TLDR:
- Australia’s Federal Court ordered Binance Australia Derivatives to pay a A$10 million penalty for onboarding failures.
- Over 85% of Binance Australia’s users were wrongly classified as wholesale clients between 2022 and 2023.
- ASIC confirmed that 524 retail clients lost A$8.66 million in trading and paid A$3.89 million in fees.
- Binance compensated approximately A$13.1 million to affected clients under ASIC oversight before the court ruling.
Binance Australia Derivatives has been ordered to pay A$10 million by Australia’s Federal Court. The penalty follows a pattern of onboarding failures that led to widespread client misclassification.
Oztures Trading Pty Ltd, which operated the platform, incorrectly designated over 85% of its Australian users as wholesale clients.
This gave retail investors unprotected access to high-risk crypto derivatives between July 2022 and April 2023. The case has since drawn attention across the global crypto industry.
Court Exposes Systemic Failures in Client Onboarding
The Federal Court determined that 524 retail clients were exposed to complex derivatives without proper protections. These clients collectively lost A$8.66 million in trading over the affected period.
They also paid A$3.89 million in fees, as confirmed by ASIC in a press release published on Friday. The combined financial harm to affected clients exceeded A$12 million.
The court attributed the failures to three internal breakdowns at Oztures. Deficient onboarding systems, weak compliance oversight, and inadequate staff training all contributed to the problem.
Together, these gaps caused retail clients to be wrongly classified and permitted to trade products beyond their risk profile.
One specific failure involved the platform’s “sophisticated investor” qualification process. Binance allowed clients unlimited attempts to pass a quiz meant to verify eligibility.
Beyond that, compliance staff did not adequately verify the supporting documentation that applicants submitted alongside their applications.
ASIC Chair Joe Longo publicly responded to the ruling with a firm statement. He said, “This wasn’t just a technical breach — it directly resulted in over A$12 million in client losses.”
He further stated that the case should serve as a clear warning to international crypto firms operating within Australia’s regulated markets.
ASIC Enforcement Actions and the Path Toward Resolution
ASIC first launched its investigation into Binance Australia Derivatives in 2022, targeting concerns over client classification.
By April 2023, the regulator had moved to cancel the platform’s Australian Financial Services Licence. Oztures consequently shut down its derivatives operations and voluntarily surrendered the licence.
Even before the court ruling, Binance had taken steps to address the financial harm caused. Under ASIC oversight, the company compensated approximately A$13.1 million to 524 retail investors during 2023. The company further agreed to cover the regulator’s legal costs as part of the settlement process.
A Binance spokesperson confirmed the matter is tied to a historical period now fully resolved. The spokesperson stated, “The issue was self-identified, reported to ASIC, and fully remediated in 2023, with approximately A$13 million compensated to affected users. Oztures ceased its derivatives business and voluntarily gave back its AFSL in 2023.”
On a broader level, Binance has faced persistent regulatory scrutiny across multiple jurisdictions in recent years. Co-founder Changpeng Zhao stepped down as CEO in late 2023 after pleading guilty to anti-money laundering violations.
U.S. President Donald Trump later pardoned Zhao in October, over a year after his four-month prison sentence was completed.



