AscendEX ceased operations on July 1, 2026, after failing to secure authorization under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, which took full effect that same day. The exchange told users in a July 6 notice that automatic withdrawals have been suspended and that every remaining request now goes through manual review, with no guarantee on timing or final payout amount.
What Happened
AscendEX’s notice pointed to more than the missing license. The exchange said it had relied on a strategic liquidity deal to fund its growth, and that the other party in that deal failed to follow through. It added that broader market conditions had piled on further pressure, and that it is currently reviewing its financial position to determine what options remain for account holders.
The closure followed weeks of warning signs. Cointelegraph reported that on June 26, blockchain investigator ZachXBT flagged potential liquidity issues after multiple users, including one identified as Lorenzo Navarro Rodriguez, said their withdrawals had been stuck for days.
Blockchain data on Arkham reviewed by Cointelegraph showed AscendEX’s tagged wallets held about $20.2 million in crypto at the time, concentrated in smaller tokens like UNITE and REUR rather than large holdings of ETH, USDT, or SOL. Cointelegraph said AscendEX did not respond to its requests for comment.
MiCA’s rollout has forced changes well beyond AscendEX. Yahoo Finance Crypto reported that Binance halted crypto trading in France and other parts of Europe after missing the same licensing deadline, cutting off service for roughly 2 million users, and AscendEX’s exit follows a pattern UTB has covered before, when Ord.io shut down earlier this year with little warning to its users.
Why AscendEX Can’t Guarantee Any Payout
AscendEX’s notice states plainly that no account holder is getting priority outside its documented review process, and that it can’t promise a timeline or a final amount today. Cointelegraph has noted that liquidity questions like these carry extra weight in crypto since FTX’s 2022 collapse, when a similar mismatch between customer withdrawal requests and available reserves ended in bankruptcy.
AscendEX has said only that it’s assessing its financial position, and it hasn’t addressed Cointelegraph’s questions about its reserves. That leaves affected users watching for whether the exchange processes any withdrawals at all in the coming weeks.
What This Means for Anyone Holding Crypto on AscendEX
If you have funds on AscendEX, the July 6 notice is the only guidance available right now, and it stops short of promising you’ll recover everything. If you hold crypto on any centralized exchange, this is worth treating as a prompt to check whether that platform is actually licensed to operate where you live, since MiCA’s deadline has already forced changes at exchanges well beyond AscendEX.

















