Bybit CEO dispels insolvency rumors amid $115 million user withdrawals

crypto CEO Ben Zhou has firmly denied rumors about the exchange's alleged insolvency circulating on social media.

This week, obscure social media accounts began spreading these rumors, with one user suggesting that a bug in a proof-of-reserves graph from Arkham Intelligence might have sparked the speculation.

Zhou promptly dismissed these claims, stating they were baseless. He said:

“None of the rumours that I have see so far have any real facts supporting it, please be aware.”

The CEO reinforced his point by sharing the exchange's Proof of Reserves, which showed Bybit's assets across various wallets.

The exchange's Proof of Reserves website confirms that all assets are fully collateralized, with reserves exceeding 100%. Specifically, the reserve ratios for , , USDT, and USDC are 116%, 106%, 107%, and 129%, respectively.

Furthermore, Nansen's data shows that Bybit holds over $11.3 billion in assets. However, the dashboard included a disclaimer noting that it was not intended to be a comprehensive statement of Bybit's actual reserves.

0xngmi, the pseudonymous co-founder of DeFillama, also downplayed concerns, pointing out that outflows from the platform as of May 22 were minor compared to its asset balance.

Nonetheless, DeFillama's transparency dashboard showed that Bybit users had withdrawn $115 million in from the platform as of May 23. This was the second-highest amount of withdrawals during the reporting period among the centralized platforms monitored by the crypto analytics platform.

Meanwhile, some community concerns are unsurprising, given that Bybit is facing a regulatory challenge in France. French authorities have warned crypto that Bybit is not registered as a digital asset provider in the country, adding that access to the platform's website might be blocked.

Moreover, the crypto community's distrust of centralized exchanges has increased following the high-profile collapse of in 2022. FTX, once one of the largest crypto platforms, collapsed after its leadership team was found to have misused customer funds. Its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, was convicted on criminal charges in November 2023 and received a 24-year sentence in March.

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