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BitMEX Trading Engine Back Online, Company Says [Updated]

The trading engine for BitMEX, formerly the largest bitcoin derivatives exchange by open interest, was offline for a period Tuesday.

Arthur Hayes, former CEO of BitMEX
Arthur Hayes, former CEO of BitMEX

[UPDATE 13:45 UTC] Trading on BitMEX resumed at 13:40 UTC, according to an update tweeted by exchange's official account.

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The trading engine for BitMEX, formerly the largest bitcoin derivatives exchange measured by open interest, went down on Tuesday at 12:13 UTC, according to the exchange’s status page.

BitMEX supported roughly $2.2 billion in bitcoin futures trading volume over the last 24 hours, according to Skew.

At 12:28 UTC, BitMEX updated the incident to a “major outage" and took the trading engine offline. During the incident, however, the website reported its API and web front end to be operational.

When reached for comment, BitMEX told CoinDesk its engineers are "investigating the issue to bring the platform back up as soon as possible."

In an update soon after publication of this article, the exchange said:

The BitMEX Trading Engine is currently down. We're working to bring it back online as soon as possible. We can confirm all funds are safe, delayed orders will be rejected, and no liquidations will occur during the downtime. On coming back online, there will be a cancel-only period initially.

Before Tuesday, BitMEX’s most recent outage came on March 13 when the exchange suffered a “aggressive DDoS” attack that temporarily took the exchange offline for 25 minutes, according to a postmortem.

Unlike the March incident, when bitcoin crashed to 12-month lows, bitcoin has stayed relatively stable dropping less than 1% from its daily open, according to CoinDesk's Bitcoin Price Index.

This is a developing story.

Zack Voell

Zack Voell is a financial writer with extensive experience in cryptocurrency research and technical writing. He has previously worked with leading cryptocurrency data and technology firms, including Messari and Blockstream. His work (and tweets) has appeared in The New York Times, Financial Times, The Independent and more. He owns bitcoin.

Picture of CoinDesk author Zack Voell