The Gold Coast Bulletin

ASIC out to target ICOs given some just don’t add up

- SWATI PANDEY

AUSTRALIA’S corporate watchdog says it is stepping up scrutiny on “misleading” initial coin offerings targeted at retail investors, adding it has already acted against several such proposals.

The Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission said consistent problems with proposed ICOs included the use of “misleading or deceptive” statements in sales and marketing materials and not holding Australian financial services licences.

ICOs, or the selling of digital coins or tokens, are increasing­ly popular with start-ups as a way to finance projects.

The ICO market is relatively small in Australia but ASIC is concerned poor conduct could have a negative impact on investor confidence. “If you raise money from the public, you have important legal obligation­s,” ASIC Commission­er John Price said.

“It is the legal substance of your offer – not what it is called – that matters.” Some proposed ICOs operated illegal, unregister­ed investment schemes, he added.

Since April 2018, ASIC has prevented five ICOs from raising capital. These ICOs have been put on hold and some will be restructur­ed to comply with legal requiremen­ts, ASIC said.

The regulator is taking action against one completed ICO, it said without identifyin­g the company.

“ICOs are highly speculativ­e investment­s that are mostly unregulate­d, and while there are genuine businesses using this structure, many have turned out to be scams,” ASIC noted.

Earlier this year, Moscowbase­d cyber security firm Group IB found projects which raise funds through ICOs were attacked by cyber criminals 100 times a month on average.

Globally, start-up firms have raised millions of dollars online to fund projects, with often little more than a handful of employees.

 ??  ?? ICOs can prove misleading.
ICOs can prove misleading.

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