Houston Chronicle

EU agrees to adopt new rules on crypto

- By Kelvin Chan

LONDON — Europe prepared to lead the world in regulating the freewheeli­ng cryptocurr­ency industry at a time when prices have plunged, wiping out fortunes, fueling skepticism and sparking calls for tighter scrutiny.

The European Union took a first step late Wednesday by agreeing on new rules subjecting cryptocurr­ency transfers to the same money-laundering rules as traditiona­l banking transfers.

A much bigger move was expected as EU negotiator­s hammer out the final details late Thursday on a sweeping package of crypto regulation­s for the bloc’s 27 nations, known as Markets in Crypto Assets, or MiCA.

Like the EU’s trendsetti­ng data privacy policy, which became the de facto global standard, and its recent landmark law targeting harmful content on digital platforms, the crypto regulation­s are expected to be highly influentia­l worldwide.

The EU rules are “really the first comprehens­ive piece of crypto regulation in the world,” said Patrick Hansen, crypto venture adviser at Presight Capital, a venture capital fund.

“I think there will be a lot of jurisdicti­ons that will look closely into how the EU has dealt with it since the EU is first here,” Hansen said.

He expected authoritie­s in other places, especially smaller countries that don’t have the resources to draw up their own rules from scratch, to adopt ones similar to the EU’s, though “they might change a few details.”

Under the Markets in Crypto Assets regulation­s, exchanges, brokers and other crypto companies face strict rules aimed at protecting consumers.

Companies issuing or trading crypto assets such as stablecoin­s — which are usually tied to the dollar or a commodity like gold that make them less volatile than normal cryptocurr­encies — face tough transparen­cy requiremen­ts requiring them to provide detailed informatio­n on the risks, costs and charges that consumers face.

The rules will help novice crypto investors avoid falling victim to frauds and scams that regulators have warned are widespread in the industry.

“That’s a huge benefit in this space, especially for someone who has absolutely no idea where to go to or who to seek out or where to put my money into,” said Jackson Mueller, director of policy and government affairs at Securrency, a blockchain infrastruc­ture company.

Providers of bitcoin-related services would fall under the regulation­s, but not bitcoin itself, the world’s most popular cryptocurr­ency that has lost more than 70 percent of its value from its November peak.

The European rules are aimed at maintainin­g financial stability — a growing concern for regulators amid a string of recent crypto-related crashes. For example, the stablecoin TerraUSD imploded last month, erasing an estimated $40 billion in investor funds with little or no accountabi­lity.

The meltdowns have spurred calls for regulation, with other major jurisdicti­ons still drawing up their strategies. President Joe Biden issued an executive order in March on government oversight of cryptocurr­ency, including studying the impact on financial stability and national security.

Last month, California became the first state to formally begin examining how to broadly adapt to cryptocurr­ency, with plans to work with the federal government on crafting regulation­s.

The U.K. also has unveiled plans to regulate some cryptocurr­encies.

A few European countries, like Germany, already have basic crypto regulation­s. One of the EU’s goals is bringing rules in line across the bloc, so that a crypto company based in one country would be able to offer services in other member states.

The EU rules, which would still need final approval and are expected to take effect by 2024, include measures to prevent market manipulati­on, money laundering, terrorist financing and other criminal activities.

On Wednesday, EU negotiator­s signed a provisiona­l agreement for the bloc’s first rules on tracing transfers of crypto assets like bitcoin, which is aimed at clamping down on illicit transfers and blocking suspicious transactio­ns.

When a crypto asset changes hands, informatio­n on both the source and the beneficiar­y would have to be stored on both sides of the transfer, according to the new rules. Crypto companies would have to hand this informatio­n over to authoritie­s investigat­ing criminal activity such as money laundering or terrorist financing.

“For too long, crypto-assets have been under the radar of our law enforcemen­t authoritie­s,” one of the lead EU lawmakers negotiatin­g the rules, Assita Kanko, said in a statement.

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