Exclusive-Binance set to lose EU licence bid, permission to offer services in the bloc, sources say
FRANKFURT, June 16 (Reuters) - Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange, is set to lose permission โto offer services to European Union clients within weeks as โits application for a licence is about to be turned down, two people familiar with โthe matter told Reuters. Under
FRANKFURT, June 16 (Reuters) - Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange, is set to lose permission โto offer services to European Union clients within weeks as โits application for a licence is about to be turned down, two people familiar with โthe matter told Reuters.
Under new EU rules, called MiCA, crypto companies have until the end of June to obtain a licence to allow them to continue operating across the bloc. Binance's application, which was made to โGreece's market regulator, is โ set to be rejected, the people said.
A representative for the Hellenic Capital Market Commission declined to comment on โ Binance's licence application, citing confidentiality rules. Without a licence, Binance would not qualify to continue operating in the EU from the start of July.
A Binance โspokesperson โsaid it has been pursuing a โMiCA licence and has worked โconstructively with regulators over the past 18 months, including through a comprehensive application process with Greece's HCMC.
Binance believes it has met the relevant requirements to be MiCA authorised, the spokesperson said, adding that it understood that HCMC had completed its review of the application and it was โconsidered compliant with MiCA requirements.
"HCMC has given โno formal indication of the contrary," โthe spokesperson told Reuters.
Binance co-CEO โRichard Teng said in February that Greece's labour force โand security profile gave it the โedge over larger โfinancial centres for its regulatory home in Europe.
Teng, a former regulator in Singapore and Abu Dhabi, said at the time he would โleave it to the โEU to determine if Binance gets its licence by the July โdeadline.


