Close Menu
  • Coins
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoins
    • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • DeFi
  • Metaverse
  • Regulation
  • Other
    • Exchanges
    • ICO
    • GameFi
    • Mining
    • Legal
  • MarketCap
What's Hot

ETH Surges to $3,000 — Is There More Upside Ahead? (Ethereum Price Analysis)

13/07/2025

What Will Happen If Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Steps Down? Jefferies Chief Market Strategist Explains

13/07/2025

Solana Compass flags underperforming validators

13/07/2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Back to NBTC homepage
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
X (Twitter) Telegram Facebook LinkedIn RSS
NBTC News
  • Coins
    1. Bitcoin
    2. Ethereum
    3. Altcoins
    4. NFT
    5. View All

    Why Bitcoin Skepticism Persists Even as Mainstream Adoption Grows: Adam Back

    13/07/2025

    Bitcoin Rainbow chart predicts BTC price for June 1, 2025

    13/07/2025

    Demand outmints supply, who’s to blame?

    13/07/2025

    Bitcoin Long-Term Holders Data Hint When the Next All-Time High Might Be

    13/07/2025

    ETH Surges to $3,000 — Is There More Upside Ahead? (Ethereum Price Analysis)

    13/07/2025

    Ethereum ETFs See Inflow Surge as BlackRock’s ETHA Draws in Record $300M in a Day

    13/07/2025

    Ethereum Price Surge Forces Whale to Dump 2,000 ETH Tokens, Realizes $2.59 Million Loss

    13/07/2025

    Unprecedented 29.26% of ETH Supply Staked

    13/07/2025

    Solana Compass flags underperforming validators

    13/07/2025

    SHIB Burns Skyrocket 116,757 %

    13/07/2025

    Cardano Founder Proposes Ecosystem Treasury for ADA, Midnight, and The Top 50 Native Tokens

    13/07/2025

    AP Token Price Explodes as Elon Musk Unveils America Party Plans

    13/07/2025

    Volume Plunges While Transactions Soar

    11/07/2025

    Snoop Dogg’s TON NFT Launch Could Signal New Narrative for NFT Market

    10/07/2025

    Snoop Dogg’s Telegram NFT Drop Sold Out in Half an Hour

    10/07/2025

    Why a ‘Mobile-First’ Mentality Drove OpenSea’s Latest Acquisition

    09/07/2025

    ETH Surges to $3,000 — Is There More Upside Ahead? (Ethereum Price Analysis)

    13/07/2025

    What Will Happen If Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Steps Down? Jefferies Chief Market Strategist Explains

    13/07/2025

    Solana Compass flags underperforming validators

    13/07/2025

    Why Bitcoin Skepticism Persists Even as Mainstream Adoption Grows: Adam Back

    13/07/2025
  • Blockchain

    Bullish is migrating its entire trading, custody, and settlement infrastructure to Solana

    13/07/2025

    Stability World AI Joins Forces with BearFAI to Revolutionize AI Utility Across Web3

    13/07/2025

    Logic Meets Modularity in this Big Partnership

    13/07/2025

    Band Protocol Unveils V3, A New Era of Multichain and Lightning-fast Data for Web3

    13/07/2025

    All Franklin Templeton products will one day be onchain, exec says

    12/07/2025
  • DeFi

    Nasdaq-Listed Firm Secures $200M in Financing, with Over $150M Tied to Solana Treasury Strategy

    12/07/2025

    TaskOn Partners DEXTools to Bolster Web3 Community Participation

    12/07/2025

    InceptionLRT is shutting down just six months after raising $3.5 million in seed funding

    12/07/2025

    Aave gains 18% weekly amid ecosystem growth, stablecoin dominance

    12/07/2025

    Plume Launches SkyLink on TRON to Enable Real-World Asset Yields

    11/07/2025
  • Metaverse

    Elon Musk’s xAI Quietly Fixed Grok by Deleting a Line of Code

    09/07/2025

    Bonk.fun Grabs 55% of Solana Token Issuance Share, Pushes BONK Demand

    08/07/2025

    Apple’s Top AI Exec Leaves For Meta Amid Aggressive Hiring Trend

    08/07/2025

    Automobili Lamborghini Unveils Digital Temerario and GT3 NFTs in Wilder World

    07/07/2025

    Microsoft’s AI Diagnoses Like House, Bills Like Costco

    02/07/2025
  • Regulation

    What Will Happen If Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Steps Down? Jefferies Chief Market Strategist Explains

    13/07/2025

    One of the United States’ Most Renowned Financial Experts, Ric Edelman, Reveals His Major Shift in Opinion on Bitcoin and Cryptocurrencies – “Now I…

    13/07/2025

    DePIN Project dKloud Secures Revolutionary $3.15M Funding Boost

    13/07/2025

    Israel Will Buy BTC and ETH and Give it to a Gambling Offender

    13/07/2025

    Coinbase CEO Reacts to Major Crypto Institutional Milestone: Details

    13/07/2025
  • Other
    1. Exchanges
    2. ICO
    3. GameFi
    4. Mining
    5. Legal
    6. View All

    Coinbase Lists 4 New Cryptocurrencies After Securing License in New York

    12/07/2025

    Cumberland Unveils Massive 13,100 ETH Withdrawal from Binance

    12/07/2025

    Robinhood Says OpenAI Stock Tokens Backed by Special Purpose Vehicle

    12/07/2025

    Aevo unveils platform offering 1000x leverage on select stocks like MSTR and CRCL

    12/07/2025

    ICO for bitcoin yield farming chain Corn screams we’re so back

    22/01/2025

    Why 2025 Will See the Comeback of the ICO

    26/12/2024

    Why Are So Many Crypto Games Shutting Down? Experts Weigh In

    12/07/2025

    The Real Lifestyle and WILDGO Partner to Transform Tokenized Real Estate

    12/07/2025

    Blazpay and Onmi AR Unite to Elevate Web3 Gaming Experience

    10/07/2025

    Floki’s Valhalla Surpasses 100K Veras Minted Within Days of Launch

    09/07/2025

    Q3 Bitcoin Mining Map Exposes Silent Surge in Russia, China, While US Dips Slightly

    13/07/2025

    Another BTC Mining Firm Moves Into Ethereum Reserve, Hailing ETH as ‘Digital Gold’

    13/07/2025

    CKpool rolls out low-latency pool after solo miner racks up 3.175 BTC reward

    13/07/2025

    CoreWeave Fusion Dance, $1 Billion Day for Bitcoin ETFs and Strategy’s Bye Week

    12/07/2025

    Crypto traders ‘talking to lawyers’ over Polymarket’s Zelenskyy suit bet

    12/07/2025

    US Senate targets Bukele’s El Salvador, bill calls to sanction BTC strategy

    12/07/2025

    Tornado Cash Judge Won’t Let One Case Be Mentioned in Roman Storm’s Trial: Here’s Why

    12/07/2025

    Trump Ally Compares Crypto Industry Writing Its Own Rules to Spilled ‘Urine Sample’

    12/07/2025

    ETH Surges to $3,000 — Is There More Upside Ahead? (Ethereum Price Analysis)

    13/07/2025

    What Will Happen If Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Steps Down? Jefferies Chief Market Strategist Explains

    13/07/2025

    Solana Compass flags underperforming validators

    13/07/2025

    Why Bitcoin Skepticism Persists Even as Mainstream Adoption Grows: Adam Back

    13/07/2025
  • MarketCap
NBTC News
Home»Blockchain»The BitVM Liquidity Crunch Issue
Blockchain

The BitVM Liquidity Crunch Issue

NBTCBy NBTC10/04/2024No Comments11 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


BitVM has recently come under some scrutiny after the Taproot Wizards, Tyler and Rijndael, posted their criticism of the liquidity requirements imposed on the operator of a BitVM based two-way peg. In all the recent discussions around BitVM based layer two solutions, I had taken for granted that people discussing them and interested in the design space understood the collateralization/liquidity requirements imposed by the architecture on the operator(s). The recent discussion around the “liquidity crunch” issue shows me I was incorrect about this assumption, and that many people outside of those actively involved in BitVM development were not aware of this issue.

Before I go into the liquidity crunch issue, I think it’s important to clarify one of the unique properties of a BitVM peg (called bridges by altcoin developers). In bridges built on other networks, the funds held in the actual bridge contract controlling the movement of funds between networks are what is used to actually process withdrawals. In the case of a BitVM peg, these funds are not accessible in order to fulfill withdrawals. The operator of the system (rollup, sidechain, etc.) must actually front their own liquidity in order to process user withdrawal requests.

As user withdrawal requests come in, the operator actually moving the rollup state forward looks at every request, and processes those withdrawals using their own personal funds. After a period, the system then check-points its state in a cutoff committing to all pending withdrawals. After the operator has fulfilled all pending withdrawals from the last state they can then engage in a claim process from the BitVM secured funds to make themselves whole for all the capital they have fronted. The BitVM contract is established so that operators can have their ability to claim these funds revoked if they have not honored all pending withdrawals from the last state.

So the general user flow is a deposit goes into a contract secured by BitVM, the operator fronts their own capital to process withdrawals, and then periodically the operator compensates themselves for the money they’ve spent out of pocket from the BitVM contract. This sets a BitVM peg apart from any other type of two way peg, introducing a liquidity requirement similar to the Lightning Network.

The Liquidity Crunch

The problem that Taproot Wizards identified in their write up is a result of the combination of the up-front liquidity requirements imposed on the operator and the fraud proof scheme that allows the verifiers of the BitVM to revoke the operator’s access to funds if they have not fulfilled all withdrawals in a given rollup epoch. This creates a big potential problem for the system, and particularly for the operator.

For now let’s completely ignore the potential scenario of an operator intentionally refusing to process a withdrawal due to malicious censorship. That is not a concern for now in looking at the potential problems, as if an operator did such a thing, they should have their access revoked and incur the loss of whatever funds they have already spent on processing withdrawals.

It is absolutely possible for an honest operator to run into a situation where, through no malicious intent on their part, they do not have access to enough liquidity to process the withdrawals pending in a single rollup epoch. If this were to occur, then an otherwise honest operator can now not compensate themselves from the BitVM contract for what they have processed without opening themselves up to a single verifier challenging them and resulting in them permanently losing access to the funds. Everything that they have spent processing withdrawals in that epoch would be lost funds they could not recover.

This creates a big risk for a peg operator. Through no malicious action at all, simply through limitations of their own funds, interest rates increasing in borrowing funds, just factors of time required to access funds, they can lose a massive amount of money. This introduces a big potential instability in the peg, and it also begs the question where does the users’ money go in the event of an operator being hit with a fraud proof?

The Options

The important thing to note is that where the ultimate dead end destination of funds is depends on particular design choices made by the implementers of any given peg. There is a good degree of freedom available in design choices, the end destination of funds after a challenge ejects an operator has multiple options, the period after an epoch end that an operator has to fulfill all withdraws is configurable, none of these things are set in stone as a single possible way to configure them.

So now that we understand the problem let’s look at some potential solutions.

Throttling

You could address the issue by throttling withdrawals. This would entail creating a maximum limit of funds that an operator could be bound by the contract to fulfill in any given rollup epoch. This would allow the operator to ensure that they had enough capital in order to process the maximum amount they have to. Each period the operator could process that many withdrawals, go through the claim process to compensate themselves from the BitVM contract, and then in the next epoch recycle that amount to fulfill the next wave of withdrawals.

The problem with this is you don’t know when a large uptick in funds pegged into the system will occur, and you also don’t know when market activity will align to incentivize a massive amount of money to want to peg out of the system. As more funds are pegged in, the possibility of a large increase in the volume wanted to peg out at once increases. This dynamic essentially leads to an ever growing queue to get out of the system unless you increase the maximum epoch withdrawal amount, which also increases the liquidity requirements for the operator.

This exacerbates the liquidity requirement these pegs have, and essentially creates a huge friction to withdrawals. Swap outs do not solve the issue, as this ultimately traps the counterparties liquidity in this ever growing queue, unlike other two way pegs where they could exit practically immediately after facilitating the swap.

Multiple Operators

Both BitVM 1 and BitVM 2 support having multiple verifiers in different ways, allowing more than one more to participate and be capable of revoking an operator’s access to funds. It is also possible in BitVM 2 (and some BitVM based pegs such as the Citrea rollup) to have multiple operators working in parallel. More than one entity can help process withdrawals from the peg, so multiple pools of liquidity are available to facilitate the peg.

This would in principle make the entire liquidity dynamic much more scalable, as it would no longer be limited to a single entity having to front the liquidity to facilitate timely withdrawals from the system, but it introduces questions of complexity. Each UTXO deposited into the BitVM peg and bound by the contract needs to have the terms of claiming defined. That contract needs to now be able to distinguish between multiple operators, and ensure a means of distinguishing which withdrawals are associated to which operator, and ensure they can only claim what they have facilitated rather than funds meant for a different operator.

It also needs to take into account how to handle the global withdrawal demand that all operators exist to facilitate. What if every operator has used all the capital they have, but there is still unmet demand? Do they all have access to BitVM funds revoked? None of them? Is there some rollover grace period similar to having a queue throttle? If there is, who is responsible if those withdrawals still aren’t facilitated the next epoch? These are all things that need to be concretely worked out.

Multiple Linear Operators

In addition to having multiple parallel operators, you could have a chain of linear operators. A single operator could function at a time, facilitating withdrawals, and if they were to ever run into a liquidity problem and had their access revoked from the BitVM funds the funds after a challenge/revocation process could be immediately sent to a new BitVM with a new operator. This would not address at all the risk of a single operator suffering a liquidity crunch, and they would realize the loss of whatever withdrawals they already deposited, but it would ensure someone else could step in and have a chance to continue facilitating withdrawals with the ability to claim compensation from the BitVM.

This however adds a good deal of cost to the peg-in process. Generating a BitVM instance is not cheap in terms of data and interactivity, meaning that to chain linear BitVM operators together like this, you must generate for peg-ins that number of BitVMs.

The Backstop

In all of the cases of any peg using BitVM, there is one ultimate question: where do the funds eventually go in the worst case failure? There are ultimately two options. Either you actually burn the funds, or you put them under the control of a verifier. The first means that users’ funds are now destroyed, and everyone holding funds in the peg is now rugged. The second means that the trust model has shifted outright to trusting an individual verifier or group of verifiers in a federation who unilaterally control the funds.

Burning the funds is a non-starter in a model without a withdrawal throttle, as that would validate the worst-case scenario concerns voiced by Taproot Wizards. A consistent failure case of operators, regardless of parallel or linear, would result in users’ funds actually being destroyed. The only model this would be remotely safe in, would be with a withdrawal throttle; but even then if the operator(s) defined by the contract were to disappear or have their access revoked, the risk of permanent fund loss would still exist.

So that leaves putting the funds back under the control of a single verifier or a group of them. In the event of a total failure of all operators, this would allow the verifier(s) involved in the system to recover users’ funds and make them whole. I don’t think this is that bad.

Every BitVM instance is set up with an n-of-n multisig that handles signing all the pre-signed transactions involved in the BitVM contract. The ultimate root security model of the entire scheme is that a single one of those key holders must remain honest, and refuse to sign a dishonest dispersion of funds, in order for the system to be secure.

That same security model can be applied to where funds go (minus the operator(s)) in the event of a total operator failure. That introduces the risk of a single key being lost or not cooperating burning funds though, so you could also just make it a conventional m-of-n multisig.

I see no problem in this type of set up at all, it accomplishes the goal of ensuring users’ funds are not irrevocably burned without creating a wild alteration to the trust model. Ultimately if you are not a direct participant of the BitVM contract, i.e. holding one of those n-of-n keys yourself, you are still trusting a federation of some sort. Only needing to trust a single member to be honest to keep things safe is obviously superior to having to trust 3 people in a 5-of-7 multisig, but it is still a form of delegated trust.

Wrapping Up

At the end of the day, I think the liquidity crunch issue identified by Taproot Wizards is a very legitimate issue. Depending on the specific architecture of the peg in question, it could introduce problems from completely burning users’ funds, to losing operators’ funds even without malicious action, to simply creating an ever growing queue to exit without either halting deposits or falling back on the n-of-n group to bypass the queue.

It is not however, in my opinion, something that means the idea of using BitVM to secure a two way peg is a fundamentally broken idea. I think I’ve laid out a good number of ways that specific implementations could backstop or mitigate the issue, and ultimately the reality of the n-of-n group existing and the potential to push funds in a failure case to a delegated group to handle withdrawals could address the risk of permanent loss of funds.

As a last note, the pace of development in this space has hit a pace in the last year or so that I have never seen in my time here, I think it is important when discussing these developments to step back and keep a calm head while looking at the discussions that occur over trade-offs and risks. Yes, public perception is an aspect of these conversations happening in public, but these discussions should be rooted in the goal of arriving at an accurate understanding of the issues at hand. That should not take a backseat to trying to illicit or defend any particular public perception first.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
NBTC

Related Posts

Bullish is migrating its entire trading, custody, and settlement infrastructure to Solana

13/07/2025

Stability World AI Joins Forces with BearFAI to Revolutionize AI Utility Across Web3

13/07/2025

Logic Meets Modularity in this Big Partnership

13/07/2025

Band Protocol Unveils V3, A New Era of Multichain and Lightning-fast Data for Web3

13/07/2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Top Posts
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Your source for the serious news. This website is crafted specifically to for crazy and hot cryptonews. Visit our main page for more tons of news.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Top Insights

ETH Surges to $3,000 — Is There More Upside Ahead? (Ethereum Price Analysis)

13/07/2025

What Will Happen If Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Steps Down? Jefferies Chief Market Strategist Explains

13/07/2025

Solana Compass flags underperforming validators

13/07/2025
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.