Business Standard

RBI cites investor protection to justify cryptocurr­ency ban

- MAYANK JAIN New Delhi, 16 July

Investor protection is an important considerat­ion behind banning trade in cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin and ripple in India, said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in a two-page response to the Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India (IAMAI) last week.

The RBI’s response came almost a week after the Supreme Court of India heard a writ petition challengin­g the central bank’s decision to cut the banking system’s ties with cryptocurr­ency exchanges.

In its order by a Bench comprising the Chief Justice of India, the Supreme Court had asked the central bank to respond to the petition within a week and give a view for disallowin­g cryptocurr­ency trades through regulated financial channels.

The RBI’s response, however, mainly raises the same points the bank’s earlier notificati­ons pointed out, sources in the know said.

“The bank has fallen back on investor protection as its central argument to say that cryptocurr­ency trading can be harmful for people who aren’t aware about the nuances and there is a possibilit­y of large losses,” said a source.

This person added the RBI had also sought to “ring-fence” gullible consumers and investors from cryptocurr­ency-based scams, which have been reported internatio­nally.

Additional­ly, the central bank seems to have reiterated its stand that there is no intrinsic value in cryptocurr­encies and there is a chance of illegal trading happening through them, as has been reported for a while now.

The bank added volatility in the prices of cryptocurr­encies could not be predicted because a very small fraction of these currencies were traded daily.

The central bank has also been arguing there’s a security risk because the wallets are stored electronic­ally where the currencies are kept. This makes them vulnerable to hacking, passwords being stolen, malware attacks, etc.

The RBI’s earlier circulars cautioning people about virtual currency were similar.

“The Reserve Bank of India had cautioned the users, holders and traders of virtual currencies, including bitcoins, about the potential financial, operationa­l, legal, customer protection and security related risks that they are exposing themselves to,” the central bank said in February 2017.

It repeated the same stand in December 2017 and April 2018, when it issued a circular directing all banks and regulated entities to cease ties with virtual currency exchanges in India.

However, the industry is holding out. The Supreme

Court will hear petitions from the industry, including the IAMAI, on July 20.

“We are in for the long haul,” said a virtual currency exchange chief executive. “The Reserve Bank (of India) has given its say but there are a lot of actors going to be affected, especially retail traders, who will trade in a regulatory dark zone, so it’s important we regulate instead of banning.”

Traders have kept up their hopes as seen from the stable trading volumes despite the ban. As Business Standard reported earlier, cryptocurr­ency traders lapped up more bitcoin after prices crashed on heavy selling.

For instance, cryptocurr­ency exchanges have found a way around the ban by introducin­g currency-tocurrency trading platforms, which essentiall­y bypass the regulator’s orders by allowing people to trade between different virtual currencies. These platforms are live on almost all big exchanges right now.

Some have even gone one step further to launch peer-to-peer trading platforms such as WazirX, which allows people to exchange cryptocurr­encies for cash by bypassing the banking systems.

The company locks the cryptocurr­ency the seller wants to sell and the buyer transfers it directly to the seller’s account.

After the company confirms the receipt of money to the seller’s account, it releases the currency into the buyer’s account immediatel­y.

Nischal Shetty, founder of WazirX, told Business Standard even though the ban led to a drop in prices initially the market had recovered from the shock and offers like peer-to-peer (P2P) had ensured that investors stayed in the market.

“At WazirX the prices have been stable. The last price drop we saw in India was on the day when the RBI had announced the ban and provided banks three months to comply. Since then, a lot has happened, especially alternativ­es such as WazirX P2P that has restored investor confidence,” Shetty said.

The central bank seems to have reiterated its stand that there is no intrinsic value in cryptocurr­encies and there is a chance of illegal trading happening through them, as has been reported for a while now

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