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Key Highlights

Crypto exchange Binance has been fined 10 million Australian dollars, about $6.9 million, by an Australian court over failures in how it handled client onboarding at its local derivatives business.

The order follows a case brought by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in late 2024. The regulator had alleged that Binance’s Australian arm was not properly classifying users, allowing many of them to access high-risk derivatives products without the safeguards meant for retail investors.

The Federal Court agreed, pointing to gaps in how the platform assessed who should be treated as a wholesale client.

Misclassification was widespread

As per the report by Reuters, the issue was not limited to a handful of accounts. ASIC said more than 85% of Binance Australia’s users were misclassified.

Court findings show that between July 2022 and April 2023, 524 retail investors were wrongly marked as wholesale clients. That tag comes with fewer protections and is generally reserved for experienced or high-net-worth traders.

In this case, it effectively opened the door for regular users to enter a much riskier segment of the market.

Losses and fees add up

Those misclassified users did not just gain access; they also took on losses.

The group recorded A$8.7 million in trading losses during the period. At the same time, they paid A$3.9 million in fees to the platform.

The numbers reflect how exposure to derivatives, especially without proper checks, can quickly turn costly for retail participants.

Loopholes in the onboarding process

Binance Australia Derivatives admitted to the failures in a statement of agreed facts with ASIC.

One detail that stood out was the way the investor test worked. Users could keep retaking a multiple-choice questionnaire until they passed and qualified as “sophisticated” investors. In effect, the filter meant to screen users could be worked around.

The company also acknowledged gaps in staff training and internal oversight, which contributed to the misclassification.

Regulators send a clear message

For the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, the case is about more than just one platform. It underlines the importance of getting investor classification right, especially when high-risk products are involved.

The action adds to the broader pressure on crypto firms offering derivatives, an area regulators have been watching closely.

For Binance, it is another reminder that compliance lapses in key markets are drawing closer scrutiny.

Also Read: US Lawmaker Questions Fed’s Approval of Kraken Access to Payment Rails