OKX Courts Stranded Users as Bybit Follows Binance in Europe Exit

Bybit will progressively restrict crypto trading on its Global platform for users across the European Economic Area, becoming the second major exchange after Binance to pull back from Europe before the July 1 MiCA deadline.
The exchange said affected users will receive advance notice and keep access to their assets. Bybit EU, its separately licensed European entity, stays open, while rival OKX moves to capture traders leaving both Bybit and Binance.
Bybit Steps Back From Europe Before the MiCA Deadline
The MiCA transitional period ends on July 1, 2026. After that, only firms holding a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) license can serve EEA residents. ESMA has ruled out any extension and issued a final warning to unlicensed firms.
In its notice, Bybit named 29 EEA countries where Global platform access will be limited in stages. Affected users will get timelines to manage positions and keep custody and withdrawal rights.
“We would like to inform you of certain operational and structural developments in the European Economic Area (EEA) in the context of our ongoing regulatory alignment efforts,” read an excerpt in the announcement.
Bybit EU, the group’s licensed arm in Vienna, stays open. It counts among just 14 fully licensed European exchanges on the ESMA register, though Malta sits outside its passport for now.
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OKX Courts Traders as Binance Exits the EU
Binance set the precedent days earlier. The world’s largest exchange withdrew its Greek MiCA application after reports that its regulator would balk at clearing co-founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ).
That scrutiny has history. Binance pleaded guilty in the United States in 2023 and paid more than $4.3 billion, while CZ admitted a money laundering charge and resigned as chief executive.
Binance will wind down EU services from July 1 and plans to reapply, reportedly in France.
OKX moved quickly to turn the disruption into an opportunity. It was among the first global exchanges to be licensed under MiCA, receiving Malta’s approval in January 2025, and holds a MiFID permission for derivatives.
That product matters here. Binance, OKX, and Bybit rank as the three largest derivatives venues by 2026 volume, yet Bybit EU currently offers only spot trading.
OKX Europe’s chief, Erald, urged Bybit and Binance users to switch, promoting an 8% deposit offer.
“Now we offer 8% on new deposits. Don’t wait to transfer your assets from Bybit Global and Binance to OKX,” said Erald.
Elsewhere, CEO Star Xu questioned whether Binance’s failure was really a loss for Europe, extending the longstanding public rivalry and aggression against Binance and its founder, CZ.
Xu’s appeal to the rule of law is pointed. OKX pleaded guilty in the United States in 2025 over more than $5 billion in suspicious transactions, paying a $504 million settlement. Months after gaining its MiCA license, Malta fined its European unit €1.1 million.
Compliance Becomes Europe’s New Dividing Line
Other licensed venues are pressing the advantage. Coinbase opened a Luxembourg hub, joining the regulated platforms chasing displaced traders.
The shake-out rewards firms that prepared early. Marcos Viriato, CEO and co-founder of Parfin, said a permit alone settles little.
“A license doesn’t create adoption. It creates the conditions for adoption… Compliance has become a competitive advantage,” Viriato told BeInCrypto in an email.
Whether consolidation around fewer licensed venues helps or hurts European users should become clearer in the months after the deadline.
Источник: BeInCrypto
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