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Kraken Under Fire for Alleged Iran Sanctions Violations

The New York Times reports that the Kraken exchange is under investigation by the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control for allegedly violating economic sanctions against Iran:

Kraken Allows Iranian Users Access

According to the NYT report, Treasury has outlined its suspicions that Kraken permits Iranian users to access its services, thereby violating US federal sanctions:

It is alleged that five people, either associated with the company or possessing knowledge of the inquiry, came forward to share information with the newspaper. These sources requested anonymity for their own safety but discussed how Kraken allegedly allows customers from both Iran and other sanctioned countries to use its exchange despite the illegalities.

Marco Santori, Kraken’s chief legal officer, stated that his company would not comment on regulator discussions, other than saying:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/marco-santori-7ab37b28/overlay/photo/

Kraken has robust compliance measures in place and continues to grow its compliance team to match its business growth. Kraken closely monitors compliance with sanctions laws and, as a general matter, reports to regulators even potential issues.

Marco Santori, chief legal officer, Kraken

However, it is known that Kraken’s CEO and co-founder, Jesse Powell, has in the past stated his willingness to challenge what he deems to be “unfair regulations”. International sanctions are one such regulation.

While there is no current timeline for enforcement action, it is understood that Kraken will receive a fine.

OpenSea and Economic Sanctions

The debate surrounding crypto operations in various countries has kicked into gear this year, with leading NFT marketplace OpenSea at the centre of controversy. On March 5, both OpenSea and MetaMask users from Iran and Venezuela were blocked from making Ethereum transactions.

Both platforms cited compliance issues behind the blockage; however, it was confirmed soon after that Ethereum’s Infura cut off users to separatist areas in Ukraine, and Venezuelan users were accidentally cut off. However, the block was intentional for Iranian users.

Three days later, on March 8, OpenSea updated its list of banned countries to align with the US sanctions list, blocking North Korea, Syria and Russia, along with Iran. The decision reignited the conversation on decentralisation and sparked outrage from NFT collectors.

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Crypto Exchange Crypto Wallets Kraken Trading

‘Super Wallet’ is Coming as Crypto Exchanges Will Soon Enable Trading of Stocks

Kraken CEO Jesse Powell featured on Decrypt’s GM podcast last week, in which he stated that the US exchange is currently exploring broadening its offerings to include stocks. Powell also noted that the so-called ‘super wallet’ appears to be a common goal among many exchanges:

One Wallet, Multiple Assets

During the Decrypt podcast, Powell discussed the future of crypto wallets and the exchanges they belong to. He said that ‘super wallets’ – wallets that allow users to buy and trade varying assets, from crypto and NFTs to stocks – were in the sights of many crypto exchanges right now, with Kraken itself exploring the potential of catering to stocks:

I think we’ve said before that [stocks] are something that we’re exploring, and I think [it] makes sense to do [so].

Jesse Powell, Kraken CEO

With crypto already being offered alongside other assets by companies such as Robinhood and eToro, crypto brokerages won’t be far behind. Kraken users are already speculating on how this potential addition could unfold:

https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/comments/umjq92/bitcoin_exchange_kraken_exploring_stocks_as_part/
Reddit thread on Jesse Powell’s podcast appearance

Kraken Comes to the Aid of Ukraine

Kraken has been making itself visible over the past two years via multiple company moves. The most notable of these has been its dedication to aiding fundraising for Ukraine. In March, the company announced it would be distributing over US$10 million to relief efforts in the wartorn country, along with the waiving of exchange fees for Ukrainian addresses.  

In June 2021, the company decided to re-evaluate its launch plans following the poor performance of Coinbase’s IPO, stating that a direct listing might have a long-run “dampening effect” if Kraken continued with its plans to go public.