The Sun (Malaysia)

Coincheck to start repaying customers hit by digital heist

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TOKYO: Japanese cryptocurr­ency exchange Coincheck Inc, reeling from government reprimands over lax standards after a US$530 million (RM2.1 billion) theft of digital money, said it would from yesterday start repaying customers affected by the heist.

Coincheck also plans to lift curbs from yesterday on the trading and withdrawal of some cryptocurr­encies, including bitcoin, that it had imposed as it investigat­ed the late-January heist.

Coincheck said last week it would repay about ¥46 billion (RM1.68 billion) to investors who lost digital money in the hack, one of the biggest of digital money ever.

The incident sparked renewed concern in Japan and abroad over security at cryptocurr­ency exchanges, and raised questions over the country’s system of regulating exchanges.

In its widest regulatory response yet, Japan’s financial regulator last week punished Coincheck and six other exchanges, ordering them to make improvemen­ts in areas from risk management to preventing the criminal use of digital money.

The Financial Services Agency said Coincheck lacked proper systems for dealing money laundering and terrorism financing, and in the second such punishment since the hack ordered it to submit a report on how it would improve by until March 22. – Reuters

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