Landing on a regulator's list is rarely good news. But the warning Singapore just put on Bybit isn't what it looks like.
It's a flag, not a ban. That difference is the whole story.
What The List Actually Means
The MAS is the Monetary Authority of Singapore. It's the country's central bank and top financial watchdog.
Its Investor Alert List names firms that people might wrongly think are licensed there. That's the key part.
The list is there to protect people. It helps keep them from handing money to the wrong firm.
The list is public and easy to search. Anyone can check a firm's name on it.
Being on it is not a penalty. It's not a fraud charge, and not a claim that anyone broke the law.
Think of it as a sign on the door that reads "we did not approve this." It warns the public without calling the company a crook.
Crypto rules are shifting fast, and we track what each move means for investors in Market Briefs. It's five minutes a morning, with a free investing masterclass at sign-up.
Bybit Says It Doesn't Serve Singapore
Bybit's response was basically: why us? The exchange says it has never served Singapore.
Its own site lists Singapore as a restricted place. Local users are told they can't sign up.
It also keeps them out with contract rules and IP blocking. IP blocking is tech that stops people in one country from reaching a website.
Bybit is now asking MAS to explain the listing. MAS says it weighs public feedback and documents before adding any name.
Bybit serves more than 80 million users worldwide. So the label travels far, even if few in Singapore ever see it.
Part Of A Wider Crackdown
This didn't come out of nowhere. Last year, MAS widened its rules to cover Singapore-based crypto firms that serve clients overseas.
Singapore has picked its spots with crypto. It grants licenses to firms that meet its rules, and warns the public about the rest.
MAS has also limited crypto ads to the public. It has pushed risk warnings for years.
Bybit also isn't the first big name flagged. Binance, the largest exchange of all, landed on the same list back in 2021.
There's a hopeful note for Bybit, too. Malaysia pulled the exchange off its own alert list in April, after the two sides talked.
That shows these flags can come off. Firms just have to engage with the regulator.
What To Watch
The open question is whether MAS spells out why Bybit made the list. The next one is whether other offshore exchanges are flagged too.
MAS added Bybit on June 17. It is the latest move in a wider crackdown on offshore platforms.
Bybit says it isn't in Singapore. Singapore just made sure its citizens know that too.
Want the crypto headlines that actually matter, minus the hype? Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs and get a 45-minute investing course as a free bonus.
