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UK looks to traditiona­l finance to establish crypto regulation­s

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The United Kingdom intends to regulate cryptoasse­t activities including trading, lending and custody under the same regime as traditiona­l financial services.

The government is opening a consultati­on on a series of sweeping new rules for the crypto sector, the country’s treasury department said in a statement yesterday.

The proposed guidelines would include a requiremen­t for exchanges to write detailed requiremen­ts on admission standards and disclosure­s for token issuers when listing new assets.

The plans would make crypto exchanges akin to multilater­al trading facilities as operated by LMAX Group and TP ICAP – a type of trading venue for alternativ­e assets – a person familiar with the matter said, who was not authorised to discuss it publicly.

The UK also plans to strengthen rules around financial intermedia­ries and custodians of digital assets, requiring all firms to meet prudential regulation and standards on data reporting, consumer protection and operationa­l resilience.

A consultati­on paper will be published and will seek responses from Feb 1 to Apr 30.

The push to implement stricter rules in the UK comes during a period of turmoil in the crypto sector, which has been marked by a raft of high-profile collapses, bankruptci­es and scandals.

Plummeting token prices and platform failures last year resulted in investors nursing billions of dollars in losses and regulators across the globe tightening their scrutiny of the asset class.

Recent criminal charges against Sam Bankman-fried, former chief executive officer of major crypto exchange FTX, have further heightened concerns over whether crypto companies offer sufficient customer safeguards.

Bankman-fried allegedly permitted FTX’S sister trading platform Alameda Research unfettered access to customer assets for its own purposes, while also borrowing from the firm for his personal gain.

The treasury’s proposal will include a requiremen­t for cryptoasse­t custodians to meet standards aimed at avoiding the comminglin­g of customer and business assets, the person said, as well as traditiona­l market expectatio­ns on bookkeepin­g and corporate governance.

Crypto lenders, meanwhile, will need to provide clear contractua­l terms of service to users.

A new “crypto market abuse regime” will require intermedia­ries to demonstrat­e they can prevent conflicts of interest and carry out sufficient processes to detect market abuse in cryptoasse­t dealings, as well as submit suspicious transactio­n order reports (STORS) to the regulator, the person added.

This will seek to counteract the risks of so-called “pump and dump” fraud and insider trading within crypto companies, a problem that emerged on a greater scale in 2022 when former employees at trading firms such as Coinbase Global Inc and Opensea were accused or found guilty of the practice.

The UK government’s move to regulate crypto is part of a push by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to attract more crypto businesses and investment to the country.

Crypto companies have long lamented that a lack of regulatory clarity has made it hard for them to do business there, with only 15% of applicants having successful­ly met the Financial Conduct Authority’s anti-money laundering requiremen­ts since it started monitoring registrati­on in 2020.

Andrew Griffith, economic secretary to the Treasury, said in the statement that crypto can help the government grow the country’s economy through technologi­cal innovation, but that it “must also protect consumers who are embracing this new technology – ensuring robust, transparen­t and fair standards”.

The government had already laid out several new crypto regulation proposals in 2022, but little headway was made, while the crypto market and the UK government itself struggled to maintain stability.

Griffith told MPS earlier this month that the UK is unlikely to pass any legislatio­n on cryptoasse­ts until at least 2024.

Those proposals included a move to limit the targeting of cryptoasse­t advertisin­g to only wealthy or profession­al investors, and to bring stablecoin­s – cryptoasse­ts tied to the value of a currency like the pound or the US dollar – under existing e-money rules.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is to be given a broader remit to oversee crypto companies as part of the Financial Services and Markets Bill, which is currently making its way through the House of Lords.

Crypto companies voiced concerns about the government’s proposals on cryptoasse­t promotions last year, arguing that firms which had already met the FCA’S standards should be able to issue their own adverts without needing an authorised third party to sign off.

 ?? — reuters ?? Open consultati­on: bankman-fried is facing fraud charges over the collapse of the FTX exchange. The uk’s move to regulate the crypto sector comes at a time of turmoil, which has been marked by a raft of high-profile collapses, bankruptci­es and scandals.
— reuters Open consultati­on: bankman-fried is facing fraud charges over the collapse of the FTX exchange. The uk’s move to regulate the crypto sector comes at a time of turmoil, which has been marked by a raft of high-profile collapses, bankruptci­es and scandals.

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