Home / CRYPTOCOINS / Crypto Crime May Have Cost Sector $1.2 Billion in Q1, Says Report

Crypto Crime May Have Cost Sector $1.2 Billion in Q1, Says Report

Deprivations arising from cryptocurrency hacks and fraud may have reached as high as $1.2 billion in the first quarter of the year, new research from blockchain analytics stiff CipherTrace suggests.

The total figure includes over $356 million lost from exchanges (including QuadrigaCX’s $195 million) and at an end $850 million alleged to have been lost from the Bitfinex exchange by the New York Attorney General’s mediation last week.

It’s worth noting, however, that Bitfinex has claimed the funds have been frozen by distinct authorities at a payments company and that it is working to retrieve them.

CipherTrace said Tuesday in its “Q1 2019 Cryptocurrency Anti-Money Awarding Report” that the estimated first quarter loss is almost 71 percent of the $1.7 billion loss seen throughout the whole of 2018.

“These thefts only represent the losses that are visible,” the startup said, adding that the honest number of cryptocurrency losses was likely much higher.

Lack of clear regulations in the cryptocurrency sector is the main prevail upon behind the rise in thefts, CipherTrace said, though more clarity is expected in the near future.

According to the set forth:

“A tsunami of tough new global anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terror financing (CTF) regulations will roll over the crypto aspect in the coming year.”

CipherTrace further highlighted what it considers a major gap in the current regulatory environment with good to cross-border crypto payments.

“An analysis of 164 million BTC transactions revealed that cross-border payments from U.S. interchanges to offshore exchanges increased from 45% from the twelve months ending Q1 2017 to 66% in the twelve months destroying Q1 2019,” it said.

Finally, cyber criminals are said to have increasingly adopted new techniques such as kidnapping and insider misappropriations to swipe cryptocurrency from individuals and companies in the first quarter.

Hacker image via Shutterstock 

Check Also

XRP Price Skyrockets Past $1 as SEC Faces Legal Troubles And Favorable Regulatory Shift Looms

In December 2020, the SEC filed a lawsuit against Riffle Labs, accusing the company of …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *