Global regulators start monitoring crypto assets
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[July 16, 2018]
By Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Global regulators have
published a framework for "vigilantly" monitoring risks from crypto
assets like bitcoin <BTC=BTSP> and ether, even though they don't pose a
major risk to financial stability for now.
Wild swings in crypto asset prices have prompted central bankers to warn
investors they could lose every penny. It is unclear at times which
financial rules, if any, apply to the sector or if there is legal
authority to regulate it.
Start ups have begun issuing new digital currencies via initial coin
offerings (ICOs), raising concern among regulators over investor
protection.
The aim of the new framework is to spot any financial stability risks
early enough to take action.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), which coordinates financial
regulation for the Group of 20 Economies (G20), said the framework
focuses on how risks from crypto asset markets could spread to other
parts of the financial system.
"Monitoring the size and growth of crypto-asset markets is critical to
understanding the potential size of wealth effects, should valuations
fall," the FSB said in a statement on Monday.
"The use of leverage, and financial institution exposures to
crypto-asset markets are important metrics of transmission of
crypto-asset risks to the broader financial system."
The aim of the new framework is to spot any financial stability risks
early enough to take action.
But the FSB cautioned that data is still patchy at times in a rapidly
developing market that can be fragmented and opaque. It would assess
whether the framework will need extra data at a later stage.
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Representations of the Ripple, Bitcoin, Etherum and Litecoin virtual
currencies are seen on a PC motherboard in this illustration
picture, February 13, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
Moves to formally monitor the sector forms part of a compromise in March between
G20 members like France, who wanted more radical action, and other countries who
preferred treading lightly for now.
The FSB framework also includes trading volumes, pricing, clearing and margining
for derivatives linked to crypto assets, such as the bitcoin futures launched by
CME Group <CME.O> last December.
Crypto assets in general and crypto asset trading platforms do not pose global
financial stability risks, but they raise other significant concerns, including
consumer and investor protection, market integrity and money
laundering/terrorism financing, the FSB said.
It said its affiliate, the Basel Committee, which writes bank capital standards,
is conducting an "initial stocktake" of banks' exposures to crypto assets.
The committee is also looking at whether regulators are forcing lenders to set
aside capital against holdings of crypto assets, and considering whether to
rewrite its rules to explicitly require such holdings to be covered.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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