Binance withdrew its MiCA license application in Greece last week following months of discussions with regulators, forcing the exchange to notify affected users less than 10 days before the July 1 deadline. The withdrawal came after the company was told in April that its application was complete and expected authorization in early June, but board meetings were repeatedly postponed. The move places the world's largest crypto exchange outside the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets framework at the point when the bloc is trying to bring crypto activity under a single licensing regime, with Binance suspending some services and stopping new registrations in several EU countries until further notice.
Gillian Lynch, Binance's head of Europe and the U.K., said Binance expected authorization in early June after being told in April that its application was complete. Board meetings were repeatedly postponed before the company decided to withdraw the application. "We were deemed to have a complete application," Lynch said. "Nothing was missing, nothing material was outstanding." The withdrawal forced Binance to notify affected users with shorter notice than the 30-day period the company internally contemplates. Lynch said Binance had already completed much of the regulatory process during its work with Greece's Hellenic Capital Market Commission and expects its next licensing application not to take long.
Lynch said Binance has invested more than $300 million a year in compliance and employs more than 1,500 compliance staff globally. "As the person who led the license application, there's nothing that I have been made aware of that there was any issue with the application," Lynch said. "In fact, I was told the complete opposite." Lynch disputed reports that European supervisors privately advised national regulators to reject Binance's MiCA applications, citing concerns over financial-crime compliance. "With regards to the cases raised in recent reporting, as soon as Binance uncovered these complex patterns of activity, it offboarded all accounts involved in those transactions and reported them to law enforcement," Lynch said. She called allegations that Binance ignored sanctions concerns or retaliated against compliance staff "categorically false."
Binance told clients in several EU countries that it would suspend some services and stop accepting new registrations until further notice. Lynch argued that Europe loses more than its largest exchange if Binance remains outside MiCA, saying Binance provides liquidity and infrastructure that support the wider crypto ecosystem. Some industry executives have warned that a large share of Europe's registered virtual asset service providers may not survive the shift to MiCA. If hundreds of firms suspend services, millions of users may need to move to MiCA-approved platforms, adding pressure to exchanges, custodians, and regulators during the transition.
Lynch said Binance still supports MiCA and believes the framework can become a global standard for crypto regulation. She backed a system where national regulators continue granting licenses while the European Securities and Markets Authority plays a larger supervisory role over the biggest firms. "We're very committed to being in Europe and very committed to being regulated," Lynch said. The company has declined to speculate on whether political intervention played any role in the Greek delays. Lynch described MiCA as a positive step for the industry because it brings crypto further into the financial services system and gives consumers more protection. "I fundamentally believe the crypto industry is maturing. Regulation brings maturity," she said. "We're not leaving Europe. This is an obstacle in our way at the moment. We fundamentally believe that we can be regulated and we will be back in the market."
Why did Binance withdraw its MiCA license application in Greece? Binance withdrew the application after board meetings with Greece's Hellenic Capital Market Commission were repeatedly postponed, despite being told in April that the application was complete and expecting authorization in early June.
What did Binance tell users in the EU after withdrawing the application? Binance told clients in several EU countries that it would suspend some services and stop accepting new registrations until further notice, with less than 10 days' notice before the July 1 deadline.
How much does Binance invest in compliance operations? Binance invests more than $300 million a year in compliance and employs more than 1,500 compliance staff globally, according to Gillian Lynch, the company's head of Europe and the U.K.
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The EU MiCA is fully effective; obtaining a CASP license from any member state grants access to the entire EU market.
EU MiCA authorization survival rate less than 8%, Binance becomes loser exiting EU market