Cape Times

Swiss swoop on fake cryptocurr­ency in virtual clampdown

- Joshua Franklin

SWITZERLAN­D’S financial watchdog has closed down what it said was the provider of a fake cryptocurr­ency and is investigat­ing around a dozen other possible fraud cases in the latest clampdown on the risks involving virtual money.

The move by the Financial Market Supervisor­y Authority (Finma) watchdog comes on the heels of Chinese authoritie­s’ ordering Beijing-based cryptocurr­ency exchanges to stop trading and immediatel­y notify users of their closure.

Virtual currencies such as Bitcoin, which are issued and usually controlled by their developers and not backed by a central bank, are hailed by their supporters as a fast and efficient way of managing money.

But regulators and traditiona­l banks are increasing­ly concerned about the risks of fraud in the burgeoning online cryptocurr­ency underworld.

JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon last week said Bitcoin, the original and still the biggest cryptocurr­ency, “is a fraud” and would eventually “blow up”.

The Quid Pro Quo Associatio­n shutdown by Finma had provided so-called E-Coins for more than a year and had amassed funds of at least 4 million Swiss francs (R55.06m) from several hundred users, Finma said yesterday.

E-Coin was not like “real cryptocurr­encies”, Finma said, because it was not stored on distribute­d networks using blockchain technology, but was instead kept locally on Quid Pro Quo’s servers.

Reuters was not immediatel­y able to reach Zurich-based Quid Pro Quo for comment.

Finma said it had three other companies on its warning list due to suspicious activity in cryptocurr­encies, and was conducting 11 investigat­ions into other possible fake virtual currencies.

The Swiss finance industry has been looking for new avenues of growth following a weakening of its bank secrecy rules during a global crackdown on tax evasion.

The small Swiss canton of Zug, famed for low taxes that have drawn multinatio­nal companies, has been trying to turn itself into a hub for virtual currency firms.

But the Quid Pro Quo case is an example of the pitfall of investing in the booming but still-murky cryptocurr­ency world.

Initial coin offerings, or ICOs, have fuelled a rapid ascent in the value of all cryptocurr­encies, from about $17 billion (R224.85bn) at the start of the year to a record high close to $180 bn at the beginning of September.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Stacks of Bitcoins sit near green lights on a data cable terminal. The targeted E-Coins, however, are not stored on distribute­d networks using blockchain technology like Bitcoin.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Stacks of Bitcoins sit near green lights on a data cable terminal. The targeted E-Coins, however, are not stored on distribute­d networks using blockchain technology like Bitcoin.

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