FCoin — $130 Million Deficit, Exchange Closed, Founder Disappeared
Summary
FCoin, a Chinese cryptocurrency exchange founded in May 2018 by Zhang Jian, a former chief technology officer of Huobi, permanently closed on February 17, 2020, after Zhang publicly announced that the exchange had accumulated a deficit of between 7,000 and 13,000 Bitcoin — worth up to $130 million at prevailing prices — which it was unable to cover. Zhang attributed the deficit to compounding errors in FCoin's signature innovation, a "transaction-fee mining" reward model, combined with treasury management failures and an undisclosed buyback programme for the exchange's native token. The platform did not suffer a hack, and Zhang did not immediately flee in the manner of a conventional exit-scam operator; he published an extended written explanation and stated his intention to use proceeds from future ventures to repay users. He then became effectively unreachable.
Users were paid nothing. Blockchain researchers at AnChain.AI reported in February 2020 that funds had been moved from FCoin's cold wallets to unknown accounts in the days before the closure announcement, raising the question of whether the deficit narrative was genuine insolvency or a cover for a planned exit. Chinese authorities investigated but no formal criminal charges against Zhang have been publicly confirmed in Chinese or international legal records as of this writing. Zhang's whereabouts and legal status remain undisclosed.
FCoin occupies an unusual position in the taxonomy of crypto custody failures: it sits in the contested territory between catastrophic negligence and deliberate fraud. The factual record supports both readings. This entry presents the documented facts and notes where the record is genuinely ambiguous.
Timeline
The Trans-Fee Mining Experiment
FCoin arrived at a moment when cryptocurrency exchange competition was intensifying rapidly. Zhang Jian, whose background was technical rather than financial, designed FCoin around a structural innovation intended to solve the liquidity bootstrapping problem: trans-fee mining.
Users who traded on FCoin received FCoin's native token FT in an amount equal to 100% of their trading fees — making trading free, effectively. FCoin then distributed 80% of its daily revenue pro-rata to FT holders as a dividend. The model drove FCoin's reported volumes to briefly rank among the world's highest. Economists and analysts noted the structural problem at launch: as FT was distributed in ever-larger quantities, the dividend per unit fell, and the total pool of dividend-entitled tokens was growing faster than the revenue base could sustain. The model also incentivised wash trading, since volume generated FT regardless of whether the underlying trades were economically genuine.
Zhang later acknowledged that a programming error compounded the structural problem by distributing more FT than users had actually earned, beginning in mid-2018, without a back-end audit system in place to detect the discrepancy. He dated the implementation of an adequate audit system to mid-2019 — approximately a year after the error began. During that gap, FCoin's reserve position deteriorated below its stated liabilities, and the undisclosed FT buyback programme widened the gap further.
The Disclosure That Raised More Questions Than It Answered
When Zhang published his February 17, 2020 closure notice, it was unusual in crypto-fraud history for its apparent transparency. He named specific figures — 7,000 to 13,000 BTC — and attributed specific causes: the mining reward errors, the audit gap, and the FT buyback losses. He did not announce a hack or claim the exchange had been externally compromised. He explicitly said the situation was not an exit scam.
The AnChain.AI cold wallet analysis, published in the same week, challenged that framing directly. The research identified on-chain transactions in the days before February 17 in which funds moved from wallets associated with FCoin to accounts that had no documented relationship to the exchange's operating structure. The timing — disbursements from cold wallets immediately before the announcement of insolvency — is the pattern one would expect if an operator were positioning assets before announcing closure, rather than disclosing an insolvency they had only just identified.
Zhang did not provide a public response to the AnChain.AI analysis. He published one follow-up post, stated that FCoin intended to reopen and that he would personally process withdrawal requests via email, and then became effectively unreachable. The email process produced no documented recoveries at scale. No independent auditor reviewed or certified the figures Zhang provided. Users who had deposited funds into FCoin were left to accept the deficit explanation or the exit-scam hypothesis, with no evidentiary basis to definitively resolve the question.
The distinction matters legally as well as morally. If Zhang's account is accurate, FCoin's collapse was the result of gross negligence — operating a financial platform without adequate accounting systems, making treasury decisions (the buybacks) without disclosure, and distributing a liability-generating token at scale without understanding the structural consequences. That is serious and potentially actionable, but it is different in kind from deliberate misappropriation. If the AnChain.AI analysis correctly identifies a planned exit, the deficit narrative was a constructed cover, and the conduct is straightforwardly criminal. The available evidence supports both readings without conclusively establishing either.
What Users Lost and What Followed
The users who held balances on FCoin at closure came from a predominantly Chinese retail investor base, with a secondary international audience drawn by FCoin's high-volume period and the FT dividend promise. The 7,000–13,000 BTC shortfall — approximately $125–130 million at February 2020 prices — represented the documented gap between what FCoin owed users and what it held. Many had deposited cryptocurrency directly; others held FT acquired on secondary markets.
Zhang's stated repayment plan — proceeds from future ventures, disbursed via email — produced no verified distributions. The mechanism required users to trust the same operator whose platform had just failed. No user group publicly confirmed receiving material recovery through that channel. Chinese authorities investigated, but no formal charges have been confirmed in publicly available records. Zhang's location remains undisclosed.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
FCoin has not reopened. Zhang Jian's location and legal status are not publicly confirmed. China's progressive restrictions on cryptocurrency trading culminated in a comprehensive ban in September 2021, eliminating the regulatory environment in which FCoin had operated. Whether Zhang has faced Chinese criminal proceedings is not established in publicly available records.
No material distribution to users has been documented. The $125–130 million owed at closure represents a permanent loss.
FCoin's trans-fee mining model had broader market consequences. Several competing exchanges adopted similar structures in 2018, and the structural weaknesses Zhang later identified — escalating token liability, wash-trading incentives, revenue-dividend mismatches — affected those platforms as well. The collapse contributed to the industry's understanding of why fee-mining models are not sustainable. The case is also a reference point for the difficulty of distinguishing structured insolvency from deliberate misappropriation when the same operator controls both accounting records and cold wallets.
Lessons
- An exchange that rewards trading with its own tokens and distributes revenue to those token holders is creating a liability that grows as a function of volume. Before depositing on any exchange with this structure, understand whether the model has been subjected to independent actuarial review and whether the token distribution is capped or unbounded.
- No audited proof-of-reserves means no verified custody. FCoin operated without an external audit of its reserve position for its entire operational life. A deficit of this scale — detectable through standard accounting reconciliation — is not discovered only at closure unless the accounting systems were deliberately absent or inadequate.
- An operator who announces insolvency with detailed internal figures, states a repayment plan, and then becomes unreachable has not discharged any obligation to creditors. The publication of a detailed narrative account is not evidence of good faith; it is consistent with both genuine disclosure and with constructing a record that frames liability as negligence rather than fraud.
- On-chain analysis at the time of closure announcement should be treated as primary evidence. The AnChain.AI cold wallet transactions, visible on the blockchain, provided contemporaneous evidence of fund movements that neither confirmed nor refuted Zhang's account — but the existence of those transactions was a documented fact that should have been given greater weight in subsequent assessments.
- Founding credentials and institutional affiliations are not evidence of financial governance competence. Technical expertise at a prior employer, or any other form of professional biography, does not substitute for mandatory audit, independent custody, and verified proof-of-reserves.
References
- Crypto Exchange FCoin Insolvent After Revealing Up to $130M Bitcoin Shortfall CoinDesk, February 17, 2020
- Inside the $130 Million Meltdown of China's FCoin Exchange Decrypt, February 2020
- China's FCoin Plans to Reopen, Return $130 Million in Missing Bitcoin Decrypt, February 2020
- Chinese Exchange FCoin Closes Down, Still Owes Users $125 Million CoinTelegraph, February 2020
- Trans-Fee Mining Crypto Exchange FCoin Insolvent After Mistakenly Being Too Generous CryptoGlobe, February 2020