Skip to main content

BlockShoals Says Binance Could Operate in the Philippines Under SEC Rules



Binance’s renewed path to serving users in the Philippines is being shaped by a legal framework that hinges on what the companies say they are—and are not—doing under local rules. According to BlockShoals’ head of legal, Marie Antonette Quiogue, Binance may provide trading access through its arrangement with BlockShoals, but neither party is authorized to handle peso transfers or carry out other activities regulated by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the Philippines’ central bank.


The discussion underscores a central tension in cryptocurrency regulation: whether an exchange can operate through an intermediary and a regulator-run sandbox while avoiding separate licensing requirements tied to banking and payments. The BSP has maintained that neither Binance nor BlockShoals is authorized to operate as a virtual asset service provider (VASP).



Key takeaways



  • BlockShoals argues Binance’s trading access falls under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) authority for crypto asset services, not BSP-regulated peso transfers.

  • The BSP says participation in the SEC’s sandbox does not remove the need to comply with applicable laws and licensing obligations.

  • Neither Binance nor BlockShoals has applied for a local VASP license, according to Quiogue.

  • Binance’s return comes after the SEC and other regulators restricted access over licensing concerns in 2024.



How BlockShoals’ structure attempts to fit SEC oversight


Quiogue, who leads legal at BlockShoals, told Cointelegraph at Philippine Blockchain Week 2026 that Binance’s local activities are intended to operate under the SEC’s crypto asset service provider (CASP) framework. Under this model, BlockShoals acts as an intermediary, connecting Philippine users to Binance’s global trading platform.


She said the arrangement is designed to align with the SEC’s Strategic Sandbox, or StratBox. In practical terms, this is meant to establish which regulator—SEC versus BSP—has jurisdiction over the specific activities being offered.


Quiogue did not challenge the BSP’s position that neither company is authorized as a VASP in the Philippines. Instead, she argued that the lack of a VASP license does not automatically block the companies from providing services where the SEC has jurisdiction.


Her key distinction was operational: “Trading, the activity of trading, is clearly under the jurisdiction of the SEC,” she said, while adding that BlockShoals and Binance are “not moving pesos, which is clearly under the jurisdiction of the BSP.”



BSP stance: sandbox participation doesn’t eliminate licensing duties


While the SEC framework may govern trading-related activities, the BSP’s message is that regulatory experiments or sandbox participation do not excuse compliance with banking and payments rules. The central bank told Cointelegraph that neither Binance nor BlockShoals is authorized to operate as a VASP.


The BSP also emphasized that sandbox participation does not create a blanket exemption from other laws. As stated by the BSP, involvement in the regulatory sandbox “does not exempt an entity from complying with applicable laws, rules, and regulations, including any licensing requirements imposed by relevant regulators.” The BSP added that it was coordinating with the SEC on the issue.


From a compliance perspective, the practical implication is straightforward: if a service drifts into areas treated as VASP activity—or if it involves regulated functions tied to the BSP’s remit—additional authorization could still be required, even if the trading interface itself is routed through the SEC sandbox structure.



What changes—and what remains unresolved


Quiogue acknowledged that neither Binance nor BlockShoals sought a local VASP license. But she argued that when the companies introduce services that fall under a different regulator’s scope, they must obtain the relevant authority.


“If BlockShoals and Binance will be offering any product that is regulated by any other government agency, you have to get an authority from them,” she said. In other words, the legal position presented is conditional: permitted access depends on staying within the regulator-assigned boundaries.


This raises an investor-and-user question that matters beyond the immediate headline. Even where an exchange is accessible again, the legal risk may depend less on the existence of a sandbox relationship and more on the precise flow of activities behind the scenes—particularly anything touching transfers, custody, or payment rails that might be interpreted as BSP-regulated conduct.


For users, the change appears to be the restoration of platform accessibility under a new local structuring. For compliance watchers, the more important detail is that the arrangement is built around jurisdictional separation rather than a confirmed license covering all aspects of crypto services.



Background: restrictions followed SEC warnings over licensing


Regulatory scrutiny in the Philippines predates this latest arrangement. In November 2023, the SEC warned that Binance was not authorized to sell or offer securities in the country, citing the absence of the necessary license and registration. The SEC also pointed to the Binance platform’s status in relation to local regulatory requirements, according to the SEC’s advisory at the time.


Then in March 2024, the SEC said it had asked the National Telecommunications Commission to block access to the Binance website and related webpages. Following that order, internet providers in the Philippines began restricting access to the platform.


By the time Cointelegraph published its interview, Binance’s platform was accessible to users in the Philippines. That accessibility now appears tied to the BlockShoals arrangement and the assertion that trading-related activities can be handled under the SEC’s CASP and StratBox framework, while peso transfers and other BSP-regulated functions remain outside the scope of what the companies are doing.



Readers should watch how regulators operationalize these jurisdictional boundaries: whether the arrangement remains limited to trading access routed through SEC-supervised structures, and whether any expansion into payment-adjacent or custody-like functions triggers new licensing or enforcement actions from the BSP and SEC.



https://www.cryptobreaking.com/blockshoals-says-binance-could-operate/?utm_source=blogger%20&utm_medium=social_auto&utm_campaign=BlockShoals%20Says%20Binance%20Could%20Operate%20in%20the%20Philippines%20Under%20SEC%20Rules%20

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Coinbase's x402 launches AI agents app store for payments

Coinbase-backed x402 has unveiled Agentic.market, a dedicated marketplace aimed at increasing the usefulness of AI agents by aggregating thousands of apps and services that agents can access without any API keys. The rollout positions the platform as a central hub for agents to discover, evaluate, and deploy capabilities across a standardized payments layer. Coinbase product lead Nick Prince described Agentic.market in a video posted on X as a storefront for discovering, comparing, and using x402 services. The marketplace is designed to give both humans and their AI agents access to a wide range of tools—from data feeds to consumer apps—without the friction of managing API credentials. A storefront for discovering, comparing, and using x402 services. Thousands of services. Zero API keys. Powered by x402. Prince added that the market offers a web interface for humans to browse and assess services, alongside a programming layer that lets AI agents autonomously search, filter, and integra...

Mastercard Launches AI Agent Pay System With Ripple and Solana Help

Mastercard has launched Agent Pay for Machines, a payments system built for autonomous software agents. The service allows AI agents to send and receive payments without direct human action. It brings Ripple, Coinbase, and Solana Foundation into Mastercard’s push for automated digital commerce. Ripple Brings XRPL and RLUSD to Mastercard’s Agent Pay System Mastercard introduced Agent Pay for Machines on June 10 as a tool for machine-led payments. The system targets high-volume and low-value transactions across business and consumer use cases. It also supports automated settlement between software agents and connected machines. Ripple will support the system through the XRP Ledger and its RLUSD stablecoin. The company said that settlement will become more important as automated commerce grows. It also sees blockchain rails as useful for fast and rule-based payments. RippleX senior vice president Markus Infanger said XRPL and RLUSD support enterprise-grade agent payments. He said the tool...

Top Cryptocurrencies to Watch: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, Solana, Dogecoin & More

Market Analysis and Price Predictions for Key Cryptocurrencies Recent market dynamics reveal a cautious sentiment across the cryptocurrency landscape, with Bitcoin struggling to maintain levels above $90,000 and many major altcoins facing downward pressure. Indicators point toward reduced participation from both institutional and retail investors, raising concerns about a potential consolidation phase after notable gains earlier in the year. Bitcoin has fallen below $87,000, reflecting waning demand at higher price points. Institutional fund flows into BTC and ETH ETFs have turned negative, indicating a period of subdued market activity. Active addresses and Binance deposit/withdrawal activities are at annual lows, suggesting market indecision. Most leading altcoins are approaching support levels, with some poised for potential breakdowns. Tickers mentioned: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin, XRP, Solana, Dogecoin, Cardano, Bitcoin Cash, Chainlink, Hyperliquid Sentiment: Neutral to Sli...