Japan FSA flags Bybit, others for operating without registration
Japan’s FSA warns Bitget, Bybit, MEXC Global and BitForex, among others, for unregistered operations as it cracks down on crypto exchanges in Japan.
In a warning letter released on Friday, Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) said that a number of foreign cryptocurrency exchanges, including Bybit, MEXC Global and Bitget, have been conducting business in the country without proper registration, violating the nation’s fund settlement laws.
According to the warning letter, the FSA stated that the listed exchanges had breached Japan’s fund settlement regulations by conducting crypto asset exchange business without proper registration. The regulator clarified that the current list of unregistered traders may not accurately represent the current state of unregistered businesses.
The FSA’s action follows a crackdown on unregistered crypto exchanges in the East Asian nation. In 2020, the FSA introduced new regulations requiring crypto exchanges to register with the agency and obtain a license to operate in Japan.
Crypto exchangs being warned by the FSA signifies the cryptocurrency industry in Japan and other nations is facing greater regulatory scrutiny. The risks associated with unregulated cryptocurrency exchanges, such as fraud, money laundering and market manipulation, are concerning regulators more and more
Although Japan is working on new regulations for the crypto and Web3 sectors, the country has not cracked down on the industry as hard as some other larger economies, such as the United States.
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The FSA also issued a formal warning letter to Binance for operating without necessary permissions back in 2021.
Cointelegraph reached out to Bybit and MEXC for comments on the warning issued by the Japanese FSA but didn’t get any response at the time of publication.
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