Australia’s crypto regulation is now superior sufficient that startups might be each licensed by ASIC and preventing ASIC within the Excessive Court docket on the identical time.
Australian crypto startup Block Earner has secured a brand new licence from ASIC whereas concurrently concerned in a Excessive Court docket battle with the regulator over an earlier crypto product.
The Sydney fintech introduced on Tuesday it had been granted an Australian Credit score Licence (ACL). This makes it the primary Australian crypto platform licensed to straight supply regulated lending merchandise beneath its personal credit score licence.
What makes this notably fascinating is that this has occurred whereas ASIC continues a High Court appeal towards the corporate over its now-discontinued ‘Earner’ product.
This has been one among Australia’s most carefully watched crypto regulation instances due to the awkward center floor Australia’s crypto sector nonetheless sits in.
Regulators are attempting to carry digital asset companies into the monetary system whereas nonetheless battling in courtroom over how current monetary providers legal guidelines apply to crypto merchandise.
Why ASIC remains to be preventing Block Earner in courtroom
The High Court case centres on a separate Block Earner product which allowed customers to obtain fixed-yield returns linked to crypto property.
Block Earner shut down the unique Earner product shortly earlier than ASIC launched proceedings over the providing.
ASIC initially alleged the product ought to have required an Australian Monetary Providers Licence (AFSL). The regulator argued that it amounted to a monetary product and managed funding scheme beneath the Firms Act.
The Federal Court docket initially sided with ASIC earlier than the Full Federal Court docket later overturned that ruling in 2025, discovering the product didn’t require an AFSL.
ASIC then appealed the matter to the High Court, with the case heard in March this 12 months. A judgment remains to be but to be delivered.
In the course of the listening to, a number of Excessive Court docket judges questioned how broadly ASIC’s arguments might apply past crypto merchandise, together with comparisons to peculiar financial institution accounts.
At one level, Justice Michelle Gordon informed ASIC’s barrister the association appeared much like a financial institution deposit account the place prospects deposit cash and obtain a set fee of curiosity.
ASIC argued in the course of the listening to that the case was necessary as a result of it might assist make clear how Australia’s monetary providers legal guidelines apply not simply to crypto, however to future monetary merchandise extra typically.
The case follows a string of authorized battles between ASIC and crypto yield platforms, together with the regulator’s unsuccessful court battle over Finder Earn in 2024.
What the brand new licence truly means
The corporate’s new ACL doesn’t resolve the separate AFSL dispute at the moment earlier than the Excessive Court docket. The 2 issues sit beneath totally different elements of Australia’s monetary regulatory system.
Block Earner’s new ACL permits the corporate to straight originate and supply lending merchandise tied to digital property. This consists of its Bitcoin-backed dwelling mortgage product launched final 12 months.
The product is designed to let crypto holders borrow towards their Bitcoin holdings relatively than promoting them to purchase property.
Earlier than receiving the licence, the startup operated as a credit score consultant beneath one other firm’s licence.
The corporate mentioned its Bitcoin-backed mortgage product had already generated greater than $500 million in waitlist demand.
“For the primary time, a digital asset platform in Australia can present credit score merchandise beneath its personal Australian Credit score Licence, making a regulated pathway for patrons to make use of digital property as safety for credit score,” Block Earner co-founder and CEO, Charlie Karaboga, mentioned.
The licence approval additionally arrives as ASIC ramps up strain on crypto companies forward of recent digital asset legal guidelines anticipated in 2027.
Earlier this month, the regulator warned crypto corporations they wanted to use for applicable licences or licence variations earlier than ASIC’s non permanent “no-action” place expires on June 30.
Block Earner can also be pursuing an Australian Monetary Providers Licence (AFSL) as a part of its broader regulatory roadmap, which might probably permit it to supply further regulated crypto and funding merchandise in Australia.

