Australian exchanges dispel debanking fears amid Binance saga, but risks loom

Australian crypto exchanges report no problems with their payment providers, but the lack of local laws means more debanking incidents can’t be ruled out.

Australian-based cryptocurrency exchanges have lined up to quash contagion fears after the payments provider for Binance Australia was told to offboard the exchange, though some have warned risks still loom.

On May 18, Binance Australia told users that Australian dollar services were suspended after its payments partner Zepto was told by its partner firm Cuscal to stop support for the exchange.

Independent Reserve CEO Adrian Przelozny told Cointelegraph he doesn’t think “this an industry-wide issue, as it appears to be Binance-specific,” adding the Australian dollar deposits and withdrawals for his exchange “remain uninterrupted.”

BTC Markets CEO Caroline Bowler said she had “no due for concern,” adding “we work really closely with [our payments provider], specifically on scams.”

“Nothing’s been alerted to me that there are any concerns with BTC Markets,” she said. “We are accountable to them on a monthly basis and have been for a sizable period of time.”

Jonathon Miller, Kraken Australia’s managing director, told Cointelegraph there are “only a couple” of payment providers in the local market “that are crypto-friendly, and we’ve got a really strong relationship with them.”

“It’s very unfortunate to see a business in a position where they have to cut their client’s access overnight,” he said.

“It’s not great for the end-user, it’s not great for the industry, but it seems like it’s part of a broader story with what’s been happening with that enterprise for some time.”

Some of the executives noted a significant uptick in the users, downloads and registrations on their platforms as Binance users seemingly hunt for alternative exchanges with Australian dollar payment ramps.

Debanking risks still lurk

Despite assurances, some of the execs noted the regulatory environment in Australia for crypto gives way to more possible debanking situations taking place.

“The risk of debanking is ever-present irrespective of the latest news from Binance,” Bowler said, adding:

“That is reflective of the regulatory environment that we operate in or in this case, the absence of a regulatory environment.”

Bowler added this is the reason Australia needs “a proper regulatory framework,” which she believes will reassure financial institutions about doing business with crypto exchanges.

Such laws “can have a degree of comfort about the standards which they’re operating to,” she added.

Currently, the local industry has a “very limited pool” of payments providers, as exchanges have been “unable to get access to banking rails,” according to Bowler.

Related: Australia marks first FX transaction using a CBDC as eAUD pilot continues

Kraken’s Miller said the problem isn’t “necessarily a local issue,” pointing to the bank collapses in the United States and the perceived debanking of crypto companies that followed but added it’s “certainly been a problem in Australia for a long time.”

“There have been other people and industry bodies have been quite vocal about the relationship being relatively strained between crypto businesses and banking in Australia, and that’s not new.”

He added Kraken already had or was engaged in obtaining crypto-related licenses in “multiple jurisdictions,” such as Canada, Europe and the United Kingdom, which have various legal regimes for crypto.

“Australia is kind of sitting here with no regime at all,” he said.

Jason Titman, Swyftx’s chief operating officer, told Cointelegraph that in the long term, “it’s in everyone’s interests for the cryptocurrency industry to have a healthy relationship with our national banks, and that comes with responsibilities on both sides.”

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