Australia fines Kraken’s operator $5m for unlawful credit facility

Krakenโ€™s Australian entity, Bit Trade, is facing a multi-million fine for failing to comply with rules requiring a target market determination for its margin extension product.

The Australian operator of the Kraken crypto exchange, Bit Trade, has been fined AUD 8 million (around $5.2 million) for unlawfully issuing a credit facility to more than 1,100 customers, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission said in a Thursday press release, Dec. 12.

The Federal Court ruled that the company failed to follow Australian laws requiring financial products to have a target market determination to ensure they are sold to the right customers.

From October 2021, Bit Trade offered a margin extension product that โ€œprovided for margin extensions to be made and repaid in either digital assets like Bitcoin (BTC) or national currencies such as U.S. dollars,โ€ the regulator says. However, the product was marketed without a required target market determination, a key regulatory document meant to ensure financial products are offered only to suitable customers.

The court found Bit Tradeโ€™s product breached design and distribution obligations requirements every time it was issued without a target market determination. Customers were charged fees and interest exceeding $7 million, with trading losses surpassing $5 million, the regulator claims.

One investor reportedly lost nearly $4 million using the margin extension product. Justice Nicholas, in his ruling, described Bit Tradeโ€™s actions as โ€œserious and motivated by a desire to maximize revenue,โ€ adding that the company failed to address compliance requirements until flagged by ASIC.

Commenting on the ruling, ASIC Chair Joe Longo called it a โ€œsignificant outcome,โ€ adding that โ€œit is ASICโ€™s first penalty against an entity for failing to have a TMD and a reminder for digital assets firms to consider their regulatory compliance obligations.โ€ In addition to the fine, Bit Trade was ordered to cover ASICโ€™s legal costs.

Source

CryptoX Portal

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