The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cryptocurr­ency safety

SA REGULATES: NO MORE ANONYMOUS TRANSACTIO­NS IN CYBERSPACE

- Adriaan Kruger Moneyweb

Entities and individual­s that offer investment in crypto assets will need to register as investment funds.

One of the most important outcomes of the proposals to build a regulatory framework to oversee investment­s in and transactio­ns using cryptocurr­encies is that it will remove anonymous and secretive transactio­ns.

Secondly, it will also remove the anonymity of entities that provide any service, platform and investment opportunit­ies or issue and offer cryptocurr­encies.

It seems that South African authoritie­s took a simple view of the difficulti­es in regulating this new, ever-changing and evolving asset:

If the proponents of cryptocurr­encies maintain that it is the money of the future, let’s treat it like money, and treat anybody who deals with its exchange and investment as financial service providers.

The Interdepar­tmental Fintech Working Group (IFWG) – comprising the SA Reserve Bank, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), National Credit Regulator, National Treasury, the SA Revenue Service and Financial Intelligen­ce Centre (FIC) – has just released a draft of its policy position paper on crypto assets.

Removing the ‘excuse’

The working group says the purpose of the paper is to provide specific recommenda­tions for the developmen­t of a regulatory framework for crypto assets, including suggestion­s on the changes to existing regulation­s to include cryptocurr­encies.

That would solve the basic problem: currently, anybody who tries to do anything can use the fact that there is no legislatio­n regulating crypto assets and transactio­ns as an excuse.

In short, the working paper suggests that all participan­ts in the industry be regarded as crypto asset service providers (Casps) and need to register as such.

This includes trading platforms, providers of vending machines, issuers of cryptocurr­encies or tokens, providers of investment­s or derivative­s of crypto assets, digital wallet providers and providers of custody services.

A recommenda­tion proposes an amendment of the Financial Intelligen­ce Act to include all these entities as accountabl­e institutio­ns. This would require registrati­on of these businesses and compliance to all the provisions of the act.

Specifics

According to the IFWG paper: “This will include conducting customer identifica­tion and verificati­on, conducting customer due diligence, keeping records, monitoring for suspicious and unusual activity on an ongoing basis, reporting to the FIC any suspicious and unusual transactio­ns, reporting cash transactio­ns of R25 000 and above (or the applicable threshold at any given time), and reporting in respect of control of property that might be linked to terrorist activity or terrorist organisati­ons.”

Other obligation­s will include developing and implementi­ng a risk management compliance programme to ensure compliance with the act and training employees to that effect.

Another recommenda­tion calls for an amendment to the Financial Sector Services Act to include entities involved in the crypto market as a financial service, with the result that every Casp needs to comply with the FSCA regulation­s.

The FSCA will be tasked with enforcemen­t in much the same way it regulates and enforces rules controllin­g an investment manager. Recommenda­tions 11 to 18 of the policy paper deal with crypto assets as a currency, with the IFWG seemingly taking the approach of treating it like any other foreign currency.

The Reserve Bank is tasked with asking the finance minister to amend the applicable exchange control regulation­s to include cryptocurr­encies.

This small change will require dealers facilitati­ng cryptocurr­ency trading to register as authorised foreign currency dealers and adhere to the same rules as an authorised dealer dealing in pound, dollar, euro, yen or kwacha.

Cross-border and offshore

These regulation­s include the reporting of cross-border transactio­ns using cryptocurr­ency, as well as the transfer of rands or other currencies offshore to buy the digital currencies. A specific balance of payments category will be created to report crypto asset transactio­ns.

The IFWG proposes that the issue of new cryptocurr­encies through a so-called initial coin offering should be treated like the issue of (unlisted) shares and over-the-counter financial instrument­s. This would put initial and new coin offerings under the umbrella of the Financial

Markets Act.

Thus, any entity that wants to issue new crypto assets to SA citizens would be required to prepare a detailed prospectus.

“The document should set out specific requiremen­ts and details on disclosure­s about the company, a governance plan, any agreements between the customers and ICO [initial coin offering] issuer, comprehens­ive independen­t audits and specific reports (to be confirmed) to regulators,” states the position paper.

Reframing

The working group also looked at regulating funds that invest in crypto assets.

Again, it proposes the use of existing legislatio­n. It was recommende­d that the pooling of crypto assets be regarded as constituti­ng an alternativ­e investment fund.

This means entities and individual­s that offer investment in crypto assets have to register as investment funds. It also means existing alternativ­e investment funds will be able to include crypto assets in their portfolios.

The implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions of the policy paper – a total of 30 – will have far-reaching effects on cryptocurr­encies.

It will bring a host of regulation­s to an industry that prides itself on being outside the traditiona­l, regulated financial markets to curb criminal activity.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? REINED IN. The proposals bring a host of regulation­s to an industry that prides itself on being outside the traditiona­l, regulated financial markets.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck REINED IN. The proposals bring a host of regulation­s to an industry that prides itself on being outside the traditiona­l, regulated financial markets.

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