The Phnom Penh Post

Facebook’s Libra announces 21 founding members

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THE Libra Associatio­n, created by Facebook to launch its new cryptocurr­ency, has announced its 21 founding members after defections by previous supporters including Visa and MasterCard.

The announceme­nt on Monday came as the planned Libra global currency faces swelling criticism from regulators, and reported warnings from the Group of Seven that it poses a threat to the global financial system.

The group kicked off its first council meeting in Geneva and founding members including Uber, Spotify and Vodafone formally signed onto the Libra Charter, director-general Bertrand Perez said.

“We now have a total guarantee of their involvemen­t, so we have confidence in the project,” he said.

Last month, the non-profit associatio­n voiced hope that the number of companies backing it when it opened for business would swell from an initial 28 to “well over 100”.

But instead the list has shrunk, after more of its initial backers walked away amid swelling criticism from regulators around the world.

Credit card giants Visa and MasterCard, online marketplac­e eBay and digital payments firm Stripe each announced on Friday they had changed their minds about being founding members of the associatio­n, following a s i milar recent announceme­nt by digital payments firm PayPal.

The Libra Associatio­n confirmed on Friday that the companies would no longer be founding members, but said it would continue building an alliance of businesses, social-good organisati­ons, and others to implement the cryptocurr­ency.

Its launch was originally planned for mid-2020, but Perez said he had not ruled out a later start date.

“What we want is to build a platform that is solid, that is there to last and that will survive in the long term,” he said, adding he was still “optimistic” about reaching around 100 members as planned.

Threat to financial stability?

The membership departures came after US senators sent letters to several financial firms noting that they could face “a high level of scrutiny from regulators” if they participat­ed in the new currency plan.

French economy and finance minister Bruno Le Maire has warned that under current circumstan­ces, Libra posed a threat to the “monetary sovereignt­y” of government­s and could not be authorised in Europe.

Facebook executives have, however, claimed the new digital coin could help lower costs for global money transfers and help those without access to the banking system.

Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg is set to testify at an October 23 hearing in the US House of Representa­tives on the Libra plan.

But in a fresh blow, a draft Group of Seven (G7) report has outlined nine major r isks posed by such digital currencies, according to the BBC.

The report, due to be presented to finance ministers at Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s annual meeting this week, did not single out Libra but referred to “global stablecoin­s” with the potential to “scale rapidly” as posing a range of potential problems.

Stablecoin­s are seen as more steady than cryptocurr­encies like Bitcoin, since they are pegged to traditiona­l currencies such as the US dollar or the euro.

But the G7 draft report reportedly cautioned that such currencies could pose problems for policymake­rs setting interest rates, and could threaten financial stability if users suddenly suffer “loss of confidence” in the digital unit.

Randal Quarles, the head of the Financial Stability Board, which oversees regulation among Group of 20 (G20) economies, also sent a letter to G20 finance ministers on Sunday warning that “global stablecoin­s could pose a host of challenges to the regulatory community”.

This, he wrote, was “not least because they have the potential to become systemical­ly important, including through the substituti­on of domestic currencies”.

“St a bl e c oi n proj e c t s of potentiall­y global reach and magnitude must meet the highest regulatory standards and be subject to prudential supervisio­n and oversight,” he insisted.

 ?? GERD ALTMANN/PIXABAY ?? Facebook had hoped backers of its Libra project would swell from an initial 28 to ‘well over 100’, but instead several initial supporters have abandoned a scheme regulators say threatens the global financial system.
GERD ALTMANN/PIXABAY Facebook had hoped backers of its Libra project would swell from an initial 28 to ‘well over 100’, but instead several initial supporters have abandoned a scheme regulators say threatens the global financial system.

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