Binance has announced that it is temporarily suspending bank transfers in United States dollars (USD) beginning Feb. 8. No other trading methods will be affected, the exchange said in a tweet on Feb. 6.
The news came with no explanation, although the company, which is the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, added in the same tweet that:
Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao (CZ) said in a separate tweet:
The suspension apparently applies only to international Binance users, as Binance.US tweeted that “our customers will not be affected.”
https://t.co/gM6e3xb9BX is not affected by this suspension. Unless you see an official message from https://t.co/gM6e3xb9BX, our customers will not be affected.
Binance has had banking challenges in the United States recently. Its SWIFT transfer partner Signature Bank said on Jan. 21 that it would only process trades by users with USD bank accounts over $100,000, effective Feb. 1. The bank had said previously that it was drastically reducing deposits from crypto clients.
Binance said at the time that it was seeking a new SWIFT partner and trades with USD using credit or debit cards would still be accepted, as would all SWIFT trades using other currencies.
Also on Feb. 1, Binance published a list of 144 countries where USD SWIFT transfers of any size would be suspended.
Related: Binance stablecoin BUSD sees a sharp market cap drop amid solvency and mismanagement worries
CNBC reports, citing Arkham Intelligence, that there has been an immediate outflow of Tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC) stablecoins pegged to the dollar to other exchanges, adding that the outflow was “tiny” compared to Binance’s $42.2 billion in crypto assets.
Read more on cointelegraph.com