Singapore’s Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has added cryptocurrency exchange Bybit to its Investor Alert List, flagging the platform as an unregulated entity offering services to Singapore residents.
What MAS’s move against Bybit means
MAS, Singapore’s central bank and financial regulator, maintains an Investor Alert List of entities that may have been wrongly perceived as being licensed or regulated by the authority. Bybit’s addition to the list signals that the exchange is not authorized to solicit business from Singapore-based users.
The listing does not necessarily mean Bybit has broken any law. It is a public warning tool MAS uses to inform consumers that a particular entity is not licensed under Singapore’s regulatory framework for digital payment token services.
MAS has been tightening its oversight of crypto platforms operating without proper licensing. The regulator previously announced measures aimed at blocking access to unregulated overseas online trading platforms, underscoring its intent to protect retail investors from unlicensed operators.
How Singapore’s Investor Alert List works
The Investor Alert List is a publicly accessible registry hosted on the MAS website. It includes individuals and companies that, in MAS’s assessment, may be offering capital markets or payment services without the required licenses.
Being placed on the list serves as a consumer protection measure rather than a formal enforcement action. It does not carry the same weight as a cease-and-desist order or a fine, but it puts the named entity on notice and warns the public.
For crypto exchanges, an alert listing in Singapore carries reputational weight. Singapore is a major financial hub in Asia, and MAS’s regulatory posture is closely watched by other jurisdictions in the region. Regulatory debates over how digital asset service providers should be supervised are playing out globally, with figures like Circle’s Jeremy Allaire arguing that the SEC is not the right regulator for stablecoins in the United States.
What this could mean for Bybit users and the exchange sector
Singapore-based Bybit users may face restricted access to the platform if MAS follows through with enforcement measures tied to the alert listing. Users in Singapore should review whether their accounts or funds could be affected by any future compliance actions.
Bybit is one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges by trading volume globally. Its addition to the MAS alert list adds to a pattern of regulatory pressure facing major offshore exchanges that operate across multiple jurisdictions without securing local licenses in each one.
The broader exchange sector continues to face heightened scrutiny. Platforms facilitating spot trading of major tokens are increasingly expected to meet local licensing requirements, and even NFT-focused platforms like OpenSea expanding into mobile must navigate a patchwork of regional rules.
MAS has not indicated whether further action against Bybit is forthcoming. For now, the alert listing stands as a formal notice to Singapore residents that Bybit does not hold a license from the authority.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.




