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US accuses world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange Binance of mishandling funds

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US accuses world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange Binance of mishandling funds
Binance and its CEO Changpeng Zhao were sued by the SEC (Picture: REUTERS)

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has sued Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, accusing the company of mishandling customer funds.

Binance and its CEO Changpeng Zhao, commonly known by his initials ‘CZ,’ face 13 federal charges that include misleading investors, manipulating customer assets, and failing to register with the proper regulatory bodies.

The SEC accused the crypto giant of creating ‘an extensive web of deception, conflicts of interest, lack of disclosure, and calculated evasion of the law,’ SEC Chairman Gary Gensler said.

Regulators said that Zhao and Binance ‘commingle customer assets or divert customer assets as they please, including to an entity Zhao owned and controlled called Sigma Chain.’

Sigma Chain then used that money for ‘manipulative trading’ used to artificially inflate Binance’s trading volume.

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Additionally, the company faces charges of deliberately chosing to ‘evade’ US law.

In 2019, Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) banned Binance from operating in the US, due to the fact that the company failed to properly register with the agency.

In order to comply with US law, the company set up a separate, independent exchange called Binance.US.

However, the SEC has now accused the Zhao of secretly manipulating and controlling Binance.US despite its purported independence.

They also say Binance allowed certain ‘high-value US customers’ continued access to the original Binance exchange despite being banned from operating in the country.

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The complaint alleges that Zhao personally directed these moves to break US law. ‘In one instance, the Binance chief compliance officer messaged a colleague that, “[w]e are operating as a fking unlicensed securities exchange in the USA bro,”’ the SEC said.

‘We allege that Zhao and the Binance entities not only knew the rules of the road, but they also consciously chose to evade them and put their customers and investors at risk – all in an effort to maximize their own profits,’ SEC Division of Enforcement Director Gurbir S Grewal said.

The lawsuit comes months after Binance’s former top competitor FTX collapsed in part due to similar allegations of mishandling customer funds.

The company is now in bankruptcy, and its disgraced CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is now facing criminal charges for securities fraud and wire fraud.

This is a breaking story, check back for updates…

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Portland police alert public to court scam involving cryptocurrency – Newport Dispatch

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Portland police alert public to court scam involving cryptocurrency – Newport Dispatch

PORTLAND — The Portland Police Department is warning residents about a scam where callers, posing as officials from the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office, claim that the victims are in contempt of court for failing to appear as witnesses in a trial.

The scammers then demand payment of a substantial fine to avoid further charges, including arrest.

Victims are being instructed to make payments through Coinstar machines using Dogecoin or other cryptocurrencies.

The phone number used for the scam calls, when searched on Google, appears to be associated with the Cumberland County Courthouse.

Authorities urge anyone who receives such calls not to engage with the scammer.

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Instead, they should contact the courthouse directly at 207-822-4200 to verify the legitimacy of the call.

Officials have clarified that the courthouse will never request payments over the phone.

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The First Web3 RPG From Saudi Arabia Astra Nova Launches a SocialFi Platform on Immutable zkEVM – Press release Bitcoin News

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The First Web3 RPG From Saudi Arabia Astra Nova Launches a SocialFi Platform on Immutable zkEVM – Press release Bitcoin News
PRESS RELEASE. Astra Nova, the pioneering Web3 RPG from Saudi Arabia, is excited to announce the launch of its SocialFi platform, The Black Pass. This The First Web3 RPG From Saudi Arabia Astra Nova Launches a SocialFi Platform on Immutable zkEVM
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Cryptocurrency won’t go mainstream until US solves its problems, says Chainalysis CEO

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Cryptocurrency won’t go mainstream until US solves its problems, says Chainalysis CEO

Cryptocurrency may not become a fully mainstream financial instrument until concrete regulations for the highly volatile industry are drawn up and enforced by authorities in the US, the chief executive of blockchain company Chainalysis has said.

While acknowledging that current cryptocurrency frameworks are “actually pretty good and functional”, the $2.33 trillion industry’s other issues need to be addressed, especially when it comes to protecting investors and consumers, Michael Gronager told The National.

The US, the world’s biggest economy that is also considered the most important financial market as the Federal Reserve sets the global tone for interest rates – should take the lead on this, he said.

“In finance, everyone looks towards to the US first trying to figure out what’s going on, and then whether the regulation has already been created in other places first … it’ll be changed to adapt the US framework once it’s figured out,” Mr Gronager said.

“We’ve seen that in the past; we’ll see that again with crypto. So, we are kind of waiting for the US to solve some of these things and that’s where things stand today.”

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The US granted the cryptocurrency sector a major victory in January when it finally approved the country’s first spot Bitcoin ETFs, clearing the way for trading on the New York Stock Exchange, the Cboe Global Markets and the Nasdaq Composite, and making Bitcoin more accessible to retail traders.

ETFs “definitely boosted the sentiment of crypto”, Mr Gronager said.

In addition, US authorities have been vigilant in clamping down on the sector, running after irregularities and illicit activity within the ranks.

Their actions have claimed some of the biggest names, including Sam Bankman-Fried, the former chief executive of FTX who was sentenced to 25 years in prison for fraud, and former Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao, who in November pled guilty to charges related to money laundering and was handed a four-month prison sentence on April 30.

“The FTX case was so unique; it was less tied to crypto and more tied to a traditional fall because everything happened behind closed doors, and was related to how that company was run by the people behind it,” Mr Gronager said.

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“The lesson learned by the industry and regulators is that if it’s a non-regulated business in your jurisdiction and you don’t have any ways to think that your funds would be good, they’re probably not good,” he added, also noting the collapses of Three Arrows and Celsius Network in 2022.

The fates of those companies, coupled with job losses at the time, triggered the so-called cryptocurrency winter, a period in which the sector cooled down, dragging Bitcoin to below its key $20,000 psychological level in June 2022 and wiping out about $2 trillion from the digital asset industry’s market capitalisation.

“Celsius and Three Arrows were the symptoms of a way too hot finance market. And the newest kids in finance were the crypto exchanges and some crypto projects – they were definitely the ones who overleveraged completely,” Mr Gronager said.

“And some of them did it in an illegal way. And that was basically what we saw there. We also saw established venture capital firms over-leveraging their investments and getting in big trouble, but most of them actually survived it.”

For the broader finance industry, Mr Gronager believes there is a “solid and pretty good framework” that tackles money laundering and terrorist financing.

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Applied to the cryptocurrency sector, the $4.3 billion settlement between Binance and the US Department of Justice last November is an indication that authorities have taken a stance and this is being taken very seriously.

“We had all the big banks … each getting billion-dollar fines; now you’re seeing the same in the crypto space and that raises the bar, ensures compliance will be high priority, and a good understanding and responsibility of the industry,” Mr Gronager said.

Among the most notable fines imposed on financial institutions for compliance failures are JP Morgan Chase’s $2.6 billion settlement in the aftermath of the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme in 2014 and Credit Suisse’s $5.28 billion payment in 2017 for misconduct on sales of residential mortgage-backed securities.

“There’s now a price on not doing compliance or making mistakes.”

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Regulations are key to establishing trust in the cryptocurrency industry, and governments should play an active role in ensuring this, said Mr Gronager, who counts the UAE as among “the top three to five in terms of the global landscape” of finance and cryptocurrency, as well.

He said the Emirates has had “a good way of working with the [crypto] industry, ensuring that there’s adequate regulation”, at par with other global financial centres such as New York, London and Singapore.

The total value of cryptocurrency transactions in the UAE from the first quarter of 2023 to the first quarter of 2024 hit $39.2 billion, data provided by Chainalysis to The National shows.

Institutional investors, those who invest more than $1 million, made up the biggest chunk of UAE transactions with 59 per cent, while professional investors ($10,000 to $1 million) were at 39 per cent and retail investors (up to $10,000) were at 2 per cent, the data showed.

“The UAE, in general, is very advanced and sophisticated in [cryptocurrency] use cases and is probably one of the few markets where decentralised finance is more relevant than centralised exchanges, demonstrating that the level of sophistication is pretty high,” Mr Gronager said.

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Updated: May 16, 2024, 3:00 AM

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