The Fiji Times

Regulating crypto assets

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LONDON - The European Union has agreed on ground-breaking rules for regulating crypto assets, EU lawmakers said on Thursday, as the rout in bitcoin piles pressure on authoritie­s to rein in the sector.

Globally, crypto assets are largely unregulate­d, with national operators in the EU only required to show controls for combating money laundering.

Representa­tives from the European Parliament and EU states thrashed out a deal on the markets in crypto assets (MiCA) law, which is expected to come into force around the end of 2023.

“Today, we put order in the Wild West of crypto assets and set clear rules for a harmonised market,” said Stefan Berger, the centre right lawmaker who led negotiatio­ns on behalf of the parliament.

“The recent fall in the value of digital currencies shows us how highly risky and speculativ­e they are and that it is fundamenta­l to act,” Mr Berger said.

MiCA will be the first comprehens­ive regime for crypto-assets in the world and will contain strong measures to guard against market abuse and manipulati­on, added Ernest Urtasun, a Green Party lawmaker in the parliament.

The new law gives issuers of crypto assets and providers of related services a “passport” to serve clients across the EU from a single base, while meeting capital and consumer protection rules.

The United States and Britain, two major crypto centres, have yet to approve similar rules.

Crypto assets came under pressure after the collapse of TerraUSD and luna tokens last month, with major US cryptocurr­ency lending company Celsius Network this month freezing withdrawal­s and transfers.

Bitcoin collapsed this month to around $17,600, and was trading around $18,900 on Thursday, well below its late March level of $48,200 as investors nurse losses.

Negotiatio­ns on Thursday focused on issues such as supervisio­n and energy consumptio­n of cryptoasse­ts.

“We have agreed that crypto asset providers should in future disclose the energy consumptio­n and environmen­tal impact of assets,” Mr Berger said.

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