Crypto Exchange Zipmex Loses Thai License Amidst Financial Strain
Shalini is a crypto reporter who provides in-depth reports on daily developments and regulatory shifts in the cryptocurrency sector.
- Bitcoin Poised To Top 2025 Peak Soon, Miller Value Partners’ Exec Says
- Michael Saylor's Strategy Posts $17.4B Q4 Unrealized Loss On Digital Assets
- Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Ticks Up As Asian Shares Carry Wall Street Momentum
- Big Four Accounting Firm PwC Ramps Up Crypto Push After Regulatory Thaw
- Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Snaps Back Above $92K, Stocks Advance While Oil Turns Volatile

Thailand’s Ministry of Finance revoked Zipmex’s digital asset business license on May 28, following recommendations from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The action came after the exchange repeatedly failed to adhere to the regulator’s directives, according to a statement.
In a statement on Monday, the SEC explained its decision. First, it raised concerns about the firm’s financial health, suggesting it could harm customers. Second, the regulator found the company’s management structure and staffing inadequate to run the business responsibly and follow regulations.
Earlier this year, Zipmex got into hot water with Thai regulators. In January, the SEC flagged issues with its finances and management structure. It ordered the company to make changes, but the exchange failed to comply. As a consequence, the SEC temporarily suspended its trading and brokerage services in February and gave them a short window to fix the problems.
Zipmex didn’t return Cryptonews’ request for comment by press time.
Zipmex Fails to Comply, Thai SEC Takes Action
Things got even worse after the SEC launched an investigation. The regulator charged and accused the former CEO, Akarlap Yimwilai, of fraud and deception. The SEC discovered that the exchange moved customer funds from its Thai wallets to overseas accounts without informing regulators beforehand. This contradicted the information Zipmex previously provided, raising trust concerns.
Despite the suspension and deadline, Zipmex continued to fall short. By Feb. 21st, the SEC determined Zipmex hadn’t addressed the compliance issues and hadn’t made the necessary changes to its operations.
The SEC has now mandated how Zipmex should handle customer assets. It requires Zipmex to transfer the assets back to customers within 15 days. If a customer doesn’t claim their assets, Zipmex must then place them in a secure system and report every step of this process to the SEC promptly.
- [LIVE] Fed Payments Innovation Conference: Real-Time Updates as Federal Reserve Discusses Crypto, Stablecoins, and AI with Industry Leaders
- Crypto Market Prospect: After the Washout, the Soil Looks Richer
- XRP Price Prediction: Years of Waiting Might Finally Pay Off – Is This the Breakout Everyone’s Been Hoping For?
- China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Bitcoin and Solana By the End of 2026
- Leading AI Claude Predicts the Price of XRP, Shiba Inu and Solana By the End of 2026
About Us
2M+
250+
8
70
Market Overview
- 7d
- 1m
- 1y
- [LIVE] Fed Payments Innovation Conference: Real-Time Updates as Federal Reserve Discusses Crypto, Stablecoins, and AI with Industry Leaders
- Crypto Market Prospect: After the Washout, the Soil Looks Richer
- XRP Price Prediction: Years of Waiting Might Finally Pay Off – Is This the Breakout Everyone’s Been Hoping For?
- China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Bitcoin and Solana By the End of 2026
- Leading AI Claude Predicts the Price of XRP, Shiba Inu and Solana By the End of 2026
More Articles
Get dialed in every Tuesday & Friday with quick updates on the world of crypto