Key takeaways
- CZ, who owns a large portion of Binance, ruled out returning as CEO in a recent interview, saying “anything could happen” later.
- Zhao resigned in November 2023 after a plea deal in the United States and served four months in prison.
- CZ now advises a dozen governments on crypto policy while mentoring the founders of BNB Chain.
From the highest position to secondary positions
Changpeng Zhao, the billionaire who made Binance the largest company in the world cryptocurrency Exchange, threw cold water on speculation that he might return to the chief executive role he gave up in 2023. In an interviewZhao (universally known as CZ) said he has no plans to return as CEO, even though his influence over the stock market and its BNB the token remains unmistakable. He added:
“I don’t think they need me, but in the future… anything can happen.”
CZ resigned from Binance CEO in November 2023 as part of a settlement with US authorities, in which the exchange pleaded guilty to money laundering and sanctions violations and agreed to pay $4.3 billion in fines. Zhao personally pleaded guilty to a related charge and served his sentence. four months in a US federal prison. Richard Teng, a former regulator, took over as CEO and continues to run the company.
Since his release, CZ has repeatedly stated that he is happy outside the corner office. He told the interviewer that he did not want to run the global stock exchange he largely owns, its U.S. subsidiary, or be a chief executive and sit on any board of directors.
What CZ does instead
Rather than returning to day-to-day management, Zhao spread his attention across multiple projects, advising a dozen governments on cryptocurrency regulation and tokenization of assets. He also launched Giggle Academy, a free educational platform, and continues to mentor founders leveraging the BNB Chain ecosystem through his investment company, YZi Labs.
Additionally, Zhao pushed back against accusations that Binance played a role in a surge in market liquidations. Earlier this year he predicted that 2026 would be a “super cycle” for Bitcoin, a call that has not aged well. He then acknowledged that there was no easy explanation for why crypto markets fell so sharply in the first half of the year, pointing to geopolitical tensions, investor rotation into artificial intelligence (AI) stocks and industry familiarity. four-year cycle.
Still a force in crypto
Although CZ does not hold any official position at Binance, his presence still looms over the exchange and the broader BNB ecosystem. He remains one of its main shareholders and his publications on social networks regularly move the markets. His latest comments appear aimed at allaying recurring speculation that he is plotting a return to top office.
Teng, for his part, has led the exchange through a demanding compliance overhaul since taking over, and a high-profile return of the founder could have complicated the company’s relationship with regulators around the world.


