ETH’s rebound is outpacing BTC’s as markets stabilize, with high-beta plays like Solana and Bittensor joining the bounce. One working theory suggests Friday’s meltdown wasn’t about stablecoin fragility — it was a structural failure on Binance.
By Sam Reynolds, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
Oct 13, 2025, 2:04 a.m.

- Bitcoin steadied around $115,000 after a historic crypto liquidation event, while Ether rose to $4,150, recovering from Friday’s lows.
- Binance faced criticism for a pricing flaw that led to a localized collapse, triggering forced liquidations and a temporary depeg of USDe.
- Gold surged to a record high amid escalating U.S.–China trade tensions and expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts.
Welcome to Asia Morning Briefing, a daily summary of top stories during U.S. hours and an overview of market moves and analysis. For a detailed overview of U.S. markets, see CoinDesk’s Crypto Daybook Americas.
Bitcoin is trading at $115,157, steady after a volatile weekend which began with the largest crypto liquidation event in history, while Ether rose to $4,146, extending its recovery from Friday’s lows near $3,700.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Elsewhere, Solana gained 11% to $196, Bittensor surged 28%, and Cronos jumped 11%, according to CoinDesk market data, as capital rotated back into high-beta assets following a $20 billion leverage flush. Both Washington and Beijing worked to cool down trade tensions over the weekend, helping the recovery.
Bitwise’s Jonathan Man points to positioning as the key factor: leverage was stretched across long-tail tokens, so when liquidity vanished, the wipeout was severe — but it cleared the decks for a faster reset.
Staking also played a secondary role in cushioning the decline. With nearly 30% of ETH supply locked in validators but only a quarter of that circulating as liquid staking derivatives, the network’s structure created friction that slowed panic selling. Even as derivatives unwound, validator capital stayed put, blunting what could have been a full liquidity spiral.
But as postmortems roll in, many fingers are pointing at Binance.
Dragonfly’s Haseeb Qureshi questions if Ethena really depegged, arguing that instead $60–$90 million in USDe, along with wBETH and BNSOL, was dumped on Binance, exploiting a pricing flaw that valued collateral using Binance’s own order book instead of external oracles.
As Binance’s infrastructure buckled under heavy load, market makers were unable to hedge or rebalance positions, the thesis goes, causing wrapped assets to decouple from their underlying prices and deepening the selloff.
The localized collapse drove USDe to $0.65 on Binance only, while it held near $1 on Curve and Bybit. Because Binance’s unified margin system marked collateral to its internal prices, the drop instantly wiped out hundreds of millions in margin value, triggering forced liquidations across assets.
Ethena’s USDe protocol remained fully collateralized and redeemable throughout, suggesting the chaos was an exchange-side failure, not a stablecoin depeg.
Binance has since acknowledged “platform-related issues,” moved to oracle-based collateral pricing, and pledged compensation for affected traders.
In hindsight, Friday’s crash looks less like a stablecoin panic and more like a masterclass in exploiting an exchange’s weakest structural link.
In a post on X, Yi He, Binance’s co-founder and chief customer service officer admitted that the exchange had brief service delays and temporary depegs in some yield products but said these occurred after the broader market drop. Binance added that over $280 million in compensation has already been paid to affected users and reaffirmed that it will not cover ordinary market losses.
For now, crypto’s cleanout has given way to a measured rebound, one led by the assets that fell hardest and reset the deepest.
BTC: Bitcoin steadied around $115,000 after falling nearly 9% on Friday and recovering about 4% over the weekend as traders unwound shorts and broader risk sentiment began to stabilize.
ETH: Ether rebounded to about $4,150 after dropping nearly 17% on Friday, recovering faster than Bitcoin as leveraged positions cleared and DeFi activity picked back up.
Gold: Gold surged to a record $4,059.87 per ounce in early Asian trading on Monday as escalating U.S.–China trade tensions, renewed geopolitical risks, and expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts fueled demand for safe-haven assets.
AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
More For You
Sep 9, 2025
Combined spot and derivatives trading on centralized exchanges surged 7.58% to $9.72 trillion in August, marking the highest monthly volume of 2025
What to know:
- Combined spot and derivatives trading on centralized exchanges surged 7.58% to $9.72 trillion in August, marking the highest monthly volume of 2025
- Gate exchange emerged as major player with 98.9% volume surge to $746 billion, overtaking Bitget to become fourth-largest platform
- Open interest across centralized derivatives exchanges rose 4.92% to $187 billion
More For You
By Siamak Masnavi, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
5 hours ago
Paolo Ardoino’s latest comment about bitcoin and gold echoes Tether’s policy of buying BTC with profits and building up gold exposure.
What to know:
- Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino wrote on X that “bitcoin and gold will outlast any other currency,” echoing Tether’s reserve stance.
- Tether said in May 2023 it would use up to 15% of realized operating profits to buy bitcoin for reserves and later detailed growing gold backing for XAUt.
- Ardoino has linked the two assets before and has rejected claims Tether sold BTC to add gold; investors now await the next attestation.