A single internal input error during a promotional event at South Korea’s Bithumb briefly distorted local Bitcoin pricing, creating a flash crash that never propagated to global markets.
The most striking part of this episode isn’t the price move itself, but how narrowly it was contained.
During the incident, Bitcoin on Bithumb plunged more than 10% relative to international venues, even as prices on major exchanges elsewhere remained stable.
The disruption occurred during a “Random Box” promotional campaign. Instead of crediting users with 2,000 Korean won (roughly $1.50), an internal configuration error designated the reward unit as BTC. As a result, hundreds of users were mistakenly credited with 2,000 BTC each, an amount worth roughly $133 million per account at the time.
While initial speculation suggested a smaller error, Bithumb later confirmed that approximately 620,000 BTC had been distributed across 695 user accounts, making it one of the largest operational mistakes ever recorded in crypto markets by nominal value.
Recipients attempted to liquidate the unexpected balances almost immediately. That selling pressure overwhelmed Bithumb’s local order book, forcing Bitcoin’s price on the exchange down from around 97 million won (near $66,000) to a low close to 81.11 million won (about $55,000).
This created a rare “reverse Kimchi premium,” where Korean prices traded at a steep discount to global markets. Crucially, no similar price dislocation appeared on international exchanges, highlighting that the move was driven by localized liquidity shock rather than broader market stress.
Bithumb moved to contain the situation within roughly 35 minutes, freezing trading and withdrawals on the affected accounts. By February 7, the exchange reported it had recovered 99.7% of the mistakenly credited funds, equivalent to 618,212 BTC.
Accounts tied to the incident remain restricted as Bithumb works to retrieve the remaining 1,788 BTC that were successfully sold before controls were put in place. The exchange emphasized that customer assets outside the promotion were never exposed.
Bithumb issued a public apology and stressed that the event stemmed from an internal ledger and configuration error, not a security breach or external attack. Still, the scale of the mistake drew immediate regulatory attention.
South Korea’s Financial Services Commission and other authorities have since launched on-site inspections, citing the magnitude of the operational failure rather than any evidence of compromised custody.
This incident underscores how operational controls, not just security defenses, can become single points of failure in centralized exchanges. The flash crash was violent but isolated, contained by geography, liquidity boundaries, and rapid intervention. The longer-term impact will likely be regulatory, as authorities focus less on market manipulation and more on whether internal systems are robust enough to prevent errors of this scale from ever reaching live trading environments again.
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