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July 17, 2018

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Laying down rules for crypto currencies

A financial regulator yesterday unveiled a strategy to monitor whether crypto currencies such as Bitcoin pose a threat to world economic stability.

In a statement, the Financial Stability Board, which oversees regulation among G20 economies, said it believes “crypto assets do not pose a material risk to global financial stability at this time.”

But, the FSB added, the speed at which crypto currencies are spreading, the lack of solid data on their use and uncertainty over which rules apply in the sector should spur major economies to redouble their scrutiny.

The framework also calls of an examination of whether crypto currencies are evolving from a method of paying for goods and services into a securities product, which individuals are holdings as a savings device instead of a stock or a bond.

The FSB also underscored “the scarcity of reliable data on banks’ holdings of crypto assets.”

That point serves as a chilling reminder of the 2008 financial crisis, which was made worse by the fact that some banks did not know their level of exposure to securities backed by junk mortgages, even after those mortgages started to fail.

The FSB said an affiliate called the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision was “conducting an initial stocktake on the materiality of banks’ direct and indirect exposures to crypto assets.”

It warned that the exposure of financial institutions to crypto currencies will serve as a key measurement of the “risks to the broader financial system.”

The FSB said it expects its plan will face hurdles from the outset, given the “data gaps” and “lack of transparency” in the sector, especially concerning the individuals trading coins on a daily basis.

The FSB, currently chaired by Bank of England chief Mark Carney, said it will formally present the framework to G20 finance ministers when they meet in Buenos Aires later this month.




 

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