Coinbase Halts Bitcoin Cash Trading Abruptly After Exchange Launch

Just hours after abruptly announcing it would add support for the cryptocurrency bitcoin cash, U.S. exchange Coinbase has already moved to disable trading of its newest asset.

Announced today via a blog post to users, the decision to add the cryptocurrency, the third-largest by market capitalization, comes months after developers backing the effort cloned the bitcoin blockchain, effectively creating a competing network that claimed to enable a greater volume of transactions.

Using a mechanism called a fork, however, the project created unique complications for exchanges, as by copying bitcoin’s ledger at the time of the split, Coinbase users who owned bitcoin at the time of the split were effectively granted bitcoin cash.

As such, the sudden influx of users armed with new capital appears to have put a strain on the exchange, the most well-capitalized in the U.S. market.

At press time, buying and selling of bitcoin cash was disabled on the platform, with the last quoted price listed at nearly $9,000, more than $6,000 above the current market price of $2,900, according to data provider CoinMarketCap.

According to the exchange’s official status blog, trading was disabled after about four minutes of trading. Trading went live at 17:20 PST and was pulled back to post-only mode at 17:24, records show.

“All BCH books will enter cancel-only mode, and all existing orders will be cleared. While in cancel-only mode, no new orders will be accepted. We will post an update shortly,” the exchange wrote at 18:30 PST.

The service outage does not appear to have affected the exchange’s other assets, nor its Coinbase brokerage service, which allows users to buy and sell bitcoin, ether and litecoin.

Trading image via Shutterstock

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Disclaimer: This article should not be taken as, and is not intended to provide, investment advice. Please conduct your own thorough research before investing in any cryptocurrency.

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