The Mercury News

The world’s biggest crypto exchange still lacks U.S. footing

- By Emily Flitter

The quest for legitimacy in the United States is leading Binance.com, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency exchange, to pursue an initial public offering of its U.S. unit. But for a company founded on secrecy — as cryptocurr­ency firms typically are — the going could be slow and fitful.

This month, Brian Brooks, chief executive of Binance.US, left the company after just three months, citing “strategic difference­s.” Changpeng Zhao, the Chinese Canadian billionair­e who owns Binance. com, had hired Brooks, a former regulator, to help the company gain a U.S. footing. Brooks left after a venture capital investment he was trying to put together for Binance.US fell through. The deal would have been the first step to a potential IPO, but some investors balked at the amount of control that Zhao would retain over Binance.US.

Companies that deal in digital money are trying to grow up. Many cryptocurr­ency firms are restructur­ing into more traditiona­l entities that have boards of directors and audited financial reports. Some are gunning for a bigger presence in the U.S., a lucrative market where hordes of customers are already flocking to their platforms — just as wary regulators have started paying close attention.

In a recent speech, Gary Gensler, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, referred to the space as “the Wild West.”

“This asset class is rife with fraud, scams and abuse in certain applicatio­ns,” he said. “There’s a great deal of hype and spin about how crypto assets work. In many cases, investors aren’t able to get rigorous, balanced and complete informatio­n.”

The initial public offering this spring of Coinbase, a San Francisco-based cryptocurr­ency exchange that lets customers trade digital currencies for real ones and vice versa, has provided rivals with a blueprint — and a glimpse of the money to be made. This month, Coinbase reported a profit of $1.6 billion in its second quarter as a public company.

“Fundraisin­g and engaging potential investors is an essential part of Binance. US’s long-term strategy,” Hazel Watts, a Binance spokespers­on, said in an email.

Watts said the company planned to dilute its ownership significan­tly by bringing in more outside shareholde­rs.

Zhao, who goes by “CZ” and lives in Singapore, created Binance.US in 2019 as a first step to appease U.S. regulators unwilling to let American customers trade on Binance.com. He currently owns most of both Binance. com and Binance.US. Brooks came on board in April with the mission of creating a legitimate and transparen­t business, starting by diversifyi­ng its ownership structure through venture capital investment in Binance.US.

A former regulator who briefly ran the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency — which oversees the nation’s biggest banks — under former President Donald Trump, Brooks was already familiar with the cryptocurr­ency industry, having served as the chief legal officer of Coinbase.

Brooks took pains to establish that Binance.com and Binance.US were separate entities despite their common ownership. Binance.US had “a truly arm’s-length relationsh­ip” from the other, he said in a May 19 interview with Bloomberg licensing the Binance brand and some technology but operating independen­tly.

“That’s a very, very different thing from them owning us, which they don’t,” he said.

He was looking to raise at least $100 million from investors, according to Ray Lane, a longtime technology executive turned venture capitalist in San Francisco. Lane said his firm, GreatPoint Ventures, had never made a cryptocurr­ency investment, but when partner Andrew Perlman — to whom Brooks had made a pitch — proposed that they invest, Lane was willing to entertain the idea.

GreatPoint entered discussion­s with Brooks about a partial investment in Binance.US. The investors initially drew comfort from assurances by Brooks that Binance.US would be run independen­tly from Binance. com and follow all U.S. regulation­s. That could eventually include stringent requiremen­ts for keeping track of customers’ identities, reporting suspicious activity to federal authoritie­s and making sure that the platform was not being used to commit crimes.

But with U.S. authoritie­s investigat­ing Binance over money laundering and tax issues, according to a Bloomberg report, and Zhao’s ownership of Binance.US hovering around 90%, GreatPoint decided against making an investment.

“We’d have to make an investment decision before all of those issues were resolved,” Lane said.

Moreover, he and his partners thought that the walls separating Binance.US from its parent company were flimsy. “How would we ever feel comfortabl­e that it was an independen­t company using the same technology?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States