
Starting next week, taker orders on Binance that breach dynamic price corridors will be automatically canceled.
Binance on Tuesday announced a Spot Price Range Execution Rule (PRER) that will restrict order execution to dynamic price bands and automatically expire all taker orders with execution prices outside a specified range. The rule takes effect on April 14 with a gradual rollout across spot trading pairs.
The mechanism allows orders to execute only within dynamic price bands set around a reference price derived from recent trades, the exchange said. Unlike stop-loss or limit orders set by individual users, PRER is an exchange-level market protection mechanism applied during order matching — functionally analogous to circuit breakers on traditional stock exchanges.
The rule comes six months after the 10/10 crash, when crypto markets suffered their largest single-day liquidation event on record. The event wiped out over $19 billion in leveraged positions within 24 hours, impacting more than 1.6 million traders, triggered by President Trump’s threat of a 100% tariff on Chinese tech imports.
The crash exposed execution vulnerabilities on Binance specifically. USDe plunged to roughly $0.65 on the exchange while trading near $1 on Curve Finance, and long-dormant limit orders filled at extreme prices for assets including BNSOL and WBETH. Binance paid $283 million in compensation to affected users, followed by an additional $300 million in stablecoins and $100 million in low-interest loans under its “Together Initiative.”
A BitMEX report later characterized the episode as a microstructure failure that left order books at their thinnest since 2022.
Low liquidity conditions and the execution of long-standing limit orders contributed to trades occurring at unexpected price levels, Binance acknowledged in its PRER documentation.
PRER is the second major post-crash policy change. On January 7, Binance updated its Proof of Reserves (PoR) methodology. Previously, the reported net account balances did not include Binance’s own assets, which resulted in an inflated reserve ratio. The revised approach folds platform-held assets into the calculation, producing more conservative but more accurate ratios.
Binance’s PoR page claims that the exchange holds user assets 1:1, maintains zero debt in its capital structure, and keeps a separate SAFU emergency fund. The system uses Merkle Tree and zk-SNARK cryptographic verification, allowing individual users to confirm their balances are included without exposing personal data.
This article was written with the assistance of AI workflows. All our stories are curated, edited and fact-checked by a human.