Binance reportedly had an office in use in China until 2019, at least, according to FT. The post Binance Concealed Links to China For Years: Report appeared first on Tokenist.
Binance Was Hiding its Links to China, the FT Claims
Binance allegedly hid significant links with China over the past few years, despite the crypto exchange saying it exited the country following the government crackdown on the industry in 2017, according to a report by FT, citing internal company documents.
The FT report claims that Binance executives, including the co-founder and CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao consistently instructed Binance staff to hide the exchange’s links in China. Binance reportedly had an office in use there until at least the end of 2019, and used a Chinese bank to pay some of the employee salaries, the report states.
“We no longer publish our office addresses . . . people in China can directly say that our office is not in China.”
– Zhao allegedly said in a company messaging group in November 2017, according to FT.
The alleged internal documents seen by FT highlight Binance’s efforts “to obscure the extent and location of its operations as regulators scrutinize crypto-related activity,” says the report, which contradicts Zhao’s previous claims that the majority of Binance employees left the country in 2017, apart from “a small number of customer service agents.”
The alleged internal documents also showed an internal conversation between Binance employees where they discussed a 2019 report that claimed the company was planning to open an office in Beijing. “Reminder: publicly, we have offices in Malta, Singapore, and Uganda,” one message said, according to the FT report. “Please do not confirm any offices anywhere else, including China.”
Regulatory Pressures Continue to Weigh on Binance
Do you think that if proven, the FT claims could lead to an intensified regulatory crackdown on Binance? Let us know in the comments below.