Changpeng Zhao has never been one to go quietly. The Binance founder claims the exchange’s application for a MiCA license in Greece was on the verge of approval before political forces stepped in and killed it.
The fallout: Binance withdrew its application, suspended services for EU users effective July 1, 2026, and is now shopping for a friendlier regulatory home somewhere else in Europe.
What happened in Greece
Binance filed its MiCA application with Greece’s Hellenic Capital Market Commission on January 23, 2026. By CZ’s account, the application was deemed compliant and was moving toward approval. He even claimed that at least two EU countries had been competing for the license, suggesting something of a bidding war for the right to host the world’s largest crypto exchange.
On June 16, 2026, Reuters reported that the Greek application was expected to be rejected. The stated concern centered on anti-money laundering controls linked to CZ’s US criminal record. CZ pleaded guilty in late 2023 to violating the Bank Secrecy Act and served a four-month prison sentence, a conviction that apparently still casts a long shadow over Binance’s regulatory ambitions.
But CZ’s telling of events goes further than standard compliance concerns. Insiders have pointed to European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde as a figure who may have influenced Greek officials to block the approval.
By June 24-25, 2026, Binance had pulled the plug on its Greece bid entirely. The exchange withdrew the application rather than wait for a formal rejection.
The stablecoin factor
By February 2026, Binance held approximately $47.5 billion in USDT and USDC. That figure represented roughly 65% of all centralized exchange stablecoin reserves. For the ECB, which has spent years carefully positioning the euro and developing its own digital currency strategy, granting a full regulatory license to a platform with that kind of dollar-denominated stablecoin exposure could explain why Binance’s application attracted attention from the highest levels of European financial governance.
EU users left in limbo
The exchange announced it would suspend services effective July 1, 2026, which is the transitional deadline for MiCA compliance. Without a license in any EU member state, Binance cannot legally operate there.
Binance has said it remains committed to the European market and that user assets are secure. The exchange has signaled intentions to reapply in another EU member state, with France being the presumed next stop. Binance already held a registration there under the previous regulatory framework.
What this means for investors
If CZ’s account is accurate, it means that even a technically compliant MiCA application can be derailed by political considerations. That introduces a layer of uncertainty for every major crypto exchange seeking European licenses.
Binance is the dominant global exchange by volume. Its absence from the EU market reshapes where European traders go and how efficiently they can access markets. Competitors like Kraken and Coinbase, both of which hold or are pursuing MiCA licenses, stand to absorb displaced volume.
Binance’s $47.5 billion in stablecoin holdings is not just a compliance issue. If Binance’s EU exit forces any rebalancing of those reserves, or if it changes how European users access dollar-denominated stablecoins, the ripple effects could touch DeFi protocols, trading pairs, and cross-border settlement flows across the entire ecosystem.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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