Bitcoin cash

Analysis: Insufficient liquidity exacerbated the BCH sell-off triggered by Mt. Gox

ChainCatcher news, according to CoinDesk, based on TradingView data, Bitcoin Cash (BCH) fell 20% last week, marking its largest drop since April. This sell-off comes as the defunct exchange Mt. Gox announced it would begin repaying creditors for tokens worth approximately $9 billion that were stolen in a 2014 hack, including $73 million worth of BCH, which accounts for 20% of the token's daily trading volume.Kaiko stated that due to the expectation that Mt. Gox creditors might liquidate on a large scale, BCH holders are panic selling, and the poor liquidity on centralized exchanges (i.e., shallow order books) exacerbates this panic. In a market with low liquidity, traders find it difficult to execute large orders at stable prices, and a large buy or sell order can disproportionately impact asset prices, leading to volatility spikes.In a newsletter released on Monday, Kaiko said: "From the price slippage of simulating a $100,000 sell order for BCH, the price slippage on most exchanges has reached its highest level in over a month, indicating that liquidity is deteriorating due to insufficient order book depth for large market orders." Slippage refers to the difference between the expected price of a trade and the actual price at which the trade is executed, and a surge in slippage indicates poor market liquidity and/or high volatility. According to Kaiko, on July 5, the day Mt. Gox announced refunds, the slippage on the BCH market on Bybit rose from 0.2% to 2.8%, while on Itbit, it increased from 0.3% to 3.5%. Kaiko noted that the poor liquidity "aligns with the strong selling pressure related to the Mt. Gox repayment event, with the highest slippage increases on Itbit and Bybit." Arca's Chief Investment Officer Jeff Dorman stated that market makers have completely disappeared, similar to the situation in the credit markets of 2009-2010.
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