June 09, 2026 ChainGPT

UK HTX sanctions snag legitimate users, spark "address tainting" compliance backlash

UK HTX sanctions snag legitimate users, spark "address tainting" compliance backlash
UK sanctions tied to HTX are roiling crypto compliance systems and sparking industry backlash, after researchers warned the measures are producing widespread “address tainting” that snags legitimate users. What happened On May 26 the UK sanctioned Huobi Global S.A., a Panama‑registered company British authorities say is linked to HTX, accusing it of supporting Russia through financial services tied to A7 Limited Liability Company. The government applied asset freezes, payment‑processing restrictions and other penalties aimed at the A7 network. Analytics firm Elliptic said the action was the first known use of Regulation 17A against a crypto exchange. How big the fallout is A report from blockchain analytics firm Global Ledger found HTX processed roughly $21.06 billion in high‑risk crypto flows between 2021 and May 2026, including about $7.64 billion tied to Russian high‑risk entities and darknet markets such as Garantex, Grinex, A7A5 and Hydra. HTX has disputed the UK designation, saying Huobi Global S.A. is legally distinct from the HTX trading platform. Researchers: compliance systems are breaking Blockchain researchers and investigators have taken to X to warn the sanctions are having unintended consequences. They say compliance tools that screen and block illicit funds are increasingly flagging wallets purely because of historical links to HTX, pushing large numbers of otherwise lawful users into elevated‑risk categories. - Alex Thorn, head of research at Galaxy Digital, criticized the UK’s decision to treat “all of HTX” as sanctioned, noting the exchange services many legitimate retail customers and that enforcement methods differ widely between stablecoin issuers. - Security researcher Taylor Monahan argued the designation undermines years of advocacy to get DeFi protocols to screen and block stolen funds, saying blanket approaches are hard to justify when most HTX users aren’t involved in crime. - Investigator ZachXBT called the move “a bit of an overreach,” warning that address tainting has become so widespread that risk scores are losing their signal for investigators. Real‑world disruptions The sanctions have already rippled through business relationships. World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a DeFi project backed by the Trump family, froze HTX‑linked addresses during a sanctions compliance review. HTX responded by removing WLFI’s USD1 stablecoin from the exchange and suspending trading pairs tied to that token. HTX said WLFI acted without sufficient communication and later announced eligible USD1 balances would be converted to Tether’s USDT on a 1:1 basis. These disputes are layered onto an ongoing legal fight between WLFI and Justin Sun, who sits on HTX’s global advisory board; both parties have filed claims against each other over token freezes and related allegations. Why the debate matters At the heart of the controversy is how to apply sanctions in a permissionless, transparent ledger environment without collateral damage. Critics warn that sanctioning an exchange with a large retail user base can create compliance complications that extend far beyond the sanctioned entity, degrading the usefulness of on‑chain risk signals and complicating investigations into illicit flows. What’s next The dispute between HTX and the UK authorities continues, and the industry is watching whether regulators will refine targeting or whether compliance providers will adjust screening logic to avoid flagging benign customers. Meanwhile, analytics firms’ reports and operator reactions show the challenge regulators and practitioners face in balancing enforcement with minimizing harm to ordinary users. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news