Crypto exchange MEXC has launched a $100 million protection reserve to safeguard users in case of platform-level breaches or critical failures, positioning itself as one of the few players in the space offering real-time compensation for technical breakdowns or hacks.
The initiative is designed for rapid deployment without the typical delays of traditional insurance. If a security breach is confirmed, a dedicated internal team—spanning risk, compliance, and cybersecurity—will quickly assess the incident and determine compensation based on the losses.
Unlike other platforms that keep such mechanisms opaque, MEXC has made wallet addresses linked to the fund publicly available and plans to expand oversight through potential third-party audit partnerships.
The fund currently equals around 2.5% of MEXC’s daily trading volume, which recently surpassed $3.9 billion, according to CoinMarketCap data.
This move follows a string of high-profile attacks across the industry. In early 2025 alone, over $1.6 billion in crypto was stolen, most of it linked to a single exploit allegedly tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group.
MEXC’s leadership says the fund is about more than optics—it’s about accountability in an industry still grappling with persistent security threats.
As Warren Buffett edges closer to ending his six-decade reign at Berkshire Hathaway, the legendary investor has tightened his focus, placing nearly $197 billion into just a handful of stocks.
KuCoin has gone from serving Thailand’s traders remotely to operating on their home turf.
Tether, the company behind the world’s largest dollar-pegged stablecoin, has quietly expanded its footprint into the precious-metals sector.
Bitcoin and broader crypto markets may be entering a stronger phase heading into the second half of 2025, as macroeconomic risks ease and investor sentiment improves.