IDFPR Requests Comment on “Digital
Currency Regulatory Guidance”
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[December 01, 2016]
CHICAGO
– Secretary Bryan A. Schneider with the Illinois Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation (“IDFPR”) has announced the
release for comment of the Department's proposed “Digital Currency
Regulatory Guidance” on decentralized digital currencies, such as
Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Litecoin, Ethereum, and Zcash.
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The proposed guidance expresses the IDFPR’s interpretation of
Illinois’ Transmitters of Money Act (“TOMA”) and the application of
its interpretation to various activities involving digital
currencies. Decentralized digital currency is an electronic medium
of exchange that is not created or issued by a central authority, is
not legal tender, and can be used to purchase goods and services or
to exchange for other currencies.
“As innovative payment technologies grow in popularity, it is vital
that we provide a succinct regulatory framework that gives
businesses operating in this space necessary clarity,” said Bryan A.
Schneider, IDFPR Secretary. “We plan to study digital currencies
carefully as the technology develops, however, at this point in time
digital currencies like Bitcoin, given their low transaction volume
and relatively niche use, are best viewed as a speculative
investment or possibly even a new type of asset class, not as money.
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IDFPR’s proposed guidance seeks to establish the regulatory treatment of
decentralized digital currencies under existing definitions of money
transmission in Illinois, as defined in the Illinois Transmitters of Money Act
(205 ILCS 657). Digital currencies currently do not fit the statutory
definitions of “money” and, therefore, do not independently trigger the
licensing requirements of TOMA. However, some business activities involving
decentralized digital currency that involve the receipt of “money” can trigger
the licensing requirements of TOMA. IDFPR’s proposed guidance considers several
types of digital currency activities and offers guidance on their licensing
implications.
IDFPR will accept comments on the proposed guidance until January 18th, 2017 at
5:00pm CST.
Comments can be submitted by clicking here.
IDFPR's full text of the proposed "Digital Currency Regulatory Guidance" can be
found here.
[Illinois Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation] |