The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Crypto-currency crackdown sparks search for bases

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NEW YORK: When US entreprene­ur Bharath Rao looked around for the best place to raise money for his crypto-currency derivative­s trading business, the United States did not make his list. Instead he chose the East African island nation Seychelles to sell the trading platform’s tokens.

Rao, a San Diego-based technology veteran who has worked for major Wall Street banks, is not alone.

Confronted with national regulators’ intensifyi­ng scrutiny of digital currency fund-raising, known as initial coin offerings, many entreprene­urs are moving businesses to locations more welcoming to crypto-currencies and known for low taxes.

Dozens of start-ups have flocked to Singapore, Switzerlan­d, Eastern Europe and the Caribbean this year, according to interviews with entreprene­urs and company registrati­on data made available to Reuters.

Like bitcoin, the best-known crypto-currency created in 2009, the coins use encryption and a blockchain transactio­n database enabling fast and anonymous transfer of funds without centralize­d payment systems.

The numbers compiled by crypto-currency research firm Smith + Crown show how national regulators’ attempts to curb coin sales may just shift business elsewhere.

The United States leads with 34 digital currency start-up registrati­ons so far this year, but that reflects Silicon Valley’s role as a technology hub and the depth of US financial markets rather than a welcoming regulatory climate.

Singapore registered 21 entities, up from one in 2016, followed by 19 in Switzerlan­d, up from three last year, according to Smith + Crown. Central Europe saw 14 companies registered this year, compared with one in 2016 and the Caribbean hosted 10, up from two last year.

“The data affirms our sense that Switzerlan­d and Singapore remain go-to locations, but the US could remain for companies raising large amounts of money,” said Matt Chwierut, Smith + Crown’s research director.

Switzerlan­d does not have specific rules on digital coin sales, but some parts of an offer may fall under existing regulation­s, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisor­y Authority (FINMA) said in September.

So far, four of the five largest token sales, raising a total of over US$600 million, were carried out by firms registered in Zug, a low-tax region south of Zurich known as the “crypto-valley” of the world.

In contrast, China and South Korea banned digital coin sales this year and regulators in the United States, Malaysia, Dubai, United Kingdom and Germany warned investors that current scant oversight exposed them to risks of fraud, hacking or theft.

Soaring registrati­ons in “friendly” jurisdicti­ons show how hard it is for national watchdogs to regulate digital coin sales. It is a challenge regulators begin to recognize.

“We are talking to other regulators, and we know that there are a lot of bilateral discussion­s taking place,” the Dubai Financial Services Authority said in an email to Reuters.

The US Securities Exchange Commission declined to comment about the migration of coin issuers to remote jurisdicti­ons.

The United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority and Securities Commission Malaysia reiterated their stance that digital coin sales are highrisk, speculativ­e investment­s and that retail investors should be aware of that.

A spokesman for Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisor­y Authority (BaFin) told Reuters “hopping” within the European Union would be “largely futile” since the EU supervisor­y authority has adopted the same stance as BaFin on the issue.

The Dubai regulator pointed out that seeking out friendly jurisdicti­ons was not unusual, but regulators still needed to warn about the inherent risks in digital coin sales.

Financial regulators from South Korea and China were not immediatel­y available for comment.

In the United States, the SEC’s July 25 ruling that digital coins should be regulated as securities had a short-lived chilling effect on the crypto-currency market. Short-lived, because many US startups thought they could avoid such scrutiny by selling “utility tokens,” which gave buyers access to products or services rather than a stake in the company.

Still, concerns that regulators’ views might evolve, have made potential US coin issuers consider sales overseas.

“Our lawyers certainly think regulation­s on utility tokens could change. So for safety, the ICO should be done outside the US,” said Arran Stewart, co-founder of US-based Job.com, an online employment platform which plans a token offering in the Cayman Islands in February.

 ??  ?? Bitcoin coins placed on Dollar banknotes, next to computer keyboard, are seen in this illustrati­on picture. — Reuters photo
Bitcoin coins placed on Dollar banknotes, next to computer keyboard, are seen in this illustrati­on picture. — Reuters photo

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