Philippine SEC Warns Against 7 Crypto Platforms Including dYdX, Threatens Criminal Charges
Regulator orders unregistered crypto platforms to cease operations, warns promoters face fines up to $89,000 and 21-year prison sentences
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- The Philippine SEC issued an investor alert on April 14, 2026 warning against seven crypto platforms—dYdX, Aevo, gTrade, Pacifica, Orderly, Deriv, and Ostium—for operating without registration under the CASP framework.
- The regulator warned promoters could face fines up to 5 million Philippine pesos ($89,000) or 21 years imprisonment.
- This marks an escalation in the Philippines' crackdown on unlicensed crypto operators, following previous actions against Binance, Coinbase, Gemini, and ten other exchanges in 2025.
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The Philippine SEC has been cracking down on unlicensed cryptocurrency operators since 2024, when Binance was blocked. The crackdown intensified in late 2025 with actions against Coinbase and Gemini, and continued in August 2025 with warnings to OKX, Bybit, KuCoin, and Kraken. The latest advisory targets seven platforms, marking the broadest enforcement action to date.
The Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a public investor alert warning Filipinos not to invest in dYdX and six other crypto trading platforms, saying they are not registered or authorized to solicit investments in the country.
In a Facebook post on Tuesday, the SEC named dYdX, Aevo, gTrade, Pacifica, Orderly, Deriv and Ostium, stating that based on its findings, the platforms appear to be offering investments to the public in exchange for promised returns, profits or interest.
The regulator said none of the listed entities are registered with the Commission or hold the required authorization under its crypto-asset service provider (CASP) framework, which requires firms offering crypto-related services in the Philippines to obtain licenses and meet capital and operational requirements.
The SEC also warned that individuals promoting any of the listed platforms in the Philippines may face criminal liability under the Securities Regulation Code. Under Sections 28 and 73 of the law, violators could be fined up to 5 million Philippine pesos (about $89,000) or imprisoned for up to 21 years, or both.
The advisory highlights a broader shift toward stricter enforcement in the Philippines, where regulators have increasingly moved from warnings to access restrictions. On Dec. 24, 2025, Philippine regulators blocked Coinbase and Gemini as part of their broader crackdown on unlicensed CASPs.
The latest advisory comes as Philippine regulators continue to step up enforcement against crypto platforms operating without local authorization. In 2024, authorities moved to block access to Binance after a compliance deadline expired, with regulators also directing app stores to remove the trading platform's app from users' devices in the country.
The crackdown has since expanded to include other major platforms. In August 2025, the SEC issued an advisory naming 10 exchanges, including OKX, Bybit, KuCoin and Kraken, for offering crypto services without registration, warning that their activities exposed Filipino investors to risks.
While regulators have targeted unlicensed operators, compliant firms have continued rolling out crypto products. In 2025, PDAX partnered with Toku to enable stablecoin salary payouts, while digital bank GoTyme launched crypto services with Alpaca, allowing users to buy and hold digital assets within its app.
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Additional crypto platforms will face similar SEC warnings in the coming months
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Some targeted platforms may seek registration under CASP framework
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- How will these platforms respond to the SEC warning?
- Will the SEC take further enforcement action beyond warnings?
- Will other countries in the region follow similar enforcement patterns?






