Binance let regular users trade like pros, triggering a $10M fine
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Binance let regular users trade like pros, triggering a $10M fine

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission said on Friday that an Australian federal court has ordered Binance’s local derivatives unit to pay A$10 million.

The penalty, as reported by Reuters, follows findings that the firm misclassified a large share of its clients, exposing them to high-risk crypto products.

The penalty follows a lawsuit filed by ASIC in late 2024, which alleged that the exchange’s classification failures allowed retail investors to trade complex crypto derivatives without the protections required under Australian financial regulations.

Binance Australia Derivatives admitted the failures in a statement of agreed facts with the regulator, acknowledging gaps in its systems and oversight during the period under review.

The case has drawn attention to how global crypto exchanges adapt their compliance frameworks to local regulatory requirements.

Client impact and financial losses

The Federal Court found that between July 2022 and April 2023, Binance Australia misclassified 524 retail investors as wholesale clients.

This classification gave them access to high-risk cryptocurrency derivatives that are typically restricted to more experienced or financially qualified users.

The misclassified group recorded A$8.7 million in trading losses during the period. They also paid A$3.9 million in fees while engaging with these products.

ASIC said the issue affected more than 85% of Binance Australia’s client base at the time.

The scale of the misclassification raised concerns about how investor categories were determined and monitored within the platform.

The findings also highlighted the potential financial harm when retail users are exposed to leveraged products without appropriate safeguards.

Onboarding gaps and verification failures

ASIC’s findings pointed to weaknesses in Binance Australia’s onboarding process and internal compliance controls.

The company acknowledged shortcomings in staff training and client verification practices that contributed to the issue.

Users were allowed to repeatedly attempt a multiple-choice assessment designed to determine whether they qualified as sophisticated investors.

This enabled some retail clients to eventually pass the test without meeting the intended standards.

In one instance, a client was classified as a professional investor based solely on a self-certification claiming status as an exempt public authority. This designation was accepted without further verification.

These failures meant that key consumer protections were not applied, allowing retail investors to access products that carried elevated levels of financial risk.

Regulators have increasingly focused on such onboarding weaknesses as a key area of enforcement across digital asset platforms.

Compensation and remediation steps

The A$10 million penalty is separate from about A$13.1 million that Binance Australia had already paid to compensate affected clients in 2023.

The company said the issue was internally identified and reported to ASIC, and that it had been fully addressed during 2023 through remediation measures and system changes.

These steps included strengthening internal controls, revising onboarding procedures, and improving staff training to prevent similar failures.

The court’s decision highlights regulatory expectations around accurate client classification, particularly for platforms offering crypto derivatives.

For ASIC, the case underscores broader concerns about investor protection in the crypto market, as access to high-risk trading products continues to expand.

It also signals that enforcement actions may intensify as regulators seek to align the sector with traditional financial standards.

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