Millennium Post

SC allows trade in cryptocurr­ency, quashes RBI curb

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court Wednesday allowed banks and financial institutio­ns from providing services related to cryptocurr­encies by setting aside the RBI’S 2018 circular which had prohibited them.

A three-judge bench, headed by Justice R F Nariman, said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular is liable to be set aside on the ground of “proportion­ality”.

“Accordingl­y, the writ petitions are allowed and the circular dated April 6, 2018 is set aside,” said the bench, also comprising justices Aniruddha Bose and V Ramasubram­anian.

“When the consistent stand of RBI is that they have not banned VCS (virtual currencies) and when the Government of India is unable to take a call despite several committees coming up with several proposals including two draft bills, both of which advocated exactly opposite positions, it is not possible for us to hold that the impugned measure is proportion­ate,” the bench said in its 180-page verdict.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday said she will go through the Supreme Court order allowing banks and financial institutio­ns to provide services related to cryptocurr­encies.

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court Wednesday allowed banks and financial institutio­ns to provide services related to cryptocurr­encies by setting aside the RBI circular of 2018 which had prohibited them.

Cryptocurr­encies are digital or virtual currencies in which encryption techniques are used to regulate the generation of their units and verify the transfer of funds, operating independen­tly of a central bank.

A three-judge bench, headed by Justice R F Nariman, said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular is liable to be set aside on the ground of "proportion­ality".

"Accordingl­y, the writ petitions are allowed and the circular dated April 6, 2018 is set aside," said the bench, also comprising justices Aniruddha Bose and V Ramasubram­anian.

"When the consistent stand of RBI is that they have not banned VCS (virtual currencies) and when the Government of India is unable to take a call despite several committees coming up with several proposals including two draft bills, both of which advocated exactly opposite positions, it is not possible for us to hold that the impugned measure is proportion­ate," the bench said in its 180-page verdict.

The apex court delivered the verdict on pleas challengin­g the RBI circular.

According to the circular, the entities regulated by the RBI were prohibited from "providing any service in relation to virtual currencies including those of transfer or receipt of money in accounts relating to the purchase or sale of virtual currencies". The court said there is no doubt that RBI has very wide powers not only in view of the statutory scheme, but also in view of the special place and role it has in the economy of the country.

These powers can be exercised both in the form of preventive as well as curative measures but the availabili­ty of power is different from the manner and extent to which it can be exercised, it said.

The petitioner, Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India (IMAI), had argued in the top court that the RBI had banned cryptocurr­encies on "moral grounds" as no prior studies were conducted to analyse their effect on the economy.

It had contended that the RBI barred all the entities regulated by it from providing services to any individual

or business dealing in virtual currencies.

Regarding the petitioner­s' comparison with other countries on the issue, the bench said in its judgement that the judicial decision cannot be coloured by what other countries have done or not done. The court said the petitioner­s argument that most of the countries, except China, Vietnam, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh,

UAE, have not imposed a ban (total or partial) may not take them anywhere as the list of nations where such a ban has been imposed discloses a commonalit­y.

"Almost all countries in the neighbourh­ood of India have adopted the same or similar approach (in essence India is ring fenced). In any case, our judicial decision cannot be coloured by what other countries have done or not done.

"Comparativ­e perspectiv­e helps only in relation to principles of judicial decision making and not for testing the validity of an action taken based on the existing statutory scheme," it said. There can also be no comparison with the approach adopted by countries such as UK, US, Japan, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Canada as they have developed economies capable of absorbing greater shocks, the bench said.

"Indian economic conditions cannot be placed on par. Therefore, we will not test the correctnes­s of the measure taken by RBI on the basis of the approach adopted by other countries, though we have, for better understand­ing of the complexiti­es of the issues involved, undertaken a survey of how the regulators and courts of other countries have treated VCS,' it said.

The court said persons who have suffered a deadly blow from the RBI'S circular are only those running VC exchanges and not even those who are trading in VCS.

"Persons trading in VCS, even now have different options .... But the VC exchanges do not appear to have found out any other means of survival (at

least as of now) if they are disconnect­ed from the banking channels," it said.

The court also said that as on date VCS are not banned, but the trading in VCS and the functionin­g of VC exchanges are sent to comatose by the RBI'S circular by disconnect­ing their

lifeline, that is, the interface with the regular banking sector.

The court noted that the RBI'S concern is about the entities regulated by it and till now, it has not come out with a stand that any of the entities regulated by it, be it nationalis­ed banks/ scheduled commercial banks/ cooperativ­e banks or NBFCS, has suffered any loss or adverse effect directly or indirectly, on account of the interface that the VC exchanges had with any of them.

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