U.S. regulators signal stronger risk, tax oversight for cryptocurrencies
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[May 21, 2021] By
Howard Schneider and David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve
chief Jerome Powell turned up the heat on cryptocurrencies on Thursday,
saying they pose risks to financial stability, and indicating that
greater regulation of the increasingly popular electronic currency may
be warranted.
The Treasury Department, meanwhile, flagged its concerns that wealthy
individuals could use the largely unregulated sector to avoid tax and
said it wanted big crypto asset transfers reported to authorities.
The back-to-back announcements came in a week when Bitcoin, the most
popular cryptocurrency, took a wild ride, falling as much as 30% on
Wednesday after China announced new curbs on the sector, underscoring
the volatility of the sector.
Powell underlined cryptocurrency risks in an unusual video message
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/
pressreleases/other20210520b.htm that also laid out a clearer timetable
as the Fed explores the possibility of adopting a digital currency of
its own.
While highlighting the potential benefits of advances in financial
technology, Powell said cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and other
innovations "may also carry potential risks to those users and to the
broader financial system."
As the technology advanced, "so must our attention to the appropriate
regulatory and oversight framework. This includes paying attention to
private-sector payments innovators who are currently not within the
traditional regulatory arrangements applied to banks, investment firms,
and other financial intermediaries."
Powell's comments signaled how seriously the Fed has been forced to
reckon with the surge in popularity and market values of non-traditional
currency options such as Bitcoin, especially as it looks at developing a
digital version of the U.S. dollar, the world's reserve currency.
SPECULATIVE ASSETS
The Fed and Treasury consider cryptocurrencies, which now have a market
capitalization of about $2 trillion, to be more like art, gold or other
highly speculative assets.
A central bank digital currency, though, offers whoever holds it - a
person, a business, even another government - a direct claim on that
central bank, which is exactly what holding a paper dollar bill does
now.
Powell said the Fed would release a discussion paper this summer on
digital payments, with a focus on the benefits and risks of establishing
a central bank digital currency, and will also seek public comment.
He noted that "to date, cryptocurrencies have not served as a convenient
way to make payments, given, among other factors, their swings in
value."
The Treasury also flagged cryptocurrency risks, including opportunities
for wealthy individuals to move taxable assets into the largely
unregulated crypto sector.
"Cryptocurrency already poses a significant detection problem by
facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion," the
Treasury said.
Its proposal, disclosed as part of a policy report
https://home.treasury.gov/
system/files/136/The-American-Families-Plan-Tax-Compliance-Agenda.pdf
detailing the Biden administration's $80 billion IRS enforcement
proposal to boost revenue collection, would provide additional resources
for the IRS to address crypto assets,
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies before the Senate
Banking Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
December 1, 2020. Susan Walsh/Pool via REUTERS
In addition to the reports of $10,000-plus cryptocurrency transfers that would
parallel bank reports of similarly sized cash transfers, the Treasury also
proposed that crypto asset exchanges and custodians also report transactions to
the IRS related to bank interest, dividend and brokerage transactions.
The reporting requirements, depending on how they are structured, could also
allow the government to gain insight about U.S. companies that are extorted to
pay hackers ransoms, almost invariably in cryptocurrency, to regain control of
their IT systems.
Law enforcement and private sector cybersecurity experts alike have complained
that a lack of transparency around these ransomware incidents contributes to
their continued occurrence.
The Treasury disclosure took the wind out of a rally in the dollar value of
Bitcoin on Thursday that followed steep plunges for Bitcoin and etherium on
Wednesday. Bitcoin was up 8.7% in afternoon trade after an earlier gain of 10%.
CAUTIOUS APPROACH
While the Fed and some other developed economies are still conducting research
on what a central bank digital currency would look like, China is moving ahead
at a fast clip and is currently piloting a digital version of the yuan, with
plans to ramp up usage before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
Powell said last month that the Fed would not rush its efforts in response to
China’s more aggressive pace, noting that the approach taken there would not
work in the United States.
"It is far more important to get it right than it is to do it fast," Powell said
after the April policy setting meeting.
The Boston Fed is currently working with the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology to research the technology that could be used for a central bank
digital currency and will be releasing those findings in the third quarter.
Congressional action would be required before a digital currency could be
developed.
Also on Thursday, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler
said he would like to see more regulation around cryptocurrency exchanges,
including those that solely trade bitcoin and do not currently have to register
with his agency.
"This is a quite volatile, one might say highly volatile, asset class, and the
investing public would benefit from more investor protection on the crypto
exchanges," he said at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's annual
conference.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and David Lawder; Additional reporting by
Jonnelle Marte and Raphael Satter; Editing by Andrea Ricci, Dan Burns and
Richard Pullin)
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