Swiss-based Libra will have to meet tough U.S. standards: U.S. Treasury
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[September 10, 2019] By
Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi
BERN (Reuters) - The Facebook-led Libra
cryptocurrency project must meet the highest standards for combating
money laundering and terrorism financing if it is to get off the ground,
a senior U.S. Treasury official said on Tuesday.
Any cryptocurrency project, including Geneva-based Libra, operating in
all or substantial parts of the United States will clearly have to
satisfy U.S. regulatory standards, U.S. Under Secretary of Terrorism and
Financial Intelligence Sigal Mandelker told reporters in the Swiss
capital.
"Whether it's bitcoin, Ethereum, Libra, our message is the same to all
of these companies: anti-money laundering and combating the financing of
terrorism has to be built into your design from the get-go," Mandelker
said.
She was speaking after meeting Swiss government officials and
representatives from the Bank for International Settlements and other
international financial bodies to discuss cryptocurrencies including the
planned Libra project, which is to be launched by a Swiss-based
association.
While the digital currency industry has paid tremendous attention to
developing the underlying technology, much of the industry has paid far
too little attention to ensuring that the networks they are building do
not enable terrorists and other bad actors to hide and move money,
Mandelker said.
The Treasury official said she would meet Switzerland's financial market
supervisor FINMA on Tuesday, where discussing not only the application
of proper anti-money laundering safeguards but also taking enforcement
actions against companies flouting those rules would be a priority.
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Representations of virtual currency are displayed in front of the
Libra logo in this illustration picture, June 21, 2019. REUTERS/Dado
Ruvic/File Photo
FINMA in August granted Switzerland's first banking and securities
licenses to two blockchain service providers and has built up a digital
currency hub nicknamed the "Crypto Valley".
"Switzerland, like a number of other countries, has promoted itself as a
hub for fintech and for innovation, and so of course any country that
promotes itself in that way -- in my view, it's incumbent upon that
country to take these particular concerns at the highest level in(to)
the utmost regard," she added.
The Libra project was still in very early stages of thinking through
steps to prevent such crimes, she said, adding Swiss officials had
similar views.
Digital currencies such as Libra raise serious concerns and must be
regulated as tightly as possible to ensure they do not upset the world's
financial system, Group of Seven finance ministers and central bankers
had said in July.
(Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi, Editing by Michael Shields)
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