The operator of the KuCoin exchange, Peken Global Limited, has been ordered to pay a $500,000 civil penalty and is now permanently barred from the U.S. market, closing out a multi-year enforcement action by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
"The order, entered in the Southern District of New York, requires Peken to pay a $500,000 civil penalty and prohibits it from offering trading access to U.S. participants unless it registers as a foreign board of trade," the official court filing stated.
This civil action follows a January 2025 guilty plea in a parallel criminal case brought by the Department of Justice, which resulted in nearly $297 million in penalties and forfeitures for operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. According to the DOJ, KuCoin had approximately 1.5 million U.S. users, from whom it generated at least $184.5 million in fees. The court also dismissed claims against affiliated entities Mek Global Limited, PhoenixFin PTE Ltd., and Flashdot Limited.
The injunction converts what was a temporary withdrawal from the United States into a permanent shutdown of its American business, demonstrating a sequential enforcement process where criminal charges are followed by civil market bans. This action solidifies the end of KuCoin's U.S. operations and signals a significant risk for other offshore exchanges operating in a regulatory gray area.
A Two-Front Regulatory Battle
The conclusion of the CFTC case marks the final step in a comprehensive U.S. regulatory push against KuCoin. While the DOJ focused on anti-money laundering (AML) and licensing failures, the CFTC targeted the exchange for illegally offering derivatives products to U.S. customers without authorization.
The relatively small $500,000 CFTC penalty reflects the much larger financial punishment already imposed in the criminal proceeding. The agency noted it did not seek disgorgement of the $184.5 million in fees, citing Peken’s cooperation and the forfeiture order from the DOJ case. This may indicate a regulatory willingness to offer more lenient civil terms when firms cooperate with parallel criminal investigations.
A central issue in the enforcement actions was KuCoin's failure to implement Know-Your-Customer (KYC) protocols until August 2023, and even then, not applying them to its vast existing user base. This gap allowed the exchange to operate without verifying the identity of its U.S. customers for years.
The End of an Era for Offshore Exchanges
While the settlement leaves a theoretical path for KuCoin to re-enter the U.S. by registering as a foreign board of trade, the immediate impact is a definitive market exit. The case serves as a clear warning to other global cryptocurrency exchanges: relying on offshore corporate structures to serve U.S. users without adhering to local compliance is an unsustainable business model. The coordinated actions by the DOJ and CFTC show that U.S. authorities will use all available tools, from criminal prosecution to civil injunctions, to enforce domestic regulations.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.