The post Binance in Trouble as Australia’s AUSTRAC Orders Urgent AML Audit appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Binance seems to be under fire again – this time in Australia. The country’s financial watchdog, AUSTRAC, has ordered Binance Australia to bring in an external auditor after identifying “serious concerns” with the exchange’s anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing systems.

Here’s what’s going on. 

Watchdog Steps In

Binance now has 28 days to nominate auditors for AUSTRAC’s approval. The regulator pointed to weak internal reviews, high staff turnover, and a lack of local management oversight as red flags.

AUSTRAC CEO Brendan Thomas said crypto remains highly exposed to financial crime, and global exchanges must take local risks seriously.

“Big global operators may appear well resourced and positioned to meet complex regulatory requirements, but if they don’t understand local money laundering and terrorism financing risks, they are failing to meet their AML/CTF obligations in Australia,” Thomas warned.

Binance Responds

Binance has downplayed the move, calling it part of AUSTRAC’s routine oversight rather than a penalty. Matt Poblocki, Binance’s Australia and New Zealand GM, said the company “acknowledges AUSTRAC’s decision” and described it as “one of their supervisory review measures and not an enforcement action.”

Regulators expect more rigorous customer checks, stronger transaction monitoring, and accountability at the top.

Trouble Down Under

This isn’t the first time Binance has clashed with Australian regulators. In 2023, ASIC canceled its derivatives license after finding users were misclassified as wholesale investors. The same year, ASIC searched Binance’s local offices as part of its probe.

Banking access has also been a headache. Binance lost its payments partner Zepto with less than a day’s notice, cutting the exchange off from Australian dollar transfers. Today, users still rely on stablecoins or P2P trades to move funds, with bank transfers suspended.

Global Scrutiny Tightens

Binance’s troubles aren’t limited to Australia. In the U.S., Paxos recently agreed to pay $48.5 million to settle AML failings linked to its past partnership with Binance. Investigators said billions in suspicious transactions moved through the exchange, including dealings with sanctioned entities.

Across Asia, the trend is similar. Singapore has tightened licensing for crypto firms, and South Korea has cracked down on lending products. 

Regulators now want action and compliance is no longer optional!