The European crypto story is moving fast. Binance, the world's biggest crypto exchange with over 300 million users, now has one path left to stay in the European market, and that path runs through Paris.
The exchange's original plan fell apart after Greece's financial regulator, the HCMC, rejected its MiCA application. Reuters first broke the story on June 16, and multiple sources confirm the refusal is final.
This is a major shift in the Binance-EU regulations story. A MiCA license works like a passport, one approval gives access to all 27 EU member states. Lose that, and the platform loses the entire continent.
According to an investigation by Grégory Raymond, co-founder of The Big Whale, the HCMC had reviewed the application and found it fully complete and compliant with MiCA requirements. Their anti-money laundering officer gave a favorable opinion throughout the process.
The 40-day review window ended June 4 with no objections raised at the European level. Passporting notifications had already been filed in anticipation of approval.
Then, Raymond's sources claim, something shifted between June 7 and June 15. According to the investigation, ECB President Christine Lagarde allegedly signaled to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis during a May meeting that the BNB-powered exchange was not welcome in Europe. That message reportedly moved down from the Prime Minister's office to the Finance Minister, and eventually reached the regulator.
The suspected reason behind this? Stablecoins. Binance is the primary channel for stablecoin liquidity across Europe. Cutting off that access could indirectly strengthen Frankfurt's planned digital euro project.
One legal expert quoted in the investigation called it political interference in an independent regulatory process, noting that the ECB technically holds no authority over MiCA licensing decisions.
These claims have not been independently verified, and neither the ECB nor the Greek government has publicly confirmed this account.
Talks between Binance and France's AMF are active, but no formal application has been filed yet. The exchange's France SAS has held a Digital Asset Service Provider registration since May 2022, giving it a head start.
France's Treasury and Tracfin — the country's financial intelligence unit, are reportedly pushing for the platform to be supervised from Paris. Their core concern is straightforward:
If the CEX exchange exits the EU, regulators lose all visibility into its financial flows
Keeping it under a French MiCA license would preserve that oversight
Even so, a full license takes months to process. Some Binance-based Europe services could face restrictions or suspension during the gap between application and approval.
The crypto platform committed to the European users to provide a full update by June 30. The EU restriction situation, while serious, does not put user funds at immediate risk.
Here is what options look like for affected users:
Free withdrawal of all assets from the platform
Transfer to MiCA-licensed exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, or Bitvavo
Self-custody wallets like Ledger or Trezor for long-term holders
Passive holding while the platform and regulators manage an orderly transition
While the Binance EU license update keeps markets watching, another player is making a quiet but significant move.
BitGo Europe just launched a MiCA-ready crypto-as-a-service platform. It gives exchanges and businesses ready-built infrastructure – compliant custody, KYC systems, and trading rails, without building everything from scratch.
The timing is deliberate. The EU's MiCA licensing deadline hits July 1, 2026, and many platforms are still scrambling to meet standards across the European Economic Area.
BitGo already holds a MiCAR license, which positions it as a regulated backbone for other businesses entering or staying in the European market.
This matters as one door closes for some platforms, others are quietly laying the infrastructure for institutional-grade crypto across Europe.
The Binance ban from Greece has effectively handed rivals a rare opening. Platforms already holding MiCA authorization are now competing directly for millions of displaced European users.
The June 30 deadline is now a point to unveil a major Binance news that shapes European crypto for years.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.


