Spanish Exchange 2gether Blocks Operations, Affecting 100,000 Users

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2gether, one of the oldest cryptocurrency exchanges in Spain, has suddenly blocked its operations, leaving its users without access to their accounts. The platform informed it had to take this action due to the current situation of the market in an email directed to customers. In addition, the platform erased its presence from social media, deleting its account on Twitter.

2gether Reports Bear Market Woes

The current downturn in the cryptocurrency market has affected several cryptocurrency exchanges and lenders unable to return funds to customers, having declared bankruptcy, or being in the process of finding additional funding to keep operating. This time, one of the oldest cryptocurrency exchanges in Spain, 2gether, has been the one affected, blocking the access of customers to its platform.

The exchange reported this situation to its customers via an email, where it stated that due to the current market conditions, it was unable to continue to serve its customers. The company explained:

After five years of serving the crypto community, we are forced to close the private account service. The lack of resources and the crypto winter prevent us from providing the service with the quality and guarantees [with which] other nearby providers are doing it.

2gether looks to be the first Spanish cryptocurrency exchange affected in such a way by the current crypto climate.

Accounts Held Hostage

However, 2gether has not allowed its customers to withdraw their funds to other exchanges or to self-custody wallets. Instead, the company has closed its platform and has informed customers that, to keep their accounts active, each one of them will have to provide the equivalent of €20 ($20.35) to be collected by the exchange to continue operating.

Accounts that don’t have this amount of funds available by June 10th will be suspended, with the cryptocurrencies still available also being liquidated. According to reports from Asufin, the Financial Users Association of Spain, this action is affecting 100,000 customers that trusted in 2gether to make their transactions and safeguard their funds. The organization is preparing to initiate legal action in the name of all of the customers of the exchange.

This situation might be used by regulators to press for the establishment of clearer cryptocurrency regulations regarding the actions of virtual asset service providers in the country. In May, Pablo Hernandez de Coz, the Governor of the Bank of Spain, highlighted the importance of establishing such regulations in a quick way to avoid the risk of financial instability.

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What do you think about 2gether’s account blockade? Tell us in the comments section below.

Sergio Goschenko

Sergio is a cryptocurrency journalist based in Venezuela. He describes himself as late to the game, entering the cryptosphere when the price rise happened during December 2017. Having a computer engineering background, living in Venezuela, and being impacted by the cryptocurrency boom at a social level, he offers a different point of view about crypto success and how it helps the unbanked and underserved.

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