Strike Wins EU Passport as Binance Exits Four Major Markets

What You Need to Know
- Strike obtained full MiCA passport via Malta, accessing all 27 EU member states with single license before July 1 deadline.
- Binance withdrew Greece application after regulatory rejection, now restricting spot services in France, Italy, Poland, and Spain starting today.
- Binance faces harder licensing scrutiny due to French money laundering investigation and former CEO’s 2023 guilty plea to anti-money-laundering violations.
- Strike’s Bitcoin-only model simplifies regulatory assessment compared to Binance’s broader asset offerings and enforcement history.
Strike secured a full MiCA passport one day before the July 1 deadline, giving it access to all 27 EU member states through a single license obtained via Malta. Binance, which had applied through Greece, withdrew its application after regulators failed to approve it in time and now must restrict spot services in France, Italy, Poland, and Spain starting today.
The contrast is sharper than a simple regulatory win-loss. Binance carries significant legal baggage into any European licensing process: French authorities are still investigating alleged money laundering offenses, and former CEO Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty to violating U.S. anti-money-laundering laws in 2023, serving four months in prison afterward. MiCA was always going to be a credibility filter as much as a compliance one, and firms with that kind of regulatory history were always going to face harder questions than a Bitcoin-only company with a narrower product surface and no comparable enforcement record. Strike’s Bitcoin-only model also simplifies the licensing conversation considerably; the fewer asset classes you offer, the fewer risks a regulator has to assess.
Binance’s customers withdrew an estimated $400 to $440 million in the week following the Greece rejection, which sounds significant until you see it against the $133.3 billion in tracked assets: roughly 0.3%.
That number matters for how you read Binance’s situation. The outflows suggest concern at the margin, not a crisis of confidence, and the company has said it will pursue authorization through another member state. But the service restrictions in four of Europe’s largest economies are real and immediate, and competitors with clean MiCA licenses now have a structural advantage in those markets that will compound over time. Strike’s authorization arrives alongside a $2.1 billion credit facility for its Bitcoin-backed lending business and a proposed merger with Twenty One Capital and Bitcoin miner Elektron Energy, giving it momentum in Europe at a moment when its largest competitor is temporarily sidelined.
Binance’s path back into full EU compliance is not closed, but it runs through another member state application with the same legal history attached. Which jurisdiction accepts that application, and on what timeline, is the open question that determines whether today’s restriction is a temporary inconvenience or the beginning of a longer contraction in Binance’s European footprint.
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