The National - News

BIG GUNS OF BUSINESS IN INDIA SET SIGHTS ON BITCOIN

▶ Regulators may act against cryptocurr­encies, reports Rebecca Bundhun

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Shivam Thakral, 22, was so fascinated by bitcoin that, while studying for his undergradu­ate degree, the young entreprene­ur decided to launch a cryptocurr­ency exchange in India in 2016.

“Cryptocurr­encies have been gaining a lot of traction in India because people who have invested have doubled, tripled their investment,” says Mr Thakral, the co-founder of BuyUcoin, based in New Delhi, which provides a platform to trade cryptocurr­encies including bitcoin.

Despite mounting concerns expressed by authoritie­s, the cryptocurr­ency frenzy in India seems to be showing no signs of abating. Several cryptocurr­ency companies have started in India, while existing firms are moving in on the rising interest in virtual currencies. Demand for this new money has gathered pace in the subcontine­nt amid surging prices generating worldwide interest. Demonetisa­tion in particular has helped to fuel demand in India.

But, increasing­ly, authoritie­s in the country have been trying to repress investment in cryptocurr­encies, citing financial and security risks, which has prompted some Indian banks in recent weeks to block transactio­ns related to exchanges such as BuyUcoin.

This comes as government­s globally are becoming more concerned about speculativ­e investment­s in virtual currencies. The South Korean state said last week it plans to ban local cryptocurr­ency exchanges, which triggered a 12 per cent slump in bitcoin rates to US$12,801. Last year, regulators in China took steps to block such exchanges.

“There are pros and cons of investment­s in cryptocurr­ency – cryptocurr­encies display a tendency to oscillate between high-value returns and substantia­l value reductions,” says Vinay Kalantri, the founder of the Mobile Wallet, an online payment solution company based in Mumbai.

The Indian government has not yet revealed measures as aggressive as some of its Asian peers, but is has been very outspoken of its negative stance on the trend. India’s finance minister Arun Jaitley, warned that cryptocurr­encies are not “legal tender”. The finance ministry recently issued a statement describing the currencies as a “Ponzi scheme”, stating that virtual currencies “don’t have any intrinsic value and are not backed by any kind of assets” and their prices are purely driven by speculatio­n, making them highly volatile.

Taxation around the currencies has also become an area of concern and is still to be clearly defined. The income tax department last month moved in on exchanges and individual­s in connection with these tokens, sending notices to traders and conducting surveys of exchanges across several major cities.

The central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, has issued a series of warnings to the public.

RBI says it has not issued “any licence or authorisat­ion to any entity or company to operate such schemes or deal with bitcoin or any virtual currency”. The RBI added “that dealing with virtual currencies came with “potential economic, financial, operationa­l, legal, customer protection and security related risks”. Local media reports suggest the RBI has informally requested banks in the country to steer clear of virtual currency exchanges, and this has led to a number of banks blocking transactio­ns.

“This has resulted in deposit and withdrawal related bottleneck­s across all the Indian exchanges,” says Vikram Pandya, the director of the fintech programme at SP Jain School of Management, which also has a campus in Dubai.

“What we require is the proper framework and regulation­s to govern these projects. If one bans deposit and withdrawal from banks, people may start exploring other routes to do these transactio­ns, which defies the purpose because through the bank it is at least traceable. While some of the currencies are utter nonsense there are currencies which have really good potential.”

Mr Thakral says the move by the banks to avoid cryptocurr­encies has impacted his business. “It has caused a little bit of a drop,” he says, but he expects the negative impact to be temporary and believes interest in cryptocurr­encies among investors is actually growing because of the backlash against them.

“More and more people are becoming aware of cryptocurr­encies because of the comments by the government and the RBI,” Mr Thakral says.

Ultimately, he thinks the government will move towards issuing a set of regulation­s to govern exchanges such as his rather than trying to ban the trading of the currencies.

Reliance Jio, a telecom company, which is part of the billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries conglomera­te, is reportedly planning to create its own cryptocurr­ency to capitalise on the trend, according to Mint, an Indian business daily.

“With Reliance Jio planning to launch their own coin, I assume very soon we can expect regulation­s around such tokens,” says Mr Pandya. “India has always taken wait and watch stance for regulation­s around new technologi­es.”

With countries including Singapore coming up with their own guidelines and framework around virtual currencies, he says he expects the RBI to eventually follow suit.

The Indian government’s demonetisa­tion move – in which it suddenly banned the two highest value banknotes in November 2016 – has played a significan­t role in the rise of cryptocurr­encies in India, with people prompted to look for alternativ­es to cash. There have been some allegation­s that this has led to black money flowing into virtual currencies.

Prime minister Narendra Modi is eager for India to move towards a more transparen­t digital economy. Ironically, while the government is wary of cryptocurr­encies, its broader policies have helped boost demand for them.

Some businesses in the country are starting to accept bitcoin, in some restaurant­s, for example, as cash liquidity has reduced following demonetisa­tion.

“In India, the culture towards digital money has been pushed by the government itself and cryptocurr­encies are another form of digital money,” says Arjun Chakrabort­i, the president of Trak-Invest, a virtual equity stock platform headquarte­red in Singapore and with operations in India, which last month launched its own cryptocurr­ency.

He says that India forms one of the biggest portions of the company’s business and this interest is being driven by “the new millennial” who is attracted to these currencies.

“Millennial­s in Asia want opportunit­ies to earn money, they do speculate and they use technology, and these are all the factors that have driven the adoption.”

Mr Chakrabort­i says individual­s, however, need to be made aware of the risks and understand “socially responsibl­e trading” and that, globally, the market needs to be “pushed in a mature direction … otherwise it becomes a one-time frenzy, people will lose their money and the bubble will burst”.

But Mr Thakral believes virtual currencies are here to stay.

What we require is the proper framework and regulation­s to govern virtual currencies VIKRAM PANDYA Fintech director at SP Jain School

 ?? Reuters ?? Billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s telecom company Reliance Jio is reportedly planning to create its own cryptocurr­ency
Reuters Billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s telecom company Reliance Jio is reportedly planning to create its own cryptocurr­ency

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