Reserved IP Address°C
04-03-2025
BSV
$31.06
Vol 29.7m
-2.91%
BTC
$83551
Vol 44762.59m
-1.91%
BCH
$299.5
Vol 241.16m
-2.28%
LTC
$83.02
Vol 649.23m
-0.74%
DOGE
$0.16
Vol 1870.5m
-4%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Key Coinsquare executives are stepping down from their posts after the Toronto-based digital currency exchange admitted to using artificially inflated trading volumes to make its platform look more popular.

The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) filed the allegations of illegal practice—known as wash trading—last week, accusing CEO Cole Diamond, founder and President Virgile Rostand, and former CCO Felix Mazer of intentionally manipulating markets as well as having “authorized, permitted or acquiesced in this conduct” from company staff.

As part of Coinsquare’s settlement with OSC, Diamond and Rostand will resign from their positions and pay C$1 million (US$750,000) and C$900,000 (US$670,000) in penalties, respectively. Coinsquare and the two executives will also pay C$300,000 (US$223,000) for the regulator’s investigation costs.

Diamond and Rostand are also banned from acting as “registrants and directors or officers of a registrant” for three years, or from holding a position that requires registration for three and two years, respectively. Mazer, who had already stepped down as Coinsquare’s CCO and paid C$50,000 (US$37,000) to OSC, has a similar ban in place for one year.

Investigators said Diamond encouraged staff to engage in wash trading practices, while Rostand developed code to conduct the fraudulent activity.

As the firm’s chief compliance officer, Mazer is accused of having “failed to take steps that a reasonable CCO would have taken” to identify and flag the activity during his employment at the firm between May 2018 and June 2020.

According to the regulator, the illegal trading activity accounted for as much as 90% of Coinsquare’s trading volume from July 2018 to December 2019, casting significant doubt over the true value of the company.

The OSC said that wash trades numbered 840,000 over the period, with as much as US$5.4 billion in BTC traded artificially through the practice on the Coinsquare exchange. Further, when a whistleblower tried to bring the practice to light, the company carried out reprisals against them.

The damning charge sheet from the OSC also finds that the firm concealed its activities from the regulator while attempting to apply for a license for a subsidiary, Coinsquare Capital Markets Ltd.

The allegations first came to light in a leak to Vice Magazine, in which emails, Slack messages and other sources of information were passed on to journalists.

Coinsquare’s case and subsequent settlement is the latest casualty as Canada goes regulation-heavy and deems all digital currency exchange activities as dealings in securities.

Recommended for you

Philippines to set up AI think tank for policy development
Industry experts will convene within a newly established technical group to facilitate the Philippines' adoption and formulation of policies about...
April 3, 2025
MNEE on 1SAT launches WhatsOnChain plugin for simplified blockchain transactions
WhatsOnChain MNEE plugin is an essential tool for users who need a simpler way to view and confirm MNEE transactions.
April 2, 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement