Coinbase saw record site traffic and a massive surge in 24-hour trading volume during last weekâs coronavirus-driven market swings, CEO Brian Armstrong said in a statement shared with CoinDesk.
The San Francisco-based crypto exchange said it processed $2 billion in crypto last Thursday and Friday (for comparison, Coinbase saw $394 million in volume over the past 24 hours, according to Bitwise). Last Thursday also beat Coinbaseâs previous traffic record by over 50 percent, Armstrong said.Â
Where other platforms experienced issues and outages, Armstrong noted that Coinbase remained operational, saying the exchange has been preparing for a crisis âfor the last couple years.â
âThis hard work contributed to our stability last week while many platforms, in both crypto and traditional equities, struggled with the increased volume,â Armstrong wrote, crediting the companyâs engineering team specifically.
Jesse Pollak, the head of engineering for Coinbaseâs consumer division, told CoinDesk in a phone call the platform has been preparing since the 2017 bull run, focusing on both the actual exchangeâs matching engine as well as consumer products such as its API.
Some of this work included horizontal scaling on the database end, Pollak said. The company said it was scaling out its databases to enable more reads without interrupting writes (meaning the exchange can view the data stored on its servers while simultaneously adding new data without either operation slowing down the other as transactions are executed).
The move comes, of course, as Coinbase and other firms deal with coronavirus-induced remote work mandates. Armstrong has for weeks publicized his exchangeâs pandemic response in a regularly updated blog series. California announced a statewide shelter-in-place order on Thursday.
Pollak said that though Coinbaseâs employees are currently remote (the exchange began implementing remote work last week in response to the COVID-19 outbreak), the engineering team used a combination of automated alerts and chatrooms to keep up with the spikes in traffic.Â
âIf weâre going to be hitting higher highs than what weâve seen, weâll generally pull together people into a hangout just have them available, ready, hanging out, chatting there, looking at all the metrics,â he said.
Still, Pollak told CoinDesk that trading platforms are complex, and a lack of mistakes doesnât necessarily mean a platform wonât experience any issues.
âFrom an engineering camaraderie perspective, I think itâs just worth highlighting that scaling products is really freaking hard, and we put a lot of work into it and I think that paid off last weekend,â he said.