The Citizen (KZN)

SA leads on continent with crypto platform permits

- Bloomberg

South Africa will license about 60 cryptocurr­ency platforms by the end of the month, putting it among the first nations on the continent to require digital-asset exchanges to have permits to operate.

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), which gave exchanges until 30 November to apply for licenses or risk facing enforcemen­t action, said more than 300 crypto-asset providers sought approvals.

“We are processing those licensing applicatio­ns and we’re doing so in a phased kind of manner given the numbers,” FSCA commission­er Unathi Kamlana said.

The regulator opted not to develop a separate framework for crypto operators, and instead will oversee the firms under the existing Financial Advisory and Intermedia­ry Services (FAIS) Act, which focuses on the honesty, integrity, competency and ability of all financial services providers under its so-called fitand-proper requiremen­ts.

“If you wait for the RollsRoyce kind of regulatory framework, you still have those risks anyway,” Kamlana said, adding that the current law will cover most gaps.

Bitcoin – the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency – hit an all-time high of $73 664 (about R1.4 million), bolstered by record-breaking inflows into US exchange-traded funds tied to the unit.

Other cryptocurr­encies have been similarly lifted by renewed interest in the asset class. Ether traded as much as 3.3% higher on Wednesday and has increased about 75% this year.

With crypto exchanges falling under the FAIS Act, consumers will also have recourse and protection­s that don’t exist right now, with the regulator being able to take enforcemen­t action if an operator breaches of any of the act’s requiremen­ts.

“As we license and supervise, we will discover that perhaps there are gaps that cannot be closed by the existing regulatory framework, the FAIS Act,” he said. “And we might need to build on that as we discover what those are.”

Several of the continent’s biggest trading venues emerged from SA, including Luno – owned by Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group – and Pantera-backed VALR. –

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