CryptoRank Report on Exchanges’ Net Reserves
Crypto research and analytic platform CryptoRank has revealed that Binance tops centralized exchanges in monthly net reserves, with a surge of $4.5 billion in net inflows. The firm also noted that Bybit recorded massive outflows, an additional $3.5 billion over the past month.
Bybit experienced huge negative monthly reserves following a hack in February. KuCoin and OKX exchanges also recorded a drop in net outflows of $464 million and $517 million, respectively. Bitfinex and HTX Global reported an increase in monthly inflows, with roughly $639 million and $585 million, respectively.
Binance Reserves Net Inflows Surge by $4.5 Billion
> Binance reserves surge by $4.5B as Bybit sees massive outflows @Binance recorded net inflows of $4.5B over the past month, while @Bybit_Official saw $3.45B in outflows following a hack situation.
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> Meanwhile, @Bitfinex and @HTX_Global reported positive inflows, in contrast to… pic.twitter.com/FZHIl4zVNm
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> — CryptoRank.io (@CryptoRank_io) March 5, 2025
Binance recorded the most monthly net reserves, with a surge of $4.5 billion in inflows last month. According to CryptoRank’s data, the exchange had about $145.13 billion in reserves at the time of publication.
Data from DeFiLlama also indicated that Binance saw up to $5.323 billion in net inflows for February. The remaining nine exchanges experienced a combined total of $1.229 billion in February net inflows, excluding Bybit, which experienced massive outflows.
Per DeFiLlama, Binance saw $1.5 billion in net inflows in just 24 hours after Bybit’s hack on February 21, totaling $3.97 billion net inflow from February 21 to 27.
In January, Binance attracted around $3.5 billion in net inflows, surpassing any full month’s inflow since November 2022. Binance reported that it has continued to record massive inflows after a challenging period marked by legal hurdles and leadership shifts. Binance paid the U.S. government a landmark $4.3 billion settlement late last year, part of a guilty plea agreement for money laundering and sanctions evasion. CEO Changpeng Zhao agreed to step down as part of the deal.
Bybit Hack Causes Massive Monthly Net Outflows
Bybit experienced massive outflows following the worst crypto hack in history by North Korean hackers, who siphoned roughly $1.4 billion worth of Ether from the exchange on February 21. The record outflows stemmed from withdrawal pressure from Bybit’s customers after the hack drained 70% of the exchange’s assets.
DeFiLlama recorded that the exchange experienced an outflow of over $6.1 billion in two days after the hack. The firm noted that the rapid outflows caused the exchange’s total assets to drop from $16.9 billion to $10.8 billion as of February 24. CryptoRank indicated that Bybit has a total of $3.63 billion in reserves at the time of publication.
Bybit’s CEO, Ben Zhou, said that the firm had managed to process all withdrawals 12 hours after the hack. He described the incident during an X Spaces session and mentioned that the hack forced the company to secure a loan.
Zhou assured Bybit’s customers that the firm was back to 100% 1:1 on client assets through the Merkle tree. The company is also preparing to publish its new audited proof-of-reserves report soon.
> “All withdrawals have been processed. Our withdrawal system is now fully back to normal pace. You can withdraw any amount and experience no delays.”
> –Ben Zhou, CEO of Bybit.
THORChain has reported unprecedented inflows following the Bybit hack, processing $4.66 billion in swaps for the week ending March 2, marking the highest volume recorded to date. The firm also exceeded the $1 billion mark in transactions on a single day.
Blockchain analytics firm Nansen linked the surge in THORChain’s activity to the February 22 hack of Bybit, believing that the hackers utilized THORChain to swap and launder the stolen funds, leading to record-breaking activity on the platform.
Lookonchain noted that the Bybit hacker has successfully laundered the entirety of the stolen ETH, using THORChain as the primary channel for the operation. They have laundered 270,000 ETH, equating to about $605 million, while the remaining 299,395 ETH ($514 million) remains in the hacker’s possession.
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