âItâs about the users.â
Thatâs what Binance CEO Changpeng âCZâ Zhao said in a recent CoinDesk interview following his acquisition of well-known crypto data site CoinMarketCap for a reported $400 million.Â
Launched in 2017, Binance has established itself as a juggernaut atop the crypto heap, becoming the dominant exchange by daily trading volume and running headlong into decentralized exchange (DEX) services, initial exchange offerings (IEOs) and over-the-counter (OTC) trading.
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The firmâs aggressive market moves have hardly shown signs of exhaustion either. As one CoinDesk source put it in early April, the firm is âflush with cashâ even after closing nine M&A deals in 2019 alone.
Moreover, these acquisitions have only furthered Binanceâs internal goal since Q4 2019: Bolstering its derivatives offering â catnip for seasoned crypto investors.
âIt is still the companyâs top priority in terms of the resource allocation,â Aaron Gong, Binanceâs VP of futures, told CoinDesk in a recent interview.
Binance entered the derivative game by buying the JEX exchange in September. The futures market leads in volume after only seven months of operation and now sits in contention with perennial favorites like BitMEX for most open interest, a measurement of the aggregate open long and short positions on a market.
Gong said the Binance team expected to lead trading volume in as little as 12 to 16 months after launching. Market conditions, specifically March 12âs âBlack Thursdayâ crash, would see the timetable moved forward considerably. BitMEX suffered a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack on that date â twice â forcing Arthur Hayesâ firm to briefly turn off its servers on what was the busiest trading day of the year.
Gong said BitMEXâs failure was Binanceâs boon. The exchange shortly surpassed all others for most daily trade volume, according to data provider Skew.
âWhen we had huge market movements, we often heard issues from other exchanges in terms of system overloads,â Gong said. âBut over the course of our entire first six months, we didnât have any issues.â
Binanceâs ability to somersault into the derivatives market leaderboard doesnât mean it has lost focus on retail users and its self-proclaimed desire to âexchange the world.â Rather, Binance is spreading its bets on various parts of the crypto economy and seeing what sticks.
If the CoinMarketCap deal was seen as Binanceâs attempt to capture data-hungry newbies, other investments show the multifaceted spread of the firmâs tentacles. A joint effort with peer-to-peer exchange Paxful suggests fiat-stablecoin aspirations. A strategic investment in upstart FTX represented another bet on crypto derivatives.
Of course, only time will tell which bets will pay off and which wonât. Said Gong: âWe want to bring long-term growth and improvement to the entire industry instead of just focusing on short-term goals.â