Cryptocurrency alternate CEX.IO has acquired a cease-and-desist order from the FDIC, as seen in a letter printed by the U.S. regulator on Feb. 15.
The Federal Deposit Insurance coverage Company’s authorized division stated that CEX.IO has made false or deceptive statements suggesting that the FDIC insures it.
CEX.IO’s official web site claims that “U.S. {dollars} held in your CEX.IO fiat forex pockets are FDIC-insured as much as $250,000 per account” with out qualification.
The FDIC, nevertheless, says that CEX.IO is itself not insured. It referred to as the above assertion deceptive as a result of it doesn’t establish any insured deposit establishments (IDIs) with which CEX.IO has a direct or oblique relationship. Although CEX.IO could deposit funds with such an establishment, its customers’ holdings usually are not essentially insured in that means. As such, the FDIC has demanded that CEX.IO take away all statements to that impact.
The regulator additionally directed two unbiased web sites — Captain Altcoin and Bankless Occasions — to right statements suggesting CEX.IO is FDIC-insured.
The FDIC additionally stated that a kind of claims incorrectly implies that crypto belongings could be federally insured. This criticism doesn’t appear to use to CEX.IO’s personal web site, which has acknowledged since at the very least 2021 that federal insurance coverage doesn’t apply to digital belongings.
CEX.IO is a comparatively minor alternate, with a 24-hour quantity of simply $4.3 million.
The FDIC has despatched related notices to different crypto firms. Final yr, it despatched stop and desist letters to FTX.US and Voyager Digital over their insurance coverage ensures.