Australia court fines Binance unit $6.9 million over client onboarding failures


FILE PHOTO: Representations of Binance coin cryptocurrency is seen in this illustration taken September 10, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

March 27 (Reuters) - The Australian ⁠federal court has ordered Binance's local unit to pay ⁠A$10 million ($6.9 million) for misclassifying over 85% of its ‌Australian clients that exposed them to high-risk crypto products, the country's securities regulator said on Friday.

The penalty follows a lawsuit by the Australian Securities and Investments ​Commission (ASIC) in late 2024 alleging the ⁠misclassification exposed retail investors to ⁠high-risk crypto derivatives without required protections.

Binance Australia Derivatives, part of the ⁠world's ‌largest crypto exchange by trading volume, admitted the failures in a statement of agreed facts with ASIC.

The ⁠Federal Court found that between July 2022 and April ​2023, Binance ‌Australia improperly classified 524 retail investors as wholesale clients, granting ⁠them access ​to "high-risk" cryptocurrency derivatives without required consumer protections.

That led to the misclassified client group incurring A$8.7 million in trading losses and paying A$3.9 million ⁠in fees.

Binance Australia acknowledged serious lapses ​in client onboarding and staff training that allowed users to repeatedly attempt a multiple-choice test until they achieved a score qualifying as ⁠sophisticated investors.

In one case, a client was incorrectly deemed a professional investor based solely on a self-certification as an "exempt public authority", without proper verification.

The ASIC said the penalty is in addition to ​about A$13.1 million compensation paid by Binance ⁠Australia to the affected clients in 2023.

Binance Australia in an ​email response to Reuters said, "The issue was ‌self-identified, reported to ASIC, and fully ​remediated in 2023".

($1 = 1.4491 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Kumar Tanishk in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

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