with South Korean anti-money laundering regulations.[48] In 2025, amid heightened regulatory scrutiny, Bithumb reduced coin lending limits by 80% and halved maximum leverage ratios from prior levels like 4x, aligning with Financial Services Commission guidelines prohibiting leveraged positions exceeding collateral value.[49] [50] Platform reliability has faced challenges, including a 100-minute system outage on September 2, 2025, which suspended trading, order placements, and cancellations due to internal transaction errors, prompting Bithumb to commit compensation for verified user losses.[51] [52] Such incidents highlight ongoing technical vulnerabilities in high-volume environments, though the exchange maintains policies for user remediation post-disruption.Supported Assets and Listings
Bithumb supports over 170 cryptocurrencies, encompassing major assets such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) alongside a diverse array of altcoins traded primarily against the Korean won (KRW).[39] This selection emphasizes assets compliant with South Korea's regulatory framework, established under the 2021 Special Act on Virtual Asset User Protection and subsequent Financial Services Commission (FSC) guidelines, which mandate robust anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) standards for listed tokens.[53] The exchange prioritizes tokens with verifiable liquidity, technological integrity, and alignment with national policies prohibiting anonymous or privacy-enhanced features that could facilitate illicit activities.[54] The listing process involves submitting a formal application to Bithumb's dedicated committee, including a comprehensive whitepaper, technical audit reports, business documentation, and evidence of project utility, liquidity potential, and security measures.[55] An independent listing committee conducts due diligence, evaluating factors like innovation, market viability, and regulatory adherence through collaboration with global digital asset verification platforms.[56] Approvals are selective, with recent 2025 listings—such as POPCAT (Solana-based meme coin), Euler (EUL), and Stader (SD)—demonstrating a focus on tokens offering KRW pairs to enhance local accessibility while meeting heightened scrutiny on speculative assets.[57] [58] [59] Delistings occur proactively to align with evolving regulations, particularly targeting privacy coins deemed incompatible with AML requirements; as of Q1 2025, Bithumb and peers like Upbit removed such assets to avoid penalties under FSC oversight.[54] Notable examples include the 2022 delisting of Litecoin (LTC) following activation of optional privacy features via Mimblewimble Extension Blocks (MWEB), which raised compliance concerns over transaction opacity.[60] Additional removals, such as Quiztok (QTCON) in July 2025 for insufficient liquidity and regulatory fit, underscore ongoing evaluations prioritizing user protection over marginal projects.[61] Stablecoin support centers on Tether (USDT) integrations, with USDT/KRW pairs enabling efficient fiat-crypto bridging amid restrictions on direct foreign stablecoin issuance; these were expanded post-2024 to bolster trading stability without violating won-denominated mandates.[62] [53] Such pairs facilitate hedging against volatility while navigating 2025 FSC directives limiting unbacked foreign stablecoins, reflecting Bithumb's adaptation to a compliance-first ecosystem that curtails high-risk offerings.[63]Additional Offerings
Bithumb offers staking services enabling users to earn rewards on supported cryptocurrencies, alongside a lending platform that previously allowed collateralized borrowing of assets like altcoins for DeFi activities.[47][64] These features contributed to user engagement by providing passive income opportunities beyond spot trading, though uptake data remains limited to general exchange metrics. An over-the-counter (OTC) desk, branded Ortus and launched in February 2019, targets institutional clients with block deal matchmaking and operates from Hong Kong to facilitate large-volume trades outside public order books.[65][66] Prior to regulatory adjustments in 2025, lending services supported higher leverage up to 4x and loan caps of 1 billion KRW (approximately $718,000), but these were reduced by 80% in loan limits to 200 million KRW and leverage to 2x following a service suspension in July and scrutiny over risk exposure, with over 27,000 users affected in a June incident leading to forced liquidations for 13%.[67][68] Staking persists as a lower-risk alternative, supporting assets for yield farming without the leverage elements that prompted cutbacks.[47] Bithumb Global catered to non-Korean users through separate infrastructure, including a fiat gateway partnership with Coinify announced in June 2020 to enable direct cryptocurrency purchases via credit cards and bank transfers.[69] However, accessibility declined after August 2021, when the exchange halted new foreign registrations and mandated local mobile verification, effectively barring many international participants and terminating trademark licenses with overseas platforms using its branding.[70][71] Strategic partnerships diversify offerings, such as the establishment of an in-house blockchain R&D center in January 2020 to advance technology capabilities and a September 2025 memorandum with WLFI—a DeFi project—for cross-border retail products, stablecoin integration, and limited DeFi bridges on networks like Solana.[72][73] These initiatives aim to enhance ancillary revenue and global reach, though DeFi exposure remains constrained compared to core operations. User retention from such services is inferred from sustained institutional OTC volumes post-launch, but foreign user complaints on platforms like Reddit highlight verification barriers and withdrawal delays as deterrents to broader adoption.[74]Security Incidents and Measures
Major Hacks and Breaches
In April 2017, Bithumb experienced a data breach when a contract worker's personal computer, which stored customer data files, was compromised, resulting in the leak of personal information and transaction histories for approximately 30,000 users.[75] This incident exposed early vulnerabilities in the exchange's data handling practices but did not involve direct theft of cryptocurrency assets.[76] On June 20, 2018, hackers stole approximately 35 billion South Korean won (around $31 million) worth of cryptocurrencies, primarily Ethereum and Ripple, from Bithumb's hot wallets.[77] The breach, linked to unauthorized access via an employee's personal computer, prompted Bithumb to suspend deposits, withdrawals, and trading for several days across multiple assets.[78] Bithumb confirmed the loss originated from its own funds, not user accounts, and the incident contributed to a temporary dip in bitcoin prices amid broader market concerns.[76][79] Bithumb suffered another breach on March 29, 2019, marking its third major security incident in under two years, with hackers siphoning off nearly $19 million in EOS and additional XRP tokens through abnormal withdrawals detected from hot wallets.[80] The exchange attributed the attack to potential insider involvement or exploited supply chain weaknesses, though it assured users that platform-held customer assets remained unaffected.[81] This event led to immediate operational reviews but no reported trading halts.[82] No further confirmed cryptocurrency thefts from Bithumb's systems have been reported since 2019.[83]Implemented Security Enhancements
In response to the 2018 hack, Bithumb enhanced its infrastructure by adopting a comprehensive security solution modeled on commercial banking standards, including a dedicated vaccine system to mitigate hacking risks and bolster server protections.[84] The exchange also established network separation protocols and an intrusion prevention system, developed in consultation with a leading Korean cybersecurity firm, alongside continuous 24/7 monitoring operations.[84] Bithumb secured Information Security Management System (ISMS) certification from the Korea Internet & Security Agency in December 2018, demonstrating compliance with national standards for safeguarding information assets.[85] [86] It further obtained ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification for its ISMS framework, which encompasses controls for risk management and operational security, with ongoing adherence verified through periodic audits as recently as 2025.[87] [88] To protect user assets, Bithumb maintains the majority of its holdings in cold storage wallets, minimizing exposure to online threats, and employs multi-signature protocols for transaction approvals requiring multiple keys.[89] [90] In alignment with South Korean regulations enacted in January 2018, the platform prohibits anonymous accounts, mandating real-name verification linked to bank accounts to curb illicit activities.[91] [92] For financial safeguards, Bithumb procured cyber insurance policies totaling 6 billion KRW (approximately $4.5 million USD at prevailing rates) from insurers including Hyundai Marine & Fire and Heungkuk Fire & Marine, providing coverage against breach-related losses.[84] [47] Following the 2018 incident, the exchange fully compensated affected users from its reserves, a practice reinforced by South Korea's 2024 Virtual Asset User Protection Act requiring exchanges to maintain insurance or reserve funds for such events.[93] [94] These measures have contributed to the absence of major hacks since the March 2019 breach, during which approximately $19 million in assets were stolen but customer hot wallet funds remained secure due to storage practices.[82] [83] However, the platform has experienced intermittent service outages, such as a 100-minute trading halt in September 2025, prompting compensatory payouts totaling millions of KRW to impacted users.[51]Regulatory Interactions
South Korean Regulatory Landscape
The Financial Services Commission (FSC) and Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) constitute the core enforcement bodies for cryptocurrency regulation in South Korea, with authority to inspect virtual asset service providers (VASPs), enforce anti-money laundering (AML) standards, and address systemic risks such as market manipulation and financial instability.[95][96] These agencies prioritize consumer protection amid historical vulnerabilities exposed by global incidents like the Mt. Gox collapse and domestic speculative frenzies, mandating separation of customer funds from exchange assets and regular compliance audits to prevent fund commingling and operational failures.[97] Regulatory evolution began with 2017 measures prohibiting initial coin offerings (ICOs) and anonymous trading to combat speculation-driven volatility, including the "kimchi premium" where local prices exceeded global benchmarks due to capital controls and hype.[98] This was followed by 2021's Specific Financial Transaction Information Act, imposing AML reporting akin to the FATF Travel Rule, and culminated in the 2023 Virtual Asset User Protection Act (VAUPA), which took effect in 2024 and requires VASPs to maintain transparent trading, segregate deposits at trusted institutions, and face penalties for insider trading or unfair practices.[99][100] VAUPA empowers the FSC to conduct on-site inspections and enforce minimum capital thresholds, such as 3 billion KRW for KRW-virtual asset exchanges, reflecting a shift from outright restrictions to structured oversight.[95] In 2024–2025, focus intensified on high-risk activities, with the FSC and FSS halting new crypto lending services on August 19, 2025, to mitigate leverage-induced losses amid concerns over inadequate safeguards in margin trading.[101] Parallel developments include draft stablecoin rules mandating 500 million KRW equity capital, bankruptcy-remote reserves, and issuer licensing under a proposed Digital Asset Basic Act, alongside roadmaps for spot crypto ETFs with custody and valuation protocols by late 2025.[102][103] These interventions underscore causal responses to empirical risks—hacks eroding trust and leverage amplifying downturns—while preserving innovation through graduated permissions rather than blanket prohibitions.[104]Bithumb's Compliance Efforts and Challenges
Bithumb implemented South Korea's mandatory real-name verification system shortly after its enforcement in January 2018, enabling the creation of over 174,000 linked virtual accounts by March of that year to comply with anti-money laundering requirements.[105] The exchange obtained Information Security Management System (ISMS) certification from the Korea Internet & Security Agency in December 2018, affirming adherence to national standards for protecting user data and platform integrity, and has since maintained ISO/IEC 27001 certification for international security compliance.[87] These measures positioned Bithumb among the early adopters of regulatory safeguards in the domestic cryptocurrency sector, facilitating continued operations amid stringent oversight. In response to Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) warnings in July 2025 about high-risk leveraged products exceeding stock market limits, Bithumb halved its crypto lending leverage from 4x to 2x and reduced loan limits by 80% upon resuming services in August 2025, aiming to mitigate investor risks and align with emerging guidelines on margin trading.[106] However, these adjustments followed a temporary suspension of lending activities, highlighting reactive rather than proactive alignment with regulators' risk assessments.[107] Bithumb encountered significant challenges in 2025, including scrutiny from the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) over its September launch of order book sharing with an Australian exchange, which authorities flagged for elevating money laundering risks through integrated domestic and international transactions; the probe, initiated in September, was extended into October.[21] The exchange has also suspended specific KYC-linked services, such as new virtual account issuances due to bank renewal failures and dealings with high-risk foreign entities like Cambodia-based platforms amid AML investigations.[108] Additionally, Bithumb opted out of a third national audit in 2025, alongside competitor Dunamu, prompting criticisms of inadequate transparency in financial reporting and reserve verification despite ISMS achievements.[109] Critics, including regulatory officials, have argued that Bithumb's pursuit of innovative features like cross-border liquidity tools sometimes prioritizes growth over robust compliance protocols, as evidenced by the FIU's concerns over insufficient safeguards in order book integrations.[110] Conversely, the exchange's sustained ISMS compliance and adjustments to lending practices demonstrate efforts to balance operational viability with South Korea's evolving framework under the Virtual Asset User Protection Act, though ongoing probes underscore persistent gaps in preemptive regulatory adherence.[111]Controversies and Criticisms
Legal Disputes and Liability Claims
In December 2018, a South Korean court ruled in favor of Bithumb in a lawsuit filed by a user who lost approximately 390 million won (around $355,000) due to a hack targeting the user's account, determining that the exchange bore no liability as it is not classified as a financial institution under applicable laws and had issued prior security warnings to users.[112] The decision emphasized that the breach occurred via phishing or similar user-side vulnerabilities rather than deficiencies in Bithumb's core systems, attributing primary responsibility to the victim's failure to heed recommended safeguards like two-factor authentication.[113] Similar outcomes emerged in related data breach claims; for instance, in October 2020, a court dismissed a suit alleging Bithumb's negligence in a 2017 incident where an employee's personal computer compromise led to user information leaks, rejecting demands for compensation of about $400,000 on grounds that the exchange had implemented reasonable protective measures against foreseeable risks.[114] However, partial liability was assigned in another 2017 data leak case, where Bithumb was ordered to reimburse a affected customer roughly 32 million won ($27,200) for direct financial harm stemming from inadequate internal data handling protocols.[115] Bithumb's legal defenses in these hack-related suits consistently highlighted the sophistication of cybercriminals—often involving advanced phishing, malware, or supply-chain exploits beyond standard industry defenses—contrasting with voluntary post-incident compensation initiatives, such as full reimbursements for verified losses in the June 2018 hot wallet breach affecting 35 billion won in assets.[112] Courts weighed these factors causally, finding no gross negligence where exchanges demonstrated multi-signature wallets, cold storage for most funds, and user education, though critics argued such rulings incentivize minimal accountability by shifting burden to individuals despite platforms' control over custody.[113] In contrast, liability was affirmed for non-hack disruptions; the Supreme Court in January 2023 upheld an order for Bithumb to pay 251.4 million won ($202,400) to 132 investors harmed by a 1.5-hour server outage in December 2017, attributing damages to foreseeable operational failures during high volatility rather than external attacks.[116] This ruling reversed a lower court's dismissal, establishing precedent that exchanges must compensate for self-induced service interruptions impacting trade execution, separate from hacker-induced events.[117] Employee-involved probes have intersected with liability claims, including 2021 investigations into pre-hack security testimonies, but courts dismissed broader insider trading allegations against executives in related fraud cases by 2024, citing insufficient evidence of material non-public information misuse tied to user losses.[118] These outcomes underscore a judicial pattern prioritizing demonstrable exchange negligence over inherent crypto risks, with Bithumb prevailing in most direct hack liability suits while facing accountability for internal mismanagement.Recent Operational and Ethical Concerns
In April 2025, South Korean lawmaker Kim Jae-sub accused Bithumb of employing dark patterns in its fee structure, misleading users into paying higher trading fees than advertised despite claims of offering the industry's lowest rates.[119] [120] The exchange allegedly generated over 140.91 billion won (approximately $97 million) in additional fees from February 2023 to February 2024 through these practices, prompting calls for greater transparency in user interfaces.[120] Bithumb has not publicly disputed the fee calculations but maintains its overall fee competitiveness as a profit-driven feature in a volatile market where exchanges must balance innovation with operational costs.[119] Bithumb experienced a significant platform outage on September 2, 2025, lasting approximately 100 minutes due to a transaction system error, halting trading and order modifications during a period of high market volatility.[121] [51] This incident marked the 41st such outage for Bithumb since 2018, far exceeding rival Upbit's 28 cases, leading to user frustration over reliability and demands for improved infrastructure.[51] In response, Bithumb pledged full compensation for verified direct financial losses, reviewing claims sequentially to address affected traders, a measure it has applied in prior disruptions including January 2025 outages tied to national political events.[121] [122] Critics argue these recurring failures reflect ethical lapses in prioritizing uptime, while proponents view them as inherent challenges in scaling crypto platforms amid regulatory pressures, such as 2025 mandates to cap leverage in lending services, which Bithumb addressed by voluntarily reducing high-risk offerings.[123] [124] Bithumb Global, the international arm, has faced ongoing user complaints regarding scams, withdrawal delays, and subpar customer service, with reports of uncredited deposits and ignored support tickets persisting into 2025.[125] Platforms like Trustpilot reflect low satisfaction ratings, with users alleging opaque operations that enable fraudulent activities, though Bithumb Global attributes some issues to external phishing attempts rather than platform faults.[126] Market manipulation allegations in 2024–2025 primarily involve third-party actors, such as the January 2025 arrests of two individuals for artificially inflating ACE token prices on Bithumb to net $5 million, rather than direct exchange complicity.[127] Bithumb's decision to skip a national transparency audit in October 2025 alongside rival Dunamu has amplified ethical concerns over accountability, contrasting with defenses that such audits yield limited value compared to voluntary compliance enhancements in a sector often scrutinized through a lens of presumed fraudulence.[109]Financial Performance
Revenue Streams and Profitability
Bithumb's primary revenue stream derives from trading fees charged on cryptocurrency transactions, typically structured as maker and taker fees ranging from 0.04% to 0.25% depending on trading volume and market pairs.[128] [129] In early 2024, the exchange temporarily suspended these fees through a promotional zero-fee period in January to capture market share, reaching a 36% share in South Korea, before reinstating commissions in February, citing their direct link to operational income.[130] [131] Additional income sources include token listing fees paid by projects seeking exchange inclusion, estimated between $300,000 and $800,000 per listing based on market precedents, though these constitute a smaller portion compared to volume-driven fees.[132] For fiscal year 2024, Bithumb reported revenue nearly tripling year-over-year to approximately 496.3 billion South Korean won (around $360 million USD), driven by elevated trading activity amid a cryptocurrency market recovery and strategic fee adjustments post-promotion.[133] [134] Net profit reached $110 million, marking a 565% increase from 2023 losses and reflecting effective cost management, including operational restructuring, alongside favorable market conditions that enhanced fee generation without relying on unsustainable subsidies.[6] [133] This turnaround occurred despite ongoing regulatory pressures in South Korea, underscoring the exchange's ability to maintain financial viability through core fee-based models rather than speculative ventures. The sustained profitability in 2024 counters prior narratives of insolvency tied to past security incidents and legal disputes, as evidenced by the shift from net losses in 2023 to robust earnings, primarily attributable to disciplined expense controls and revenue optimization in a competitive landscape.[6] [135] Efforts to diversify, such as stablecoin trading initiatives compliant with local regulations, have supported margin stability by attracting steady-volume pairs less volatile than altcoins.[136] Overall, these figures highlight Bithumb's reliance on transaction-based income over lending or staking services, which faced reductions amid regulatory scrutiny, prioritizing long-term operational resilience.[137]Trading Volume and Market Share Trends
In 2024, Bithumb recorded an average daily trading volume of 1.6 trillion KRW, contributing to South Korea's overall cryptocurrency market surge amid a global bull market recovery that drove heightened retail participation and KRW-denominated trades exceeding $1.1 trillion for the year.[16][138] This uptick aligned with broader domestic trends, where Upbit and Bithumb together captured nearly 96% of total exchange volumes, though Bithumb trailed Upbit's 4.6 trillion KRW daily average.[139][16] By early 2025, Bithumb's market share in South Korea rebounded to approximately 25%, reflecting gains from competitive strategies including aggressive token listings and promotional fee reductions that attracted volume during sustained market momentum.[130][140][141] These efforts narrowed the gap with Upbit, which held about 72% dominance, as Bithumb's share climbed from prior lows amid zero-fee trading events and targeted incentives linked to bull market extensions.[16] Regulatory oversight from South Korean authorities, including volume disclosures in compliance reports, underscored Bithumb's second-place positioning without altering the duopoly structure.[142]| Year | Bithumb Avg. Daily Volume (KRW) | Market Share (%) | Key Influence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 1.6 trillion | <25 (pre-rebound) | Bull market surge[143] |
| 2025 | Sustained ~1.6 trillion+ | ~25 | Promotions & listings[130][16] |