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						EU must look at regulating bitcoin, ECB's Nowotny says
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		 [December 11, 2017] 
		VIENNA (Reuters) - The European Union needs 
		to consider regulating bitcoin, European Central Bank ratesetter Ewald 
		Nowotny said on Monday, citing the risk of money laundering.
 The cryptocurrency has surged from $1,000 at the start of the year to 
		above $16,000, and its futures jumped more than 20 percent to a high of 
		$18,700 in their U.S. debut on Sunday night.
 
 The steep gains have prompted many to question its real value and ask 
		whether a bubble has emerged, and central bankers are worried they will 
		be blamed if the as yet unregulated market crashes.
 
 "Simply because of the scale, it is certainly increasingly necessary to 
		discuss whether and in what form regulations are needed here," said 
		Nowotny, who is also Austria's central bank governor.
 
 "A particular aspect that needs to be discussed ...is the question of 
		how far the regulations on money laundering ...are relevant here," he 
		told a news conference.
 
		
		 
		While even small lenders were subject to strict controls on money 
		laundering, it made no sense that even large bitcoin transactions could 
		proceed without similar checks, he said, though this was a matter for 
		the European Union rather than the ECB. 
		
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			 European Central Bank (ECB) 
			Governing Council member and OeNB governor Ewald Nowotny addresses a 
			news conference in Vienna, Austria, June 9, 2017. REUTERS/Leonhard 
			Foeger 
            
			 
The still relatively small scale of the market in relation to traditional 
currencies also meant the problem was not that it threatened the current 
monetary system, he said. 
Although there was no solid data, Austria appeared to be attracting companies 
selling bitcoin because it was perceived to be relatively easy to get a license 
to operate there, Nowotny told reporters.
 "We now have indications that we here in Austria have a more lax, a simpler 
regulation than in Germany... and we therefore also see a trend that such 
granting (of licenses) is increasingly shifting to Austria. And we have 
absolutely no interest in that," he said.
 
 Austria should at least match German regulations, he said, adding: "Ultimately 
we must settle this at the European level."
 
 (Reporting by Francois Murphy; editing by John Stonestreet)
 
				 
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