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Coinbase Agrees to $100 Million Settlement With New York Financial Regulator for Anti-Money Laundering Violations

Coinbase Agrees to 0 Million Settlement With New York Financial Regulator for Anti-Money Laundering ViolationsCoinbase has agreed to pay a $100 million settlement with the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS), according to a consent order signed by the NYDFS superintendent Adrienne Harris on Jan. 4, 2023. New York’s financial regulator said compliance problems were detected and the exchange’s anti-money laundering controls were inadequate from 2020 through 2021. […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

CrossTower eyeing further crypto acquisitions outside of Voyager bid

CrossTower’s president said they would place extra emphasis on highly transparent and compliance-focused companies in light of the FTX collapse.

Crypto exchange CrossTower Inc., which is currently bidding for the assets of Voyager Digital, is reportedly window shopping for other crypto company acquisitions. 

In a Nov. 24 Bloomberg report, CrossTower CEO Kapil Rathi revealed that the company is looking to pick up firms with a “good set of customers” and a “good balance sheet” despite the current bear market, stating:

“We’re in a great place to either acquire entities who have a good set of customers with them and a good balance sheet [...] so we are openly looking at different types of companies from an organic growth perspective.”

In September, CrossTower was one of the companies reported to be competing to acquire the assets of bankrupt crypto lender Voyager Digital, along with FTX and Binance.

FTX Trading eventually became the winner of the Voyager bid on Sept. 27 with the sale valued at $1.4 billion.

However, with the exchange filing for bankruptcy filing on Nov. 11, Voyager reopened the bidding process and a new revised offer came from CrossTower on the same day.

“We are working on a revised offer that we feel will benefit the Voyager customers and the wider Crypto community. CrossTower has always been, and will continue to be, very community-focussed,” a spokesperson told Cointelegraph at the time, without specifying an amount.

While CrossTower has still yet to disclose any details on its latest bid for Voyager, CrossTower president Kristin Boggiano stated that Voyager’s small $3 million FTX investment wouldn’t play a factor in a potential sale for the lending platform.

CrossTower also stated that it has “minimal exposure” to FTX-related investments.

Other companies back in line to buy out Voyager’s assets include Binance and blockchain-focused venture capital firm Wave Financial, who had also expressed interest in the initial auction for Voyager's assets in September.

Related: Voyager's auction did not serve depositors' best interests, alleges Wave Financial rep

In light of recent events with FTX, Boggiano stated that the firm has now placed an extra emphasis on companies that are highly transparent and compliance-focused.

“There’s an opportunity in this market to provide a compliance focused platform and to bring the transparency and trust that people have been hoping for.”

However, Rathi said the trading platform’s risk appetite to buy out companies has leveled off with the firm looking to adopt a slightly more cautious approach over the short to mid-term.

CrossTower is a United States crypto asset exchange that was founded in 2019. It's a relatively small exchange with only $103,816 in trading volume over the last 24 hours with 13 spot markets, according to Coinmarketcap. 

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Binance Creates Global Advisory Board to Tackle Regulatory Challenges

Binance Creates Global Advisory Board to Tackle Regulatory ChallengesAn international group of experts with extensive background in public and corporate governance will advise global cryptocurrency exchange Binance on regulation. The move is an indication of Binance’s focus on compliance and collaboration with regulators, according to its management. Crypto Exchange Binance Secures Qualified Advice on Regulatory Matters Binance, the world’s leading digital asset exchange […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Central Bank of Argentina Issues New Compliance Rules for Digital Wallets

Central Bank of Argentina Issues New Compliance Rules for Digital WalletsThe Central Bank of Argentina has issued a new set of rules for operators of digital wallets in the country. Customers of companies like Uala, a wallet popular in Argentina, will now be qualified as financial users, having new protections similar to those offered by banks and other financial institutions. Central Bank of Argentina Strengthens […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Huobi to delist Monero and other privacy coins, citing regulatory pressures

The exchange cited its own token management policy and compliance efforts as primary reasons for delisting seven privacy coins.

Cryptocurrency exchange Huobi will delist seven different privacy coins from its platform as regulatory pressure mounts on anonymity-enhanced currencies (AECs).

The exchange announced that it had terminated the trading service of a number of privacy tokens including Dash (DSH), Decred (DCR), Firo (FIRO), Monero (XMR), Verge (XVG), Zcash (ZEC) and Horizen (ZEN).

These tokens will begin to be delisted on Sep. 19, while deposit services were ceased on Sep. 12 in correspondence with the announcement. Users were urged to cancel open orders for the privacy coins, while the exchange will cancel any existing orders at the delisting time and credit users spot accounts.

Related: US expansion for Huobi a step closer after it secures a FinCEN license

Huobi noted that it made efforts to meet compliance policies of more than 100 countries in which its services are available. The announcement cited efforts to comply with the latest financial regulations, as well as the company’s Token Management Rules.

Article 17(16) of its rules list addresses ‘trading concealment or suspension’, which gives Huobi Global the right to conceal or suspend token trading in the following circumstances. Clause 16 is directed at privacy coins in particular:

“The token is a privacy token, does not support offline signatures, or its node source codes are not open-sourced.”

The exchange also confirmed that it had ended trading services on its futures, margin, ETP, OTC and trading bot services. Cointelegraph has reached out to Huobi Global to ascertain the driving force behind the move and whether regulators in specific countries have necessitated the delisting of the respective privacy coins.

As Cointelegraph previously reported, privacy tokens have come under intense scrutiny in different jurisdictions around the world, with the likes of Japanese, South Korean and Australian regulators outlawing their use in recent years.

Huobi is eyeing a move into the United States market after acquiring a Money Services Business (MSB) license from the US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) in July 2022. 

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Central Bank of Uruguay Summons to Binance Due to Its Savings Focused Cryptocurrency Products

Central Bank of Uruguay Summons to Binance Due to Its Savings Focused Cryptocurrency ProductsThe Central Bank of Uruguay has issued a summon to Binance, one of the biggest exchanges in the world, due to the series of crypto-based savings products they are offering in the country. These savings products, according to the bank, can only be made through verified banking institutions or by companies that issue equity in […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Netherlands-Based Coinbase Customers Required to Submit KYC Data When Transferring Crypto off the Platform

Netherlands-Based Coinbase Customers Required to Submit KYC Data When Transferring Crypto off the PlatformCoinbase has announced that the company plans to introduce a number of changes for customers in the Netherlands in order to comply with the 1977 Sanctions Act, a law that recently applied know-your-customer (KYC) guidelines to non-custodial wallets. If the person living in the Netherlands wants to send crypto to a third-party wallet via Coinbase, […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Mercadolibre Inks Partnership With Mastercard to Secure Its Crypto Ecosystem in Brazil

Mercadolibre Inks Partnership With Mastercard to Secure Its Crypto Ecosystem in BrazilMercadolibre, one of the biggest “e-tailers” in Latam, has partnered with credit giant Mastercard to make use of its tech to secure the cryptocurrency ecosystem of the company. Through this partnership, Mercadolibre will be able to use Mastercard’s Ciphertrace technology, to allow the company to enhance the control and security of the crypto transactions in […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe

Spanish Cryptocurrency Exchange Bit2me Expands Operations to Brazil

Spanish Cryptocurrency Exchange Bit2me Expands Operations to BrazilThe Spanish cryptocurrency exchange Bit2me is taking interest in getting into the Latam market. The company has launched its operations in Brazil by introducing an office in the country that will deal with compliance issues to make the exchange a safe option for Brazilians. The exchange aims to successfully tackle the 20-million-customer market in the […]

CFTC Reportedly Subpoenas Customer Info from Coinbase Related to Polymarket Probe