Coinbase reaches $100 million settlement with New York

Coinbase Global, the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, said its U.S. unit reached a $100 million
settlement with New York regulators for letting customers open accounts with insufficient background checks.

The settlement with the New York State Department of Financial Services requires the firm to pay a $50 million fine and spend $50 million to improve compliance over two years, Coinbase said on Wednesday.

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Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

"Coinbase failed to build and maintain a functional compliance program that could keep pace with its growth," Adrienne A. Harris, New York's superintendent of financial services, said in a statement. During the relevant period, Coinbase treated customer onboarding requirements as a "simple check-the-box exercise and failed to conduct appropriate due diligence," the department said.

In one instance, Coinbase onboarded a customer who was criminally charged with crimes related to child sexual abuse material in the 1990s and allowed the customer to engage in suspicious transactions for more than two years before closing the accounts, the department said. In another example, Coinbase let an individual purporting to be an employee of a company to open an account on behalf of that firm without authorization, resulting in a theft of more than $150 million, which was later recovered.

By late 2021, Coinbase failed to keep pace with a growing backlog of over 100,000 unreviewed transaction monitoring alerts, the department said.

"Coinbase has taken substantial measures to address these historical shortcomings and remains committed to being a leader and role model in the crypto space, including partnering with regulators when it comes to compliance," Paul Grewal, Coinbase's chief legal officer, said in a statement.

The crypto industry has grappled with increasing regulatory pressure over enforcing know-your-customer rules and anti-money-laundering program. Binance, the biggest global crypto exchange, and FTX, its now bankrupt rival, both faced U.S. investigations over money laundering, Bloomberg reported earlier.

New York requires companies engaging in crypto services to obtain its BitLicense in order to operate in the state, which allows its regulators to conduct examinations and oversight. In August, the Department of Financial Services fined Robinhood Markets' crypto arm $30 million for violations of anti-money-laundering rules and other rules.

Coinbase has disclosed the investigation by New York relating to its compliance program in its 2021 annual filing. "The size of the settlement is not significant in context of" the more than $5 billion cash on its balance sheet, but will "likely pressure the company to continue to increase investments and ongoing expenses" related to compliance, KBW analysts including Kyle Voigt wrote in a note Wednesday.

Shares of Coinbase jumped 11% to $37.41 as of 11:53 a.m. in New York. The stock tumbled 86% last year. Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market value, dropped 64% in 2022.

— With assistance from Matt Turner.

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