
Every birthday is special when you’re a crypto exchange, to whom each anniversary means they’ve withstood 12 months of market forces, regulatory pressure, and determined hackers. For BitMEX to have survived 11 such anniversaries in a row, therefore, is highly impressive. It’s clearly not luck, so what’s behind the platform’s indestructibility?
The crypto industry, after all, has never been kind to businesses that stand still, as can be seen by the exchanges that come and go with every market cycle. Longevity in this sector is less a badge of honor and more a stress test: if you’re still here, it’s because you’ve been the toughest dog in the fight.
BitMEX is simultaneously celebrating its latest birthday while revisiting the choices that have kept it operational for more than a decade. These lessons are especially relevant to traders navigating the current crypto landscape. If you know what’s good for you, you’ll read and act on them cos they’re crammed with insights, including the following highlights.
BitMEX has lived through every Bitcoin cycle since 2014, during which time Bitcoin has rewarded patience far more than its rewarded precision. BitMEX attributes some of this to Bitcoin’s unusually clean origins, with no pre-allocation or venture distribution to drag the price down. It’s an old-school asset – much like the old-school exchange that gave Bitcoin its perps debut.
Perpetual swaps are so deeply embedded in crypto culture today that it’s easy to forget how strange they once seemed. A futures market without an expiry date, back then, felt like someone had removed the clock from the game. But it solved a practical problem: traders wanted directional exposure without the administrative baggage of rolling contracts and it was BitMEX who delivered it, with the real genius lying in the funding mechanism that anchors perps to the underlying price. Today, this innovation underpins trillions in annual trading volume across dozens of crypto exchanges.
It’s no secret that the safest decisions you can make – in crypto as in life – are often the least convenient. Keeping your cryptocurrency on an airgapped wallet is highly secure, for example, but it’s highly impractical if you wish to trade it. And this trade-off doesn’t just apply to users – the same is true of exchanges. BitMEX’s refusal to operate a hot wallet from day one has meant users waiting up to 24 hours for withdrawals to be processed. This approach has proven justified, however, in retrospect. Disconnect the wallet from the web, and you remove the single most common attack vector.
While other exchanges optimized for speed, BitMEX went for security. Eleven years without a hack is proof that its design worked. If moving your money is too easy, it’s probably easy for someone else to move it, too. Exchanges that have fallen by the wayside – be it due to greed, mismanagement, or external forces – include Mt. Gox and FTX, both of which receive a passing mention in BitMEX’s anniversary post.
BitMEX’s retrospective is a reminder that crypto cycles reward those who remain mindful of how quickly consensus can shift. The exchange has survived this long because it’s behaved as if every decision carried existential risk. That mindset feels increasingly relevant as new financial experiments gather momentum.
Whether it’s a dubious high-yield stablecoin – an asset class BitMEX takes aim at in its anniversary post – or an irresponsibly high-leverage new exchange, the same rules apply. If something feels too good to be true, it probably is. Having watched the rise and fall of algorithmic stablecoins and the Terra/Luna disaster, BitMEX’s key takeaway is to always be skeptical. If a project is offering yield, you need to know exactly where it’s coming from because if the mechanics are opaque, there’s a good chance you’re the exit liquidity.
BitMEX isn’t dispensing this advice to pour cold water on rival crypto sectors or products, incidentally, but because it has no desire to see users get rekt chasing the next narrative. After all, it’s not as if high-yield stablecoins are impacting its business, yet BitMEX still feels compelled to urge caution. Likewise with Digital Asset Treasuries (companies acting as Bitcoin proxies). If you want exposure to Bitcoin, BitMEX suggests you buy Bitcoin rather than a share in a company that holds it.
The overarching message from BitMEX’s anniversary article is that technology changes and token tickers rotate, but the rules for surviving the game – patience, skepticism, and security – remain the same. Speaking of games, the perps platform isn’t merely mining nostalgia in its birthday blog: it’s also using the opportunity to invite traders to its Legends competition. With a 5 BTC prize pool – plus the bragging rights for coming up trumps – there’s a lot on the line. Give it a go if you’re feeling brave – just go easy on the leverage.
With the winner earning a spot in the BitMEX Hall of Legendsimmortality beckons.
No Comments