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Regulators Double Down: ASIC Escapes Crypto Fight to High Court After Block Earner Loss

Regulators Double Down: ASIC Escapes Crypto Fight to High Court After Block Earner Loss

Author:
Cryptonews
Published:
2025-05-22 12:32:26
10
3

Australia’s corporate watchdog isn’t backing down—despite a bruising lower-court defeat, ASIC is taking its crypto crackdown to the highest judicial arena. The move signals regulators’ refusal to let decentralized finance slip through their fingers, even when the rules are murky.

Block Earner’s win in February exposed gaps in existing frameworks, but ASIC’s appeal proves bureaucrats hate losing more than they hate volatility. One thing’s clear: when it comes to crypto, the only certainty is legal bills.

Bonus jab: Meanwhile, traditional finance keeps pretending 0.5% savings accounts are ’yield.’

Block Earner Case Tests Boundaries of Financial Licensing Laws

The case centers on Block Earner, a Sydney-based fintech operating under Web3 Ventures Pty Ltd. Between March and November 2022, it offered two yield-generating products, “Earner” and “Access.”

ASIC originally filed suit in 2022, alleging the company provided unlicensed financial services by offering these products without the necessary Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL).

On 9 February 2024, the Federal Court ruled that Block Earner’s “Earner” product constituted a financial product and had been offered without a license.

🚩An Australian federal court has determined that fintech company Block Earner engaged in unlicensed financial services conduct by offering its crypto-backed Earner product.#CryptoNewshttps://t.co/VdMEg1aitv

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) February 9, 2024

However, it dismissed ASIC’s claims regarding the “Access” product, which offered variable yields via decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols.

Though the Court acknowledged regulatory breaches with Earner, it waived the $350,000 penalty in June 2024. ASIC appealed the decision to drop the fine, while Block Earner cross-appealed the finding that the Earner product required a license.

However, on 22 April 2025, the Full Federal Court allowed Block Earner’s cross-appeal and dismissed ASIC’s arguments, ruling that neither product breached licensing obligations. This decision prompted ASIC to seek High Court intervention.

The Australian court found that the discontinued ‘Earner’ product was a loan, not a managed investment scheme, dismissing ASIC’s allegations.#Australia #CryptoLenderhttps://t.co/2V5wng6ajm

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 23, 2025

The agency said in its Wednesday statement, “the definition of financial product was drafted in a broad and technology-neutral way, and ASIC believes it is in the public interest to clarify this.”

It added that the issue has implications beyond crypto and is essential to all financial products and services due to the law’s broad, technology-neutral drafting.

“This clarification is important as it applies to all financial products and services whether they involve crypto-assets or not.”

Crypto Yield Products Face Global Scrutiny Amid Regulatory Gaps

The Block Earner case is the latest in Australia’s legal challenges surrounding regulating crypto-related financial services. It shows ongoing regulatory uncertainty around whether yield-generating crypto products fall within the scope of existing financial laws.

This is not the first time ASIC has faced a crypto firm in court. In 2023, the regulator took action against Finder Wallet and BPS Financial over similar allegations related to interest-earning crypto products.

🇦🇺Australian Court Rules in Favor of Crypto Firm Finder’s Earn Product

An Australian Federal Court dismissed a case filed by ASIC against crypto firm Finder Wallet. #CryptoNews #newshttps://t.co/PFO6FhYKkd

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) March 14, 2024

Both cases questioned the “financial product” definition under the Corporations Act, particularly when applied to innovative offerings such as DeFi protocols, stablecoins, or tokenized yield accounts.

Internationally, regulators have also struggled to classify crypto products that resemble traditional financial instruments. The U.S. SEC, for example, has brought similar cases against crypto lenders like BlockFi and Celsius, which were fined or shut down for offering interest-bearing products without proper registration.

Therefore, ASIC’s High Court application could set a landmark precedent not only for Australia’s crypto sector but also for how regulators worldwide approach evolving financial technologies.

If successful, it may lead to stricter oversight of DeFi platforms and stablecoin-based services operating under the guise of non-financial products.

|Square

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