March 14, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Cardano: Deep Dive on the Trump Reserve Token Whose Blockchain Ignores TVL Court Approves 3AC’s $1.53B Claim Against FTX, Setting Up Major Creditor Battle Weekly Recap: Regulatory Wins, Market Doldrums Bitcoin Tops $84K, Battling Key Level for Bulls; SOL, LINK Lead Gains Bitcoin-Related Convertible Bond ETF Comes to Market How Bitdeer Is Transforming Bitcoin Mining Machines Euler Looks to Build on V2’s DeFi Lending Comeback Story Russia Turns to Crypto to Bypass Western Sanctions in Oil Trade: Reuters CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: Index Gains 3.3% as All Twenty Assets Move Higher ZKsync Sunsets Liquidity Rewards Program, Citing Bearish Market Conditions

Coinbase Plans India Comeback After Securing Regulatory Registration With FIU

Coinbase (COIN) is one step closer to fully returning to India after securing registration with the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), the crypto exchange said on Tuesday.

The Nasdaq-listed company, which was active in the country several years ago, faced a number of issues due to regulatory pressure and eventually backed away from India.

In 2022, it started operations in the country only to suspend them due to “informal pressure” from the Reserve Bank of India. The following year, the exchange shut off new user registration, while continuing to offer wallet services to Indian citizens.

The FIU registration allows Coinbase to bring its trading services to the Indian market.

Earlier this year, TechCrunch reported that Coinbase was in discussions with regulators, including the FIU, for a possible re-entry into India.

The Brian Armstrong-led exchange said it plans to start up retail services this year, adding that it is also looking at releasing other products and increasing investment in the country.

“India represents one of the most exciting market opportunities in the world today, and we’re proud to deepen our investment here in full compliance with local regulations,” said John O’Loghlen, regional managing director for APAC at Coinbase.

This post was originally published on this site