The Spanish securities regulator, the CNMV, has ordered 
Binance to stop offering cryptocurrency derivative products to customers
 in the country. According to local media, the crypto exchange giant has
 followed the orders of the regulator, withdrawing these products from 
its customers in Spain.
Spanish Securities Regulator Sets Eyes on Binance
The CNMV, which is the Spanish securities regulator, is putting more 
pressure on exchanges offering cryptocurrency-linked derivatives in the 
country. Binance, one of the biggest exchanges in the world by volume 
traded, has been required to drop the offer of cryptocurrency-related 
derivatives, like futures contracts, for customers in the country, according to local media.
The purpose of the measure is ostensibly to protect investors using 
such products as investment tools. The regulator warned last year about 
the danger of derivatives, stating they increase the complexity of 
trading operations, and also can cause investors to lose even more than 
the initial investment capital.
Binance has reportedly withdrawn all of its derivatives offerings 
from its investments page for Spanish users, preventing them from 
opening new operations. However, the operations that were already open 
are being maintained in the same state, as the exchange awaits more 
feedback from the regulator.
Gray List
Binance is following the orders of the Spanish regulator as a way of 
getting the needed permits to establish its operations in the country. 
Currently, the exchange is in regulatory limbo, being mentioned in a 
gray list that was published last year with several cryptocurrency 
exchanges that also operate in Spain. However, Binance has been in talks
 with the CNMV to get out of this current state and get approval from 
the Bank of Spain.
The exchange has been in talks
 to get licenses from the Bank of Spain and the securities regulator 
since January, but there has not been a positive answer from either as 
of writing. At the time, Alberto Ortiz, country manager of Binance in 
Spain, declared:
By joining the Bank of Spain registry we hope to encourage other firms to do the same.
However, other exchanges have already been greenlighted by the Bank of Spain. Bit2me, a local exchange, was the first one to receive this license, and others have followed since.

