The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has officially ended its legal battle with crypto exchange Binance, closing a major chapter in the regulatory crackdown on digital asset platforms.
A court filing submitted in Washington, D.C. confirmed that the SEC voluntarily dismissed its lawsuit, which had originally targeted both Binance and its founder Changpeng Zhao.
The filing was signed by legal representatives from both sides, marking a mutual agreement to terminate the case.
The lawsuit, first brought in 2023, accused Binance of a range of violations—including inflating trading activity, mishandling client funds, giving U.S. users improper access to the global platform, and misrepresenting its internal compliance procedures.
At the core of the complaint were also allegations that Binance enabled the trade of certain tokens the SEC had previously categorized as unregistered securities.
While the dismissal doesn’t necessarily imply that Binance was cleared of wrongdoing, it does signal the end of one of the most high-profile enforcement actions the SEC has pursued against a crypto firm to date. The agency has not yet provided a public statement explaining its decision to drop the case.
Tether is deepening its involvement in the tokenized gold space by introducing a new version of its gold-backed stablecoin—XAUt0—on The Open Network (TON).
Robinhood has officially announced the acquisition of Bitstamp, one of Europe’s longest-standing digital asset exchanges.
Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin has received the green light from the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), paving the way for its use in the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC).
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao is once again stirring innovation in crypto, this time calling for a new kind of decentralized exchange (DEX) that prioritizes privacy for large-scale traders.