Counterparty Risk
Counterparty Risk: Trusting Others with Your Money
Counterparty risk is the chance that the other party in a financial transaction won't fulfill their obligations. In crypto, it's the difference between self-custody and hoping someone else doesn't lose your money.
Counterparty risk refers to the probability that the other party in a financial transaction will default on their contractual obligations. In cryptocurrency, this typically involves trusting exchanges, lending platforms, or other services to hold or return your funds.
How Counterparty Risk Works
Trust dependency requires relying on other parties to honor agreements, maintain security, and remain financially solvent over time.
Centralization exposure increases risk when single entities control large amounts of user funds or critical infrastructure components.
Default scenarios can result from business failure, regulatory action, fraud, security breaches, or simple mismanagement by counterparties.
[IMAGE: Counterparty risk spectrum showing self-custody (low risk) to centralized services (high risk) with various examples]
Real-World Examples
- FTX collapse wiped out billions in customer funds due to mismanagement and fraud
- Celsius bankruptcy locked user funds when the lending platform became insolvent
- Exchange hacks like Mt. Gox demonstrate security-related counterparty risks
Why Beginners Should Care
Risk assessment becomes crucial when choosing which platforms to trust with your cryptocurrency holdings and transactions.
Diversification strategies can reduce counterparty risk by spreading funds across multiple platforms rather than concentrating exposure.
Self-custody benefits eliminate counterparty risk for storage but require taking responsibility for your own security and key management.
Related Terms: Custodial Wallet, Cold Storage, Exchange, Self-Custody
