Key Takeaways
- Robinhood is entering Indonesia through the acquisition of a fully regulated local brokerage and digital asset firm.
- Binance has become the first crypto exchange to secure the full suite of licenses under Abu Dhabi’s FSRA.
- APAC has emerged as the most competitive battleground for global exchanges over the past three years.
For years, the Asia-Pacific region has been the most sought-after and fiercely contested market for global cryptocurrency firms.
This week, that competition escalated dramatically.
Robinhood announced plans to acquire two regulated Indonesian financial companies, marking its first major push into Southeast Asia.
Hours later, Binance revealed it had secured a full set of operational licenses from Abu Dhabi’s Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA), becoming the first exchange to operate under end-to-end regulatory supervision in the emirate.
Together, the two moves signal a pivotal moment in the APAC crypto race, as global giants position themselves to capture some of the fastest-growing digital asset markets in the world.
Mining Rig Rentals
Hashing24
Binance Pool
Robinhood Makes Its Move in Indonesia
Robinhood has entered into agreements to acquire PT Buana Capital Sekuritas, a licensed brokerage, and PT Pedagang Aset Kripto, an officially regulated digital asset trader in Indonesia.
The dual acquisition gives Robinhood immediate access to one of the region’s most dynamic retail trading markets, while providing a regulatory foothold in a country where crypto adoption continues to outpace traditional equities.
Patrick Chan, Robinhood’s Head of Asia, called Indonesia a rapidly growing market for trading and said the company plans to bring the same user-friendly experience that helped it scale in the U.S.
Following the deal, Robinhood will continue servicing existing Buana Capital customers while expanding product offerings to include access to U.S. equities, crypto trading, and potentially other asset classes.
The acquisition marks one of Robinhood’s biggest steps toward global expansion and signals the company’s intention to compete directly with regional exchanges such as Tokocrypto and Indodax.
Binance Secures Historic Full Licensing in Abu Dhabi
While Robinhood looks to Southeast Asia, Binance has achieved a regulatory breakthrough in the Middle East.
The FSRA of Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) granted Binance the full suite of licenses required to operate a complete digital asset ecosystem, including:
- a regulated exchange,
- a clearing and custody entity, and
- a broker-dealer platform.
This makes Binance the first global exchange to receive end-to-end operational authorization from the FSRA—an achievement that could position Abu Dhabi as a new hub for tightly supervised crypto activity.
The regulator approved three Binance-affiliated “Nest”-branded entities to handle trading, custody, settlement, and advisory services.
The milestone aligns with Abu Dhabi’s long-term plan to become a crypto and fintech powerhouse, further intensifying the competitive landscape in APAC and the Gulf region.
Richard Teng, Binance Co-CEO, lauded the regulatory approval as a major milestone:
“We have become the 1st global exchange to secure a comprehensive regulatory approval from a world-respected regulator – FSRA ADGM – to have its global operations and liquidity supervised end-to-end. Earning a full FSRA license reflects the strength of our foundations and our commitment to building the most trusted and compliant global exchange.”
APAC: The Fastest-Growing Crypto Market
The Asia-Pacific (APAC) region has rapidly become the most important battleground for global crypto exchanges.
A mix of maturing regulation, rising institutional participation, and steadily expanding retail demand has turned APAC into a market no major player can afford to ignore.
On-chain activity alone has exploded—from $81 billion in mid-2022 to $244 billion by late 2024.
And the exchanges have followed. Over the past three years:
- Coinbase secured a Major Payment Institution license in Singapore and later used the country as the launchpad for Coinbase Business, its first platform built outside the U.S.
- OKX, Bybit, and Kraken have ramped up their presence through new regulatory licenses, region-tailored trading products, and strategic hiring.
- Binance, even under heavy scrutiny in Western markets, remains deeply embedded across Asia and the Middle East, expanding its influence through partnerships and new regulatory approvals.
Altogether, APAC now represents more than 70% of global crypto exposure in several key jurisdictions.
Against this backdrop, Robinhood’s entry into Indonesia and Binance’s full licensing in Abu Dhabi are not isolated events—they’re the latest indications that the competition in APAC is tightening.
The region has become the proving ground where global strategies, regulatory compliance, and market share are being fought in real time.






















