BusinessMirror

Hong Kong prepares sweeping rules to foil stealthy crypto purchases

- By Suvashree Ghosh & Kiuyan Wong With assistance from Rebecca Choong Wilkins /Bloomberg

DOTTED across Hong Kong are small shops that convert between cash and crypto with few questions asked, a modernday echo of the city’s freewheeli­ng past. Soon, many may shut under a looming crackdown.

Officials estimate 450 shops, automated teller machines and websites in Hong Kong offer such services. They are a key slice of over-thecounter or OTC crypto trades, which accounted for the bulk of the $64 billion in digital assets that flowed through the city in the year through June, according to Chainalysi­s.

Some crypto shops are suspected of facilitati­ng banned activity, for instance Chinese nationals flouting foreign-transfer limits or scammers luring investors into frauds. Against that backdrop, Hong Kong plans a licensing regime under the customs department that will force crypto OTC providers to collect customer records and add staff to monitor for misconduct, portending a jump in costs.

The city, in parallel, is aiming for a deck of tightly regulated crypto exchanges as the main alternativ­e to the OTC route into digital assets. Such exchanges face a Feb. 29 deadline to obtain or apply for a permit under a rulebook imposed by the Securities & Futures Commission in mid-2023.

‘Consolidat­ion’ likely

THE planned OTC framework “will lead to consolidat­ion and a reduction in the use of these platforms as on-ramps into crypto,” said Chengyi Ong, APAC policy head at Chainalysi­s, which tracks digital-asset transactio­ns. Providers will have to better manage crime, cybersecur­ity and other operationa­l risks, she said.

Hong Kong’s Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau this month began a consultati­on through April 12 on the OTC rules. The focus is on preventing money laundering, terrorism financing and fraudulent activity. The provisions won’t apply to service providers like digital-asset exchanges that are already subject to robust SFC or Hong Kong Monetary Authority oversight.

Bringing the city’s customs department into the mix alongside the other agencies risks giving the impression of regulation­s being devised on a “piecemeal basis,” said Jason Chan, a Hong Kong-based partner at law firm Howse Williams, which specialize­s in financial regulatory advice.

A spokespers­on for the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau said the customs department is the most appropriat­e authority to oversee crypto OTC service providers given the agency’s experience. The planned rulebook delivers needed controls and maximum investor protection, the spokespers­on added.

Rising costs

ONE of Hong Kong’s OTC companies is One Satoshi, which operates a chain of stores. Co-founder Roger Li said the business mostly serves retail investors, typically for small trades of HK$10,000 ($1,278) or less.

While the firm already conducts anti-money-laundering and knowyour-customer

Hong Kong’s Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau this month began a consultati­on through April 12 on the OTC rules. The focus is on preventing money laundering, terrorism financing and fraudulent activity. The provisions won’t apply to service providers like digital-asset exchanges that are already subject to robust SFC or Hong Kong Monetary Authority oversight.

checks, new requiremen­ts related to compliance staff and record keeping may lift costs, Li said. OTC firms “will either have to stop the crypto business or apply for the new license,” he said, adding more guidance is awaited.

Hong Kong pivoted toward fostering a digital-asset hub in late 2022, part of an effort to appear cuttingedg­e amid doubts about the city’s future given Beijing’s growing control over the former British colony. The SFC rolled out rules for crypto exchanges last June, welcoming license applicatio­ns while stressing the need for investor protection given the sector’s history of volatility and fraud.

There are currently two authorized digital-asset exchanges, Hashkey Exchange and OSL Group. Some 19 others have applied for permits. The SFC is also open to allowing exchange-traded funds that invest directly in crypto, while the city’s monetary authority is framing rules for stablecoin­s—a type of token meant to hold a constant value, typically $1.

Regulatory challenge

“BRINGING OTC transactio­ns into the regulatory structure is a natural extension of the regime,” said Vince Turcotte, an adviser to crypto exchanges. “The primary impact will be to further legitimize the market in Hong Kong.”

Hong Kong is vying with the likes of Singapore and Dubai to woo digital-asset businesses. The jury is out on how well it will do, as well as whether crypto and its underlying blockchain technology are worth pursuing at scale at all. Last year, the blowup of the unlicensed JPEX crypto platform in Hong Kong led to HK$1.6 billion of losses, highlighti­ng again the risks in the sector.

The city’s drive to police the industry and surface transactio­ns is far from a straightfo­rward task, given the plethora of crypto platforms globally as well as opportunit­ies for peer-to-peer trading that are challengin­g to track.

“The decentrali­zed nature of crypto makes the industry very hard to regulate,” said Carlton Lai, head of blockchain research at Daiwa Capital Markets. “There are numerous crypto exchanges and apps based offshore that users can easily access without oversight from the government.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines