Business Standard

India intends to introduce law to ban crypto trading

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India plans to introduce a new law banning trade in cryptocurr­encies, placing it out of step with other Asian economies that have chosen to regulate the fledgling market.

The Bill is expected to be discussed shortly by the Cabinet before it is sent to parliament, according to people familiar with the developmen­t who who asked not to be identified, citing rules on speaking with the media.

The government will encourage blockchain, the technology underlying cryptocurr­encies, but is not keen on cryptocurr­ency trading, according to two people. A finance ministry spokesman didn’t respond to call and a message seeking comments.

The central bank had, in 2018, banned crypto transactio­ns after a string of frauds in the months following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s sudden decision to ban 80 per cent of the nation’s currency. Cryptocurr­ency exchanges responded with a lawsuit in the Supreme Court in September and won respite in March 2020.

The win in court prompted an almost 450 per cent surge in trading in just two months since March, according to Techsci Research, reviving concerns as more Indians risk savings amid job losses and an economic slowdown worsened by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Bitcoin marketplac­e Paxful reported 883 per cent growth between January to May 2020 from around $2.2 million to $22.1 million. Wazirx, a Mumbai-based

crypto exchanger, grew 400 per cent in March 2020 and 270 per cent in April 2020 on month-on-month basis, according to Techsci.

Regulating trades

India’s decision will be crucial as more Asian nation countries weigh pros and cons of virtual currencies. Rival China, which banned initial coin offerings and virtual currencies in 2017, recently allowed Bitcoin trading as virtual property, not as fiat money. It is also planning its own central bank digital currency. Both Singapore and South Korea regulate crypto trades.

NITI Aayog, is exploring possible uses of blockchain­s — structures that publicly store transactio­nal records or blocks in several networked databases — to manage land records, pharmaceut­ical drugs supply chain or records of educationa­l certificat­es. And while it is planning a virtual currency, the government is averse to the idea of the cryptocurr­ency trades.

A renewed trading ban could affect more than 1.7 million Indians trading in digital assets and a rising number of companies setting up platforms for the trade, data shows.

It will also affect companies like Singapore-based Coinswitch, which added 200,000 users after starting India operations in June and was reporting volumes of about $200-300 million, according to chief executive officer Ashish Singhal. About half the users of the Sequoiabac­ked company’s local arm Coinswitch Kuber are less than 25-years old.

 ??  ?? The central bank had, in 2018, banned crypto transactio­ns after a string of frauds in the months following PM Narendra Modi’s sudden decision to ban 80 per cent of the nation’s currency
The central bank had, in 2018, banned crypto transactio­ns after a string of frauds in the months following PM Narendra Modi’s sudden decision to ban 80 per cent of the nation’s currency

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