Chief executive Richard Teng, who is visiting the US to talk to monitors and officials, outlined the employment goals for the world’s largest cryptocurrency trading platform in an interview with Bloomberg News in New York on Wednesday.
“I’ve been a regulator all my life,” Teng said. “Government agencies are important.” He declined to say whether he has met with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) during his trip. The SEC is suing Binance and was not part of the US settlement.
Binance plans to have a 700-strong compliance workforce by the end of this year, up from about 500 at present, according to Teng.
He said Binance fields a growing number of requests from law-enforcement agencies worldwide, numbering 63,000 so far this year, up from 58,000 in 2023.
Spending on compliance has climbed from US$158 million two years ago and is set to increase further, he said. The monitors appointed by the US agencies, Forensic Risk Alliance and Sullivan & Cromwell, have already begun work.
“They’re going to do an assessment,” Teng said. “We’re very early in the journey.” The monitors keep an eye on the company’s financial statements and transaction tracking, he added.
The defendants contested the claims and asked for the case to be dismissed. Teng said Binance will continue to fight the accusations.
Under Teng, Binance has adjusted the way the firm works with prime brokers, tightened requirements for listing new digital tokens and spun off its venture arm. But Binance has yet to formally designate a global headquarters or release a fully audited set of accounts.
Teng said the business continues to be profitable and that Dubai, Abu Dhabi and another city he declined to specify are on a shortlist of potential locations for the headquarters. A company representative two months ago said Binance’s employee headcount was upwards of 5,000.
The planned hiring spree also encompasses customer service roles, according to Teng. The expansion follows a rebound in cryptocurrency prices and trading volumes from a bear market in 2022 that led to a spate of job losses across the sector.