What to Know:
Binance will discontinue support for deposits and withdrawals of certain tokens on some networks. The change involves disabling specific blockchain rails rather than removing the underlying asset from spot markets.
As reported by Cointelegraph, the exchange announced on March 25 that USDC on Tron (TRC-20) would lose deposit and withdrawal support from April 5. This is a network-specific action, distinct from a Binance token delisting.
According to Circle, USDC issuance on Tron had previously been discontinued, which affects downstream exchange connectivity. Binance’s move aligns network availability with the issuer’s supported chains.
MiCA stablecoin compliance is reshaping support in the European Economic Area. According to the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens require authorization, and trading venues must align with licensed issuers.
That regulatory baseline combines with issuer decisions to determine what users can deposit or withdraw. It also reflects exchange risk controls designed to protect customers from unsupported chains and operational failures.
Media coverage has emphasized the scope of network-specific changes rather than full asset bans. Reuters reported: “Binance said … it will end support for deposits and withdrawals via the Tron blockchain network for a digital stablecoin that is pegged to the US dollar.”
These dynamics may lead to regional differences in stablecoin availability in the EEA versus other jurisdictions. Outcomes will likely track issuer support, venue risk reviews, and evolving compliance requirements.
For affected networks, deposits made after the cutoff may not be credited, and withdrawals will be disabled. Users typically must choose a supported network or asset format to move funds safely.
If a token remains listed, trading can continue while a particular network rail is switched off. The distinction is important: network support removal is not the same as a Binance token delisting.
Regional policies can differ, especially in the EEA under MiCA. Availability of certain stablecoins may change as issuers and venues align with licensing and operational requirements.
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