OKX’s affiliate, Aux Cayes FinTech Co. Ltd., has agreed to a settlement with U.S. authorities, committing to a payment of over $500 million.
This includes $84 million in penalties and $421 million in forfeited fees collected from U.S. users, as part of an enforcement action by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).
The investigation revealed that the company failed to obtain the necessary license to operate as a money transmitter. OKX stated that it has since removed all affected U.S. users and emphasized that no allegations of direct customer harm were made.
In response to compliance shortcomings, the company voluntarily engaged a consultant to strengthen its regulatory adherence.
FBI Assistant Director in Charge James E. Dennehy criticized OKX for deliberately sidestepping U.S. regulations, accusing the company of facilitating illegal transactions that went undetected.
Although OKX has officially prohibited U.S. customers from using its platform since 2017, the DOJ claims the exchange still pursued business in the country. Reports suggest that employees instructed users to bypass restrictions by falsifying their location information, with one example citing a recommendation to enter a random country and fabricated ID details.
Further scrutiny arose from OKX’s marketing efforts in the U.S., including sponsorship of the Tribeca Film Festival. Authorities claim that users were encouraged to register through VPNs to mask their real location, with promotional materials even providing instructions on how to do so.
Bybit’s CEO, Ben Zhou, has announced that the exchange has fully addressed the security breach that resulted in the theft of nearly $1.5 billion in Ethereum (ETH) and Lido Staked Ether (stETH) last week.
Venture capitalist Chris Burniske suggests that the current downturn in the digital asset market is a typical part of the cycle that occurs during bull runs.
MicroStrategy’s stock has fallen over 55%, raising concerns about whether the company could be forced to sell its substantial Bitcoin holdings, which total nearly 500,000 BTC worth $43.7 billion.
U.S. Regulators have backed away from pursuing Uniswap Labs, marking the end of a three-year SEC investigation into the firm behind the top decentralized exchange.