
Bithumb wants to re-elect its CEO amid a partial ban 🚨
March 23, 2026
South Korean exchange Bithumb has come under pressure after a partial six-month restriction due to alleged AML violations. Despite this, the company wants to re-elect its current CEO, Lee Jae-won, for another term. For the market, this looks ambiguous, because the issue here is no longer only about sanctions, but also about how the exchange is responding to the internal crisis.
What happened
According to reports, South Korea’s financial intelligence unit imposed a partial business restriction on Bithumb for six months over concerns related to its anti-money laundering procedures. It is right after this that the exchange is pushing for the re-election of its head.
Why this raises questions
In a situation like this, the market usually expects either a tougher internal response or at least a signal of changes in management. Instead, Bithumb appears to be betting on continuity.
- the exchange is keeping the same executive despite the sanctions
- the regulator has already pointed to problems with internal control
- for users, this is not only a matter of stability, but also of trust
What this means for the market
The Bithumb case shows that for large crypto exchanges, regulatory pressure is already hitting not only operations, but also management reputation. If the company leaves everything without visible personnel changes, the market starts looking more closely at how exactly it understands responsibility in a moment of crisis.
Conclusion
The situation around Bithumb looks like a test of trust. The exchange received a partial ban, but at the same time wants to keep the same CEO. For some, this is an attempt to preserve stability; for others, it is a signal that the company is not rushing to revise its old management model.