AscendEX shut down on July 1, leaving some customers unsure whether they will recover their funds.
The exchange said in a July 6 notice that it does not hold authorization under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework. It also cited financial and operational pressures, including a failed strategic transaction expected to provide liquidity.
Customers can no longer use AscendEX to open accounts, deposit funds, trade, swap, stake or lend. They should retain access only to withdraw assets and complete other exit steps, provided the platform remains available, and no legal or insolvency restrictions intervene.
Withdrawal risk is separate from the MiCA shutdown
AscendEX drew a distinction between losing access to the market and processing money owed to customers.
Automated withdrawals were paused on July 6. Every request now requires manual review, including identity, sanctions, and fraud checks; asset and balance reconciliation; network availability; and any legal or insolvency requirements.
AscendEX warned that some withdrawals may be delayed, face further checks or be rejected. Customers have no firm payment date and no assurance they will recover their full balances.
The exchange has disclosed too little financial information to determine whether it is insolvent. The uncertainty leaves customers facing creditor risk as the platform winds down.
AscendEX said a counterparty failed to complete an agreed transaction intended to provide liquidity. It is assessing its financial position and warned that unresolved balances could become subject to a formal insolvency or similar process if one begins.
The gaps in AscendEX’s disclosures leave customers guessing. They do not know whether manual reviews reflect routine compliance checks, a short-term cash squeeze or a deeper hole in the exchange’s finances. AscendEX has also left unclear which legal entity holds customer assets and where any insolvency case would be handled.
It has yet to disclose how many withdrawals are waiting, how much money is tied up or when customers will hear more.
ESMA told unauthorised providers to stop onboarding EU clients after the MiCA transition ended on July 1 while allowing only the services needed for an orderly exit. AscendEX’s warning goes further by tying withdrawals to liquidity pressure and possible insolvency constraints.
Customers should stop sending deposits, review their balances, and make sure their KYC information is complete. Withdrawal requests should be submitted only through the official platform flow.
Users should also export their transaction histories and retain copies of withdrawal submissions and written complaints. Those steps preserve account records and a paper trail, but they do not guarantee processing or payment.
Public warnings and the next signals
Withdrawal concerns had circulated before the notice. On June 26, on-chain investigator ZachXBT asked AscendEX about reports of delayed or incomplete withdrawals and warned users not to deposit.
On July 6, he said multiple users had faced suspended withdrawals. His claims about wallet balances and individual losses have not been independently established.
AscendEX customers still do not know when withdrawals will resume or whether the exchange can repay them. They can file claims, but there is no timeline for receiving their assets and no guarantee they will be returned in full.
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