Arab Times

Coincheck heist pushes Japan to ‘tighten’ rules

Hackers stole $530 mln

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TOKYO, Feb 12, (RTRS): After the Mt. Gox cryptocurr­ency exchange was stung by a half-billion dollar theft in 2014, Japanese regulators swung into action.

Their goal was to craft rules that both protected traders and allowed a promising sector to flourish. By last April, they thought they had arrived at a set of guidelines that did just that.

Japan’s national system to oversee cryptocurr­ency trading was the world’s first, rolled out even as policymake­rs elsewhere grappled with how to deal with the sector. Under the Japanese framework, some exchanges would be allowed to operate - even though they hadn’t yet won regulatory approval.

One of those was Coincheck Inc. Last month, hackers stole about $530 million from the Tokyo-based exchange, a theft rivalling Mt. Gox’s as one of the biggest ever for digital currency.

The Coincheck heist exposed flaws in Japan’s system. And for some experts, it raised questions over the country’s dash to regulate the industry - a sharp contrast to clampdowns by countries like South Korea and China.

Interviews with a dozen government officials, lawmakers and cryptocurr­ency industry leaders depict a regulator that opted for relatively loose rules to help nurture an industry largely populated by start-ups.

Japan’s Financial Services Agency declined to comment.

Proponents

But proponents of its regulatory approach say the system and the hack were not connected.

“It’s too much to say that the FSA or institutio­nal design was lax because there was one hack,” said former informatio­n technology vice-minister Mineyuki Fukuda, previously a supporter in parliament of promoting and regulating cryptocurr­encies.

In the wake of the Mt. Gox bankruptcy, Japan didn’t know what to make of bitcoin - or even who should be in charge.

“It’s not money,” Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters days after the exchange collapsed. “Does the Financial Services Agency have jurisdicti­on? The Finance Ministry? The Consumer Affairs Agency? The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry?”

Amid the vacuum of oversight, the governing Liberal Democratic Party, seeing the fintech sector as a way to stimulate growth, initially called for the cryptocurr­ency industry to form a body to regulate itself.

That led to the formation of the Japan Authority of Digital Assets (JADA), comprising blockchain and cryptocurr­ency start-ups and entreprene­urs.

When the FSA was later tasked with creating regulation­s for cryptocurr­encies, it turned to JADA for help. The group lobbied for rules friendly to start-ups, like low capital requiremen­ts.

“We had constant discussion­s with the FSA, giving technical informatio­n and ideas,” said So Saito, a founding member of JADA and now general counsel of its successor, the Japan Blockchain Associatio­n (JBA).

The FSA’s rules required exchanges to register, operate robust computer systems and address risk management.

But they left the storage of assets to a set of non-binding guidelines. Exchanges should keep the encrypted keys needed to access digital money in “cold wallets” for example, USB drives not connected to the internet - only if doing so didn’t overly inconvenie­nce customers, the guidelines said.

Clause

In effect, the clause left no obstacle to Coincheck’s holding $530 million worth of NEM crypto-coins in an online “hot wallet” - essentiall­y a digital folder stored on a server - from which the funds were stolen.

“The FSA was quite relaxed on protecting consumers on things like cold wallets and hot wallets,” said the chief financial officer of a major Japanese cryptocurr­ency exchange.

Policymake­rs across the world have grappled with how to deal with cryptocurr­encies. Most have been sceptical about trade in digital assets.

US regulators may ask Congress to legislate more oversight of digital money, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission said this month.

In Asia, South Korea is embracing strong oversight of cryptocurr­ency trading, at one point saying it might shut down local exchanges. China, concerned about financial stability, last year ordered some exchanges to close. India this month vowed to stamp out use of cryptocurr­encies altogether.

Statistics on cryptocurr­encies are patchy because their trading is unregulate­d in most countries. But Japan accounts for between a third and half of all global bitcoin trade, exchange operators say - a share of the market that has grown as other jurisdicti­ons have cracked down.

As Japan’s rules came into effect last April, exchanges were given six months to register.

But even those that registered but weren’t approved could continue to operate.

Coincheck was among the exchanges that didn’t win approval. By the time it filed its applicatio­n in mid-September, bitcoin was surging towards a record high of $19,458, which it hit in December.

The exchange had grown to one of Japan’s biggest amid a sharp increase in trading, moving to a new headquarte­rs from a dingy backstreet office. Its share of domestic bitcoin trades soared to 55 percent in December from only 7 percent a year earlier, data from Jpbitcoin. com show.

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