Coinbase UK unit fined $4.5 million by British regulator over ‘high-risk’ customer breaches

Coinbase UK unit fined .5 million by British regulator over ‘high-risk’ customer breaches


Photo Illustrating Coinbase in Suqian, Jiangsu Province, China on June 6, 2023 (Photo Illustration by Costfoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

British regulators fined Coinbase’s U.K. arm £3.5 million ($4.5 million) on Thursday over breaching a voluntary agreement designed to stop the cryptocurrency exchange from onboarding “high-risk customers.”

Coinbase Global shares were just under 2% lower in U.S. premarket trading.

CB Payments Limited (CBPL) is part of the Coinbase Group, which operates a global crypto trading platform.

In October 2020, CBPL entered into a voluntary agreement with the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), accepting restrictions that prevented it from taking on new customers that the regulator considered high-risk. It also prohibited CBPL from offering services to these customers.

However, CBPL breached the agreement and onboarded and served 13,416 of so-called high-risk customers, the FCA said. Around 31% of these people deposited roughly $24.9 million, the British watchdog added. These funds were used to make withdrawals and execute crypto transactions via other Coinbase entities, totaling approximately $226 million.

“CBPL’s controls had significant weaknesses and the FCA told it so, which is why the requirements were needed. CPBL, however, repeatedly breached those requirements,” said Therese Chambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA.

“This increased the risk that criminals could use CBPL to launder the proceeds of crime. We will not tolerate such laxity, which jeopardises the integrity of our markets.” 

Coinbase said in a statement that it takes the FCA’s findings and its “broader regulatory compliance very seriously.”

“CBPL continues to proactively enhance its controls to ensure compliance with its regulatory obligations. In its notice, the FCA acknowledged this as well as CBPL’s co-operation with its investigation,” the company added.

CBPL said that it “unintentionally onboarded” some customers that were classified as high-risk between Oct. 30, 2020 and Oct. 1, 2023, representing 0.34% of overall new customers that the unit signed up.



Source

Ilya Lichtenstein, Bitcoin hacker behind massive crypto theft, credits Trump for early prison release
World

Ilya Lichtenstein, Bitcoin hacker behind massive crypto theft, credits Trump for early prison release

The Russian-U.S. national who hacked crypto exchange Bitfinex and stole nearly 120,000 bitcoin said he has been freed from prison early thanks to the bipartisan prison-reform law signed by President Donald Trump. Ilya Lichtenstein, 38, had been sentenced in November 2024 to five years in prison after pleading guilty to a money laundering conspiracy charge […]

Read More
S&P 500 is little changed as first-day gain sputters, chip stocks remain strong: Live updates
World

S&P 500 is little changed as first-day gain sputters, chip stocks remain strong: Live updates

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) after the opening bell in New York on Jan. 2, 2026. Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images The S&P 500 was relatively unchanged on Friday, the first trading day of 2026, as gains in semiconductor names kept losses in check. The […]

Read More
Musk’s Grok AI bot is fixing safeguard ‘lapses’ after posting of sexualized images of children
World

Musk’s Grok AI bot is fixing safeguard ‘lapses’ after posting of sexualized images of children

Elon Musk looks on as US President Donald Trump speaks at the US-Saudi Investment Forum at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC on Nov. 19, 2025. Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot blamed “lapses in safeguards” for the recent posting of artificial intelligence-generated sexualized […]

Read More