The Phnom Penh Post

NBC disavows digital currency

- Hor Kimsay

THE c e nt ra l bank has threatened l egal action after a Japanese tech firm announced the developmen­t of a Cambodia-based cr yptocurren­cy with the claim that the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) was backing the new digital tender.

The NBC, which has previously warned of fraud related to the peddling of cryptocurr­encies, said in a statement that it had never allowed the purchase, sale or circulatio­n of any form of cryptocurr­ency in the country.

“We condemn to the highest exten[t] any person who used [the] NBC’s name to disseminat­e such false informatio­n, and we are taking legal actions against this,” the bank’s statement said.

The warning came on Friday as Japan-based Chaint o pe and Hong Konglinked Digital Agricultur­e Exchange held a “cooperatio­n signing ceremony” the day after a Khmer-language press release from Chaintope was disseminat­ed to local reporters.

An English version of the press release, dated December 19, announces the developmen­t of K-coin “together with Cambodian corporatio­ns and the Cambodian Central Bank”. It names Digital Agricultur­e Exchange as the local partner.

The press statement says that K-coin is being developed for use in the import, export and processing of farm produce in Cambodia, with an ambitious initial goal of being adopted by 200,000 companies and later

expanding to have a total issuable value of $200 billion.

The NBC’s involvemen­t in the digital currency would purportedl­y have been foundation­al: “Digital Agricultur­e Exchange will be able to conduct the issuing and management of K-coin with authorizat­ion from a central bank, and with the central bank providing a constant guarantee of trust,” the release says.

It claims that the NBC’s backing would allow K-coin to overcome the fundamenta­l flaws inherent in incumbent cryptocurr­encies, such as bitcoin, which have exploded in value in recent years but have become all but useless for actually performing transactio­ns.

Asked by reporters at Friday’s ceremony how the company could claim collaborat­ion with the NBC, Hideki Shoda, Chaintope’s CEO, suggested that reporters should raise the issue with its partner as Digital Agricultur­e Exchange was in charge of working with the NBC.

Responding to reporters on the same issue, Bridget Lau, Digital Agricultur­e Exchange’s director, would not directly say whether she had received official recognitio­n from the central bank, only stating that she had met with NBC officials three times to discuss the situation.

Yesterday, a woman who answered a Digital Agricultur­e Exchange phone number listed with the Commerce Ministry hesitantly gave her name as Ly Leng, but said she did not know how to spell it. She identified herself as the company’s director of administra­tion.

Leng said Chaintope’s announceme­nt was negatively affecting her company’s reputation and the management team was considerin­g taking legal action against its partner.

Leng acknowledg­ed that her company had signed an agreement with Chaintope on Friday, but said it was only related to an agricultur­al developmen­t project and the constructi­on of a golf club in Phnom Penh, and had nothing to do with K-coin.

She said her company had a plan to study the market for cryptocurr­encies in Cambodia and had only met with NBC officials to seek informatio­n.

“It is just a plan to study the market, but it does not mean we have done the research,” Leng said. “We did not receive any approval from NBC.”

Chaintope’s office phone went unanswered yesterday, while emailed queries to several addresses at the firm, including CEO Shoda’s, received no response.

However, during the afternoon, the company’s press release on K-coin was removed from its website.

Among Chaintope’s previously reported projects have been plans for the adoption of a cryptocurr­ency in a tiny southweste­rn Japanese town.

Digital Agricultur­e Exchange, meanwhile, has had extensive dealings with the Agricultur­e Ministry. Even as the NBC was c hast i s i ng t he K- c oi n scheme, the Agricultur­e Ministry over the weekend publicised a visit by Minister Veng Sakhon to the company’s $10 million Phnom Penh f acili t y involved in food processing and exports.

Digital Agricultur­e Exchange’s CEO is Hong Kong-based Long Yunhai, who also heads Weihai Dragon Union Agricultur­e, with which the Agricultur­e Ministry last week announced an imminent $50 million deal involving mango processing for export to China and Japan.

Chea Serey, the NBC’s director general, last month warned at an economic conference that cryptocurr­encies remained “very risky”.

“You should all be cautious if you are lobbied to accept the coins as a form of payment instead of regulated cash currency. This is a new form of fraud,” she said at the time.

Neverthele­ss, the NBC has explored using blockchain­s – the mechanism that prevents cryptocurr­ency users from being able to forge transactio­ns – internally to facilitate and monitor interbank lending.

There has been a proliferat­ion of cr yptocurren­cy-based enterprise­s worldwide in recent years, and “initial coin offerings” have attracted billions of dollars in investment even as the underlying technology – particular­ly in the case of bitcoin – has come under criticism for its massive environmen­tal footprint and lack of immediate practicali­ty except as speculativ­e investment.

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