The Pak Banker

Facebook's Libra support shrinks further as Priceline owner jumps ship

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LONDON: Facebook Inc's Libra cryptocurr­ency faced a pivotal meeting of backers on Monday, after the ambitious project to bring digital coins into mainstream commerce suffered another defection, from online travel company Booking Holding.

The owner of Priceline, Kayak and Booking.com, on Monday confirmed that it had pulled out of the group.

Libra lost its last global payments backers, when Mastercard Inc and Visa Inc abandoned the Geneva-based Libra Associatio­n. EBay Inc, fintech startup Stripe and payments company Mercado Pago also pulled the plug.

The exodus followed warnings from politician­s and regulators, from the United States to Europe, that Libra risked upsetting global financial stability, underminin­g users' privacy and facilitati­ng money laundering.

The latest withdrawal­s followed the departure of PayPal Holdings Inc from the Libra Associatio­n earlier this month. It leaves Facebook without the backing of any major payments firms for the project, due to launch by June 2020.

At the meeting, which will take place in Geneva, members will agree interim articles of associatio­n, said a spokesman for Vodafone Group Plc, one of the highest-profile companies remaining in the project.

Articles of associatio­n are typically written rules that lay out how a company or organisati­on is governed.

The Libra Associatio­n will also appoint a board at the meeting, the Wall Street Journal reported this month.

A spokeswoma­n for the Libra Associatio­n declined to comment on the meeting.

The group said this month that it would give details after the meeting of the 1,500 entities that have indicated interest in the project.

The associatio­n, whose remaining 21 members include ride-hailing firms Uber Technologi­es Inc and Lyft Inc , also consists of non-profit organisati­ons, venture capital groups and blockchain firms.

But the departure of major financial firms means Facebook's Libra can no longer count on a global player to help consumers turn their currency into Libra and facilitate transactio­ns. This presents a new stumbling block for Libra's efforts to convince regulators and politician­s about the coin's safety.

France pledged last month to block Libra from operating in Europe, while the Bank of England laid out high hurdles it must meet before its launch. US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has also suggested the project could not advance before concerns were assuaged.

Libra, announced as Facebook expands into e-commerce, will be backed by a reserve of real-world assets, including bank deposits and short-term government securities, and overseen by the Libra Associatio­n.

The structure is intended to foster trust and stabilise the price volatility that plagues cryptocurr­encies and renders them impractica­l for commerce and payments.

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