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Australia’s financial regulator cancels license for FTX’s local entity

ASIC had previously suspended FTX's license to operate in Australia, now the securities regulator has canceled it entirely.

The Australian financial services regulator has finally canceled the financial license of FTX Australia, the bankrupt crypto exchange's local subsidiary — effective July 14.

On July 19, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) announced the cancellation, before noting that FTX Australia will still be allowed to provide limited financial services while it wraps up its dealings with clients until July 12 next year.

It would still be bound to make arrangements for compensating clients until that time, the regulator said. FTX Australia had around 30,000 retail clients and serviced 132 local companies.

In November 2022, ASIC suspended FTX Australia's Australian Financial Services (AFS) license which allowed it to create derivatives and foreign exchange contracts to local clients.

The suspension came just days after the Bahamian-based FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, 2022.

The same day as FTX's bankruptcy, voluntary administrators from the Sydney-based investment and advisory firm KordaMentha were appointed to assist in restructuring FTX Australia and a subsidiary, FTX Express.

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In a report to a United States bankruptcy court last month, the restructuring chief for FTX's global entity said it had recovered around $7 billion in liquid assets but estimated a total of $8.7 billion worth of customer assets were allegedly misappropriated.

It's reported FTX could re-launch as an entirely new exchange, with its restructuring team holding talks with parties potentially interested in financially backing such a reboot.

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Dubai crypto regulator suspends BitOasis crypto exchange license

BitOasis was the first crypto exchange to get an operational license in Dubai, which has now been suspended by the local regulator for not meeting key conditions in time.

Dubai’s cryptocurrency regulator has suspended the license of crypto exchange BitOasis for not meeting mandated conditions within the timeframes set out by the authority.

On July 10, the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) issued two alerts saying its undertaken enforcement action against BitOasis and is reviewing the Dubai-based firm.

VARA said BitOasis’ conditional license, granted April 12, permitted it to operate provided the firm met “key conditions over 30-60 day timeframes” which the regulator said hadn’t been met.

VARA did not detail what conditions BitOasis failed to meet, but until it can fulfill the conditions the firm's “Licence for Institutional and Qualified Retail Investors remains ‘non-operational,’” according to the regulator.

BitOasis received the first of the city’s “minimum viable product operational licenses” from VARA allowing it to provide broker-dealer services to Dubai’s qualified institutional and retail investors according to a May blog post.

The license is the last of a multi-step process before a Full Market Product (FMP) license is issued. Currently, VARA has not issued an FMP license to any firm.

BitOasis will have to meet the conditions set out in its current license in order to apply for the FMP license, VARA explained.

Related: UAE emerges as a pro-Bitcoin mining destination in the Middle East

VARA’s latest action comes after its April reprimand of Su Zhu and Kyle Davies — the co-founders of the collapsed crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital.

The pair landed on VARA’s radar for operating and promoting their new OPNX crypto exchange in Dubai without the required license.

For BitOasis, VARA said it would “continue to monitor the situation for regulatory compliance remediation.”

Cointelegraph contacted BitOasis and VARA for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

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Coinbase gets Bermuda license, offshore exchange could launch next week: Report

It's reported the U.S.-based crypto exchange is planning to quickly launch a derivatives exchange based in the island nation.

United States-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has received a license to operate in Bermuda and it's reportedly set to launch a derivatives exchange based there as soon as next week.

According to an April 19 blog post, Coinbase revealed it had "received our regulatory license to operate from the Bermuda Monetary Authority" — the nation's financial regulator.

The license, a Class F License under the Digital Asset Business Act, allows Coinbase to conduct a range of activities such as token sales and issuance, and operate as both a digital asset exchange and as a digital asset derivatives exchange provider according to the Bermuda regulator.

An April 19 report from Forbes citing "a person close to the company" claimed Coinbase is planning to launch a derivatives exchange in Bermuda as soon as next week.

Related: Coinbase’s Base network gets OpenZeppelin security integration

The latest development is an update to Coinbase's "go broad and go deep" campaign that sees it seeking to "establish regulated entities and local operations."

It also shed light on its progress in Brazil, Canada, Singapore, Europe and the United Arab Emirates, adding:

"As we have said previously, our approach globally will be consistent with our approach in the United States: we will work with governments and regulators in different markets, and will always aim to be the most trusted and compliant crypto company in any market."

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