Exclusive-Brazil central bank puts brakes on tougher rules for fintechs,
sources say
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[December 22, 2021] By
Marcela Ayres and Aluisio Alves
BRASILIA/SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazil's
central bank has put the brakes on tougher regulations for the
burgeoning fintech industry, withdrawing a draft proposal that had been
set to be voted on last month by the government's top financial
policy-making body, four sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
On Nov. 18, the central bank proposed that the regulations be discussed
at an extraordinary meeting of the National Monetary Council (CMN) but
the new rules - which look to level the playing field between fintechs
and traditional banks - were never voted on, the sources say.
The central bank declined to comment.
It is unclear why the central bank chose to delay the passing of the
regulatory changes but it has left a multi-billion-dollar sector on
tenterhooks.
The proposed changes would raise the minimum capital requirements for
payment institutions according to their size, transaction volume and
risk-weighted assets.
They have been expected by the sector in some form since a public
consultation was opened on the subject in late 2020.
Two of the sources, both speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
delay did not necessarily signal that the rules would be watered down.
A third source said the central bank department responsible for the
regulatory adjustments has decided to conduct a review to ensure the new
norms would not unnecessarily burden the sector.
It is almost a decade since Brazil's central bank shook up the
regulatory framework for payment institutions, putting them under its
supervision and paving the way for the nascent industry of financial
start-ups using technology to simplify payments, transfers and
borrowing.
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People walk in front the Central Bank headquarters building in
Brasilia, Brazil August 25, 2021. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli
The different regulations were designed to introduce more competition to a stale
banking sector dominated by a handful of traditional institutions and break the
dynamics of historically high lending rates in Brazil.
Now, partly as a result of those changes, Brazil's fintech industry is booming.
Credit card issuer Nubank just listed on the New York Stock Exchange with a
valuation that makes it Latin America's most valuable financial institution.
Its debut last month occurred before any changes but Nubank disclosed in its IPO
prospectus that under the new rules - as laid out in the central bank's public
consultation - it would be subject to a 60% higher minimum regulatory capital,
of 2.1 billion reais ($367.55 million).
Nubank's impressive IPO follows the rise of other players in Brazil like
PagSeguro, Stone and PicPay which have all won millions of clients, raised
venture capital financing, and have either listed their operations or plan to do
so.
Traditional banks are increasingly calling foul and urging the regulator to
bring rules for highly successful fintechs into line with their own.
But one of the complications of a regulatory move such as the one intended by
the central bank is that fintechs - numbering more than a thousand in Brazil -
have taken very different paths.
Using only the criteria of customer-base size or financial volume for setting
new requirements could create more problems than solutions, according to those
in the industry.
"If the dose is wrong, the central bank can create barriers to entry and even
make business unfeasible," said Fabiano Camperlingo, president of SumUp, which
specializes in payment solutions for small and microenterprises.
($1 = 5.7135 reais)
(Reporting by Marcela Ayres and Aluisio Alves; Editing by Stephen Eisenhammer
and Andrea Ricci)
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