Binance VIP traders got sneak peak of US settlement: Report

Executives of cryptocurrency exchange Binance reportedly gave a heads-up to its top market makers regarding a potential $4.3-billion settlement with authorities in the United States.

According to a Dec. 1 Bloomberg report, Binance traders at an exclusive September dinner in Singapore were informed about a tentative deal the crypto exchange had with U.S. officials โ€” roughly two months before the details were made public. Some Binance executives reportedly told certain traders at the event that the exchange could easily afford the $4.3-billion penalty to stay in business.

Then Binance CEO Changpeng โ€œCZโ€ Zhao was reportedly not in attendance at the event, but Richard Teng, who succeeded Zhao following the settlement, was mingling with guests. A Binance spokesperson reportedly said the depiction of the VIP event was inaccurate but declined to identify which aspects were wrong, according to Bloomberg.

According to Tengโ€™s posts on X (formerly Twitter) from September, the then head of regional markets was in Singapore for the Token2049 conference, the Milken Institute Asia Summit, the Singapore Grand Prix for Formula 1 and โ€œplenty of side events.โ€ Cointelegraph will release an exclusive interview with the Binance CEO at 6:00 pm UTC on Dec. 3.

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As part of its settlement, Binance must pay $4.3 billion to various U.S. authorities and regulators, with CZ personally responsible for paying $150 million to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Zhao was still out on bail in the U.S. at the time of publication, as a court considered his request to return to the United Arab Emirates before sentencing in February.

Though the settlement largely settles many of Binanceโ€™s legal troubles in the U.S., the exchange Binance.US and Zhao still face a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in June. A group of investors has also filed suit against soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo for his role in promoting Binance nonfungible tokens (NFTs), allegedly unregistered securities.

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