Spooked by Libra, EU pledges to regulate digital currencies
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[October 08, 2019] By
Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union's
finance commissioner pledged on Tuesday to propose new rules to regulate
virtual currencies, in a reaction to Facebook's <FB.O> plans to
introduce Libra, which the EU considers a risk to financial stability.
France and Germany have said that Libra, whose size would dwarf
cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, could limit their monetary
sovereignty.
"Europe needs a common approach on crypto-assets such as Libra," Valdis
Dombrovskis told EU lawmakers in a confirmation hearing. "I intend to
propose new legislation on this."
The EU has no specific regulations on cryptocurrencies, which, until
Libra was announced in June, had been considered a marginal issue by
most decision-makers because only a fraction of bitcoins or other
digital coins are converted into euros.
Dombrovskis has resisted regulating digital currencies in the five years
he has served so far. He made it clear his change of heart stemmed from
Facebook's plans for Libra, a digital currency that "could have systemic
effects on financial stability," he told lawmakers.
The EU is now also pushing the G20 for global action on "stablecoins,"
an EU document circulated last week said.
Facebook's planned Libra is the best-known of the stablecoins -
cryptocurrencies backed by assets such as conventional money deposits,
short-term government securities or gold.
Libra's scale would pose risks, Dombrovskis said, because Facebook's
millions of users in Europe would be able to pay with the new digital
currency.
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European Commissioner-designate for An Economy that Works for People
Valdis Dombrovskis of Latvia attends his hearing before the European
Parliament in Brussels, Belgium October 8, 2019. REUTERS/Francois
Lenoir
An EU Commission official said there was no timetable yet for proposing the new
rules.
Dombrovskis said the crypto regulation should focus on defending financial
stability, protecting consumers and tackling the risks of money-laundering using
crypto-assets, which can easily cross borders.
Dombrovskis, a former prime minister of Latvia, said the EU needed to rethink
its defenses against financial crime. He also said he saw "a lot of merit" in
shifting some supervision to an EU body, without clarifying whether that meant
setting up a new anti-money-laundering agency or beefing up existing agencies.
In his address to lawmakers, Dombrovskis also pledged a "sustainable Europe
investment plan" to unlock 1 trillion euros ($1.1 trillion) of private and
public green investment over the next decade.
He said the plan would be based on guarantees and funds provided by the EU
budget and the European Investment Bank, although most of the money is expected
to come from the private sector.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; editing by Larry King
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