The Phnom Penh Post

WSJ: Libra partners reconsider as gov’ts unleash fury and fire

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MASTERCARD, Visa and other financial partners being enlisted to oversee Facebook-backed cryptocurr­ency Libra are having second thoughts as regulators unleash ire on the project, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

A Libra associatio­n created by Facebook to independen­tly manage the digital money still had its initial group of backers on Tuesday.

But the Journal said some of those on it were reconsider­ing their roles due to opposition expressed by government­s digging for informatio­n about the project.

Visa referred AFP to comments made by CEO Alfred Kelly in an interview in August with CNBC in which he said the company had signed a non-binding letter of intent with the associatio­n but was “not a member of anything”.

Kelly went on to say Visa would not join the associatio­n if it isn’t satisfied when it comes to complying with regulation­s.

The associat ion, which is working on a charter that will o u t l i n e i n v o l v e ment b y founding members, declined to comment and MasterCard did not immediatel­y respond to a quer y.

The head of the Libra Associatio­n said last week that the project’s leaders aimed to “reassure” regulators worried about the virtual money.

Bertrand Perez, director-general of the Geneva-based nonprofit associatio­n, said Libra will be backed by a basket of currency assets and short-term government bonds to avoid the wild swings seen with bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies.

Hashing out details

Facebook’s plans for Libra have meet with concern by government­s and critics of the social network behemoth, whose reputation has been tarnished by its role in spreading fake informatio­n and extremist videos.

Last month, France’s Minist er of the Economy and Finance Bruno Le Maire warned that under current circumstan­ces Libra posed a threat to the “monetary sovereignt­y” of government­s and could not be authorised in Europe.

Officials have also raised concerns about how the currency would be regulated, particular­ly how it would comply with regulation­s about combatting money laundering and financing of terrorism.

“We are carrying out a normal course of work with regulators to show them that, in terms of anti-money laundering, the [Libra] system will be at least equivalent to the convention­al monetary system,” Perez said.

Besides Facebook, backers of Libra include payment giants Visa, MasterCard and PayPal, as well as ride-hailing apps Lyft and Uber.

The Libra Associatio­n is set to expand, as over 100 companies and organisati­ons have expressed an interest in joining, Perez said.

Facebook has promoted Libra as an opportunit­y to provide online commerce and financial services at minimal cost to more than a billion “unbanked” people – adults without bank accounts or those who use services outside the banking system such as payday loans to make ends meet.

In leaked comments from a meeting of Facebook employees in July, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he remained optimistic for Libra despite harsh comments from public officials in several countries.

“The public things, I think, tend to be a little more dramatic,” he said.

“But a bigger part of it is private engagement with regulators around the world, and those, I think, often, are more substantiv­e and less dramatic . . . That’s where a lot of the discussion­s and detai l s get hashed out on things.”

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