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Binance to Pay $1.7M to Brazilian Securities Commission to End Probe Into Unauthorized Derivatives Offering

The Latin American country's agency had rejected Binance’s previous proposal, made in August 2023, to end an investigation into its derivatives products.

Updated Aug 14, 2024, 5:29 p.m. Published Aug 14, 2024, 5:26 p.m.
CROP 16:9 Binance BNB (Vadim Artyukhin/Unsplash)
CROP 16:9 Binance BNB (Vadim Artyukhin/Unsplash)
  • Binance offered derivatives trading services in Brazil without securing necessary licenses, the country's regulator concluded.
  • Binance will pay 9.6 million reais ($1.76 million), well over the 2 million reais the company offered to pay a year ago.

Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, will pay 9.6 million reais ($1.76 million) to the Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM) as a settlement for offering derivatives trading services in the country without receiving the corresponding license.

"On February 15, 2024, a new proposal for a Term of Commitment was presented and, after negotiations with the Term of Commitment Committee (CTC), the applicant undertook to pay the CVM 9.6 million reais," the agency said in a statement published on Wednesday.

In July 2020, the CVM ordered Binance to cease offering derivatives trading services in the Latin American country, arguing that it was not authorized to "act as a securities intermediary" and threatening the company with a daily fine of 1,000 reais.

Later, in August 2023, the CVM rejected Binance's settlement proposal of 2 million ($370,000) reais.

In a separate document detailing settlement terms, the CVM said that Binance was performing "distribution and mediation of operations with securities offered to citizens residing in Brazil without being a member of the securities distribution system and without obtaining the necessary registration or exemption from registration with the CVM."

Andrés Engler

Andrés Engler is a CoinDesk editor based in Argentina, where he covers the Latin American crypto ecosystem. He follows the regional scene of startups, funds and corporations. His work has been featured in La Nación newspaper and Monocle magazine, among other media. He graduated from the Catholic University of Argentina. He holds BTC.

picture of Andrés Engler