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Binance Has No Plans to Go Public, CZ Says

Binance Has No Plans to Go Public, CZ Says

Binance Has No Plans to Go Public, CZ Says

CEO Changpeng Zhao said the world's largest crypto exchange is happy with its status as a private company.

CEO Changpeng Zhao said the world's largest crypto exchange is happy with its status as a private company.

CEO Changpeng Zhao said the world's largest crypto exchange is happy with its status as a private company.

AccessTimeIconMar 11, 2021, 6:09 PM
Updated Aug 19, 2021, 7:57 AM

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Binance CEO Changpeng "CZ" Zhao said the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange has no plans to follow Coinbase's path and go public anytime soon.

Speaking to CoinDesk TV in a wide-ranging Thursday morning interview, the CEO said his exchange is comfortable with its cash reserves and growth figures and sees no reason to rock the boat with an initial public offering in the near future.

"We're not really short on funds. We're surviving OK and we're growing very healthily and organically so we don't have any plans for an IPO," he said.

He did, however, commend market competitor Coinbase for its fast-approaching debut on the public markets. CZ even said Coinbase's $100 billion valuation is probably too low. "I think [Coinbase] should be valued much higher to be very frank," For context, Goldman Sachs has a current market cap of around $118 billion.

He also struck back at Coinbase's sniping of Binance as a fly-by-night operation running below regulatory radar. "I actually believe we have the strongest KYC (know your customer), AML (anti-money laundering) and geofencing technologies in place," CZ said.

The CEO who has reportedly clashed with local authorities in China and sued publications for running allegedly defamatory stories on whispers of the exchange's regulatory arbitrage tactics admitted Binance's stringent controls are "somewhat counter to popular perception." He nonetheless pressed: "We have the best [regulatory] controls."

Binance further moved to strengthen its policy hand Thursday by hiring former U.S. Senator Max Baucus as its first government relations adviser.

When asked about the "Tai Chi" arbitrage documents, a set of regulatory strategies that appeared to skirt the line of legality and prompted Binance to sue Forbes, which ran the story, for defamation (a lawsuit Binance later dropped) CZ said he has "clear evidence" that Binance rejected what he said was a third-party proposal.

"We actually have an email from myself to some of our lawyers saying we are not going to pursue that approach," CZ said.

On growth, CZ said Binance is outpacing even the heady onboarding rates of the 2017 bull run. New signups are flocking on despite the bitcoin market still being in "the dip," CZ said.

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