Binance to keep hundreds of staff in Singapore despite crackdown, sources say
Singapore – The world's largest digital-assets exchange Binance plans to keep hundreds of remote workers in Singapore, despite a crackdown on unlicensed crypto outfits in the city-state.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) recently announced a hard deadline of June 30 for crypto firms incorporated in Singapore and offering services offshore to cease activities, prompting top-10 exchange operators Bitget and Bybit to weigh shifting staff overseas.
The new rules are expected to have a negligible impact on Binance's operations in Singapore, according to people familiar with the company's operations who asked not to be identified discussing confidential information. Hundreds of Singapore-based employees working remotely for the exchange won't need to relocate, the people said.
More than 400 Binance workers label themselves as based in Singapore on LinkedIn, based on a Bloomberg News analysis.
Binance had no comment on its operations in Singapore and didn't specify whether it has an office in the city-state when asked by Bloomberg. MAS referred to its earlier statements on the new rules.
Crypto exchanges have long posed challenges for would-be regulators by leaving their base of operations ambiguous. Binance has never named a global headquarters. Its chief executive officer Richard Teng – a former director at MAS – said in 2024 that the company had held talks with a number of jurisdictions on the matter, but in January he described Binance employees as 'remote-first'.
In a June 6 clarification to its initial announcement, MAS said digital-asset firms offering services 'solely to customers outside of Singapore' will need to be licensed from June 30 or 'cease their regulated activities.' Binance is not licensed in Singapore and has been on an investor alert list there since 2021, meaning it cannot solicit customers from the city-state.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
World US Senate approves divisive Trump spending Bill
Singapore A second chance to excel: 3,800 private candidates taking O- and A-level exams in 2025
Multimedia Right on track: Meet the new JB-Singapore RTS Link train
Opinion US strikes on Iran: The impact ripples on, from Baghdad to Beijing
Singapore 'He fought till the end': Man who survived acid attack as a baby dies of cancer at 26
Singapore Judge rejects woman's claim that she owns 99% of Bukit Timah condo mostly paid for by ex-boyfriend
Asia Thai PM's suspension could spell end of Shinawatra clan's era of political dominance
Life Sean 'Diddy' Combs jury asks to review Casandra Ventura's testimony
Binance staff in Singapore are seen as shielded from the recent MAS notice, however, because they mainly focus on back-office activities including compliance, human resources, data analysis and technology, the people familiar with the situation said. Working remotely, rather than in a permanent office, also helps to insulate them, the people added.
Individuals or partnerships that operate from a place of business in Singapore or incorporated in the city-state and offering digital token services outside the country will fall under the new rules, MAS said in its May 30 statement. But work done by an individual as part of their employment with a foreign-incorporated company that provides such services outside Singapore 'would not, in itself, attract a licensing requirement' under the Financial Services and Markets Act (FMSA) 2022, MAS said.
'Place of business is a gray area,' said Chris Holland, partner at Singapore consulting firm HM. 'The definition of 'place of business' is broad under the FSMA. While the term will have a boundary, I would not encourage firms to engage people resident in Singapore and then rely exclusively on that definition to work remotely assuming that it's outside the remit of the new rules.'
Singapore is one of Asia's foremost crypto hubs, with a licensing regime that global players such as Coinbase Global and OKX have
used to set up regional bases.
Cayman Islands-based Kast has hired 100 people in the past 12 months and had planned to shift internal operations staff, trading teams and other executives to Singapore while hiring 30 to 50 people there. Now Raagulan Pathy, co-founder of the stablecoin start-up, said he plans to set up a global office in Dubai instead.
Mr Pathy is a 12-year resident of Singapore and has no plans to move personally, he added, but has to 'make hard choices about where to locate offices for Kast.' BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
24 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Trump announces Vietnam trade deal with 20% import tariff
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Vietnam will also pay a 40 per cent tariff on transshipping, said US President Donald Trump. WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump said he had reached a trade deal with Vietnam, following weeks of intense diplomacy between the two nations and ahead of a deadline next week that would have seen higher tariffs imposed on the country's imports. 'I just made a Trade Deal with Vietnam. Details to follow,' Mr Trump said in a Truth Social post on July 2 . The deal with Vietnam would be just the third announced following agreements with the UK and China as trading partners race to cut agreements with the US ahead of a July 9 deadline. Mr Trump had imposed a 46 per cent duty on Vietnam as part of his initial rollout of so-called reciprocal tariffs in early April, then pared it back to 10 per cent to allow time for negotiations. The South-east Asian nation has seen its sales to US markets surge in recent years, partly because manufacturers shifted production there from China. It is a major supplier of textiles and sportswear, hosting factories for companies such as Nike Inc, Gap Inc and Lululemon Athletica Inc. Vietnam was the sixth-biggest supplier of US imports in 2024 , sending goods worth almost US$137 billion (S$174 billion), according to Census Bureau data. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade Singapore From camping to mentorship, Singapore scouts mark 115th anniversary of the youth movement Singapore Ong Beng Seng's court hearing rescheduled one day before he was expected to plead guilty World Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts but cleared of more serious charges Singapore ByteDance food poisoning: Catering firm convicted after cockroach infestation found on premises Singapore Teen, 17, to be charged with allegedly trespassing on MRT tracks Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach Singapore Man on trial for raping drunken woman after offering to drive her and her friend home The deal with Vietnam was struck after weeks of discussions during which the US pressured the country to get tougher on trade fraud, ensure stricter enforcement against the transshipment of Chinese products, and also pushed for the removal of non-tariff barriers. Vietnam offered to remove all tariffs and repeatedly promised to purchase more American goods. Senior Vietnamese officials flew to the US to rally support and sign deals, including for US$3 billion of agricultural goods. The trade minister also wooed executives from Nike, Gap and others to encourage them to get behind negotiation efforts. Brands raced to move manufacturing to Vietnam over the past decade as US-China tensions escalated. The industrial shift from China to Vietnam also helped build the kind of massive trade gap that made it a prime tariff target for Mr Trump. In 2024, Vietnam's trade surplus with the US was the third-largest globally on a country basis behind only China and Mexico. Shipments in May jumped 35 per cent as firms sought to get goods onto vessels as quickly as possible ahead of the deadline. BLOOMBERG
Business Times
27 minutes ago
- Business Times
Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on Bill
[WASHINGTON] The debate within President Donald Trump's Republican Party over a massive tax-cut and spending Bill returns to the House of Representatives on Wednesday (Jul 2), as party leaders try to overcome internal divisions and meet a self-imposed Jul 4 deadline. The Senate passed the legislation, which nonpartisan analysts say will add US$3.4 trillion to the nation's debt over the next decade, by the narrowest possible margin on Tuesday after intense debate on the Bill's hefty price tag and substantial cuts to the Medicaid healthcare programme. Similar divides exist in the House, which Republicans control by a 220-212 margin and where a fractious caucus has regularly bucked its leadership in recent years – though members have so far not rejected major Trump priorities. 'The House will work quickly to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill that enacts President Trump's full America First agenda by the Fourth of July,' House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement on Tuesday, citing the Bill's extension of Trump's 2017 individual tax cuts and increased funding for the military and immigration enforcement. The House Rules Committee advanced the Senate Bill overnight by a 7-6 vote with two Republicans – hardliners Chip Roy and Ralph Norman – voting against it. Johnson can afford to lose no more than three votes if all members are present, though a series of storms on Tuesday night complicated lawmakers' travel plans, prompting some to drive through the night towards the Capitol. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Hardliner anger over spending The loudest Republican objections against the Bill come from party hardliners angry that it does not sufficiently cut spending and includes a US$5 trillion increase in the nation's debt ceiling, which lawmakers must address in the coming months or risk a devastating default on the nation's US$36.2 trillion debt. 'What the Senate did was unconscionable,' Norman, a South Carolina Republican, said on Tuesday. One of several fiscal hawks who spoke out against the Senate Bill's higher price tag, he accused the Senate of handing out 'goodie bags' of spending to satisfy holdouts. Trump for weeks has pushed for passage ahead of Friday's Independence Day holiday and kept up the pressure on Wednesday. 'Republicans, don't let the Radical Left Democrats push you around. We've got all the cards, and we are going to use them,' Trump said in a social media post. Democrats are united in opposition to the Bill, saying that its tax breaks disproportionately benefit the wealthy while cutting services that lower and middle-income Americans rely on. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that almost 12 million people could lose health insurance as a result of the Bill. 'This is the largest assault on American healthcare in history,' Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters on Tuesday, pledging that his party will use 'all procedural and legislative options' to try to stop – or delay – passage. The version of the Bill passed by the Senate on Tuesday would add more to the debt than the version first passed by the House in May. The CBO on Tuesday raised its estimate for how much the Senate Bill would increase the budget deficit through 2045 by US$100 billion, to US$3.4 trillion. The Bill includes more than US$900 million in cuts to the Medicaid programme for low-income Americans. Those cuts also raised concerns among some House Republicans. 'I will not support a final Bill that eliminates vital funding our hospitals rely on,' Republican Representative David Valadao of California said before Senate passage. Timing difficulties But some House Republicans worried about social safety-net cuts could find solace in the Senate's last-minute decision to set aside more money for rural hospitals, funding Representative Nick Langworthy, a New York Republican, called 'a lifeline that will be very helpful to districts like mine'. Any changes made by the House would require another Senate vote, making it all but impossible to meet the Jul 4 deadline. Any Republican public opposition to the Bill risks irking Trump, as was the case when the president slammed Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican who announced his retirement after coming out in opposition to the Bill. Another former Trump ally, the world's richest person Elon Musk, this week resumed an active campaign against the Bill over social media, blasting its deficit-building effects. That has reignited a feud between Trump and Musk. REUTERS


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Only one in four Singaporeans can accurately identify deepfake videos: CSA survey
According to the latest Cybersecurity Public Awareness Survey, only one in four Singaporeans can accurately identify deepfake videos, despite 78% feeling confident that they can. Around two-thirds of those surveyed were able to spot all phishing attempts correctly, but even so, about one in five still ended up at risk of falling for malware scams. This September, the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore will be rolling out its sixth National Cybersecurity Campaign, which will focus on core cyber hygiene habits, such as using strong passwords and turning on two‑factor authentication. Alexandra Anand reports.