The bankruptcy filing lands. User funds get frozen. Lawyers start arguing over who owns what. For anyone who has followed crypto since 2014, the choreography is depressingly predictable. At BTC Prague 2026, Blockstream CEO Adam Back told the audience that Bitcoin markets keep replaying a script that should have been retired years ago. He pointed to the FTX collapse and, before it, Mt. Gox as evidence that the industry still refuses to adopt the basic structural safeguards that traditional finance built over centuries.
Back’s remarks, first highlighted in the original report , did not just blame bad actors. He argued that the deeper flaw is an architectural one: exchanges that commingle custody with trading, creating a single point of failure that sweeps up customer assets whenever a platform implodes. This model has no equivalent in mature capital markets, where broker-dealers, custodians, and exchanges are legally and operationally distinct. Even when a prime broker fails, client assets held at a third-party custodian are protected from the bankruptcy estate.
Crypto has ignored that separation almost from the start. Mt. Gox ran wallets and an order book inside the same corporate entity. FTX did the same, with a layer of offshore obfuscation. When the balance sheets cracked, customers became unsecured creditors, often waiting years for recovery. The pattern is so consistent that Back called it a playbook—something that keeps replaying not because it is clever, but because users and builders have not forced the system to change.
Why Traditional Markets Don’t Collapse This Way
Equity and derivatives markets learned hard lessons after the 1929 crash and again after Lehman Brothers in 2008. Custodial segregation, capital buffers, and clearinghouse protections became mandatory. A retail investor holding stocks at a broker that fails does not normally lose those stocks. The custodian simply transfers the assets to another institution. This is not a matter of trust; it is a legal framework enforced by regulators. Back’s point is that Bitcoin markets, for all their talk of being trustless, have recreated the most fragile version of centralized intermediation.
The pushback from exchanges is predictable. Many argue that integrated custody allows faster settlement and lower fees. But what users save in basis points, they can lose entirely in a Chapter 11 proceeding. The trade-off stops looking reasonable once the exchange freezes withdrawals. And yet, even after FTX, the majority of retail crypto volume still sits on platforms that control both the trading engine and the private keys.
This isn’t a quiet oversight. It’s a business model decision. Exchanges profit from the float on customer deposits, from lending out assets, and from the inability of users to easily verify on-chain reserves. Proof of reserves has been offered by some, but as a voluntary, unaudited snapshot, it often fails to capture liabilities or off-chain obligations. Back’s critique was that the industry keeps treating each meltdown as an isolated fraud case—Sam Bankman-Fried this time, some other bad actor the next—while avoiding the structural revision that would actually stop the cycle.
Regulation is not entirely absent. The U.S. legislative process has seen repeated attempts to bring exchanges under clearer custody rules, as evidenced by recent developments where Banks Are Trying to Kill the Biggest Crypto Bill in US History Four Days Before the Senate Vote . However, such efforts often stall under lobbying pressure or because lawmakers struggle to reconcile decentralized ideals with enforceable mandates.
The Custody Separation Nobody Wants
Back’s solution is straightforward: mandate that exchanges cannot hold customer assets, or at least that users have a clear, immediate path to withdraw funds into self-custody without being dragged into bankruptcy. In practice, this means forcing venues to act as pure marketplaces, not as hybrid wallet providers. Some institutional platforms already operate this way, but retail-facing giants have little incentive to adopt it voluntarily. The risk of another FTX is priced in—by shareholders and founders whose downside is capped, not by users.
What remains uncertain is whether the next wave of enforcement will target the structural problem rather than just singling out individual frauds. Regulators globally are still focused on anti-money laundering and securities classification, while the issue of exchange custody lags behind. Back’s critique suggests that even the most technically sophisticated Bitcoin community members are frustrated by how little has changed since 2014.
Part of the inertia is cultural. Bitcoin’s ethos includes “be your own bank,” but many users find self-custody intimidating. Solutions like multi-signature wallets and social recovery are improving, yet the default remains leaving coins on an exchange. That default feeds the very vulnerability Back wants to eliminate. Meanwhile, blockchain infrastructure continues to advance. As the Top 10 Blockchains by Developer Activity This Week shows, Ethereum, Solana, and others are pushing throughput and smart wallet capabilities that could make non-custodial trading more practical. But until exchanges are restructured, better technology at the base layer won’t protect funds held inside a centralized black box.
On-chain tokenization of real-world assets, as tracked in the Weekly Tokenization Roundup , is bringing more institutional capital into the space. Those inflows often require proper custody separation as a prerequisite. If tokenized Treasury funds start demanding independent custodians, it could pressure the entire industry to follow suit. But that shift will take years, and in the meantime, the playbook Back described remains ready for its next run.
The question for users isn’t whether they trust an exchange today—it’s whether they trust it in six months under market stress, and whether their assets would survive a restructure if they don’t. Back’s warning from Prague is that almost nothing in the architecture of major venues suggests the answer has changed.