A cluster of operational and risk-parameter updates hit MEXC in a tight window. On the plumbing side, the exchange temporarily paused deposits and withdrawals on the BRC20 network during an upgrade. On the derivatives side, MEXC reduced max leverage on select USDT-margined perpetuals and changed how often BTRUSDT funding settles. In parallel, MEXC added two Meme+ tokens across Base and BSC and announced a new USDT-M perpetual for 3KDS.
This piece focuses on the practical impact: what changes, what breaks, and what traders typically watch right after these toggles flip. It is informational and not financial advice.
MEXC said it has temporarily suspended deposits and withdrawals on the BRC20 network due to a network upgrade, without providing a public ETA in the notice itself. The exchange framed the pause narrowly around transfers, which usually implies trading can continue, but the safest assumption for users is to verify the asset network status inside the wallet UI before sending funds.
What tends to matter immediately during network pauses:
MEXC reduced ONGUSDT Futures maximum leverage from 100x to 50x, effective Jan 27, 2026, 06:05 (UTC). The exchange also warned users to adjust positions and unfilled orders to avoid unnecessary losses.
How these leverage cuts usually behave in practice:
MEXC reduced BTRUSDT Futures maximum leverage from 50x to 20x, effective Jan 27, 2026, 03:20 (UTC). The announcement includes detailed “important notes” on how different order types behave after the change, including position adjustments, limit orders, and trigger or trailing stop orders.
Key operational implications highlighted by MEXC:
MEXC also changed BTRUSDT funding settlement frequency to once every 1 hour, effective Jan 27, 2026, 04:00 (UTC), and displayed example funding timestamps starting at 05:00 (UTC) with a max funding rate of +3.00% / -3.00%. The notice explicitly states the settlement frequency may be further adjusted.
Why the cadence change matters:
MEXC added CLAWDONBASE to the Meme+ trading zone on Base, publishing a contract address and listing window. Trading was scheduled for Jan 27, 2026, 05:30 (UTC) and withdrawals for Jan 28, 2026, 05:30 (UTC), with the contract address shown as 0x9f86dB9fc6f7c9408e8Fda3Ff8ce4e78ac7a6b07. The announcement also notes Meme+ requires app version 5.1.0+.
What typically matters right after “first venue” Meme+ listings:
MEXC also listed 潜龙勿用 on Meme+ on BSC, with trading at Jan 27, 2026, 03:10 (UTC) and withdrawals at Jan 28, 2026, 03:10 (UTC). The published contract address is 0x2e591b13d3cAf27adf1dB47D75278315D0754444, and the same app-version requirement (5.1.0+) appears in the notice.
For BSC meme launches in particular, traders often watch for:
MEXC announced 3KDSUSDT would be listed on MEXC Futures (Web and App) at Jan 27, 2026, 10:10 (UTC), with leverage listed as 1-20x and both cross and isolated margin modes available. The notice also said Futures Grid Bot strategies would be available within 5 minutes of listing.
Early-perp launches often create a short-lived gap between narrative and market microstructure. The highest-signal checks tend to be:
MEXC’s latest batch of updates is a reminder that exchange risk controls and transfer rails can change quickly, even without major market headlines. The practical near-term impact concentrates in three places: transfer reliability during the BRC20 pause, forced strategy adjustments after leverage caps drop, and funding and liquidity behavior immediately after cadence or listing changes.
For users actively trading on MEXC, the most defensive posture is simple: avoid sending funds on paused networks, re-check contract settings after any leverage or funding update, and treat “first venue” Meme+ and new perp listings as high-volatility environments until liquidity and order handling stabilize.
The post MEXC Tightens Perp Risk Controls as BRC20 Transfers Pause appeared first on Crypto Adventure.
Also read: Major League Soccer Partners With Polymarket in Multi‑year Fan Engagement Deal