The Sun (Malaysia)

Japan to urge G20 for ‘help’ in cryptocurr­ency money laundering

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TOKYO: Japan will urge its G20 counterpar­ts at a meeting next week to beef up efforts to prevent cryptocurr­encies from being used for money laundering, a government official with direct knowledge of the matter said.

But the prospects for the G20 finance leaders to agree on specific global rules and mention them in a joint communique are low, given difference­s in each country’s approach, the official said, a view echoed by another official involved in G20 talks.

“Discussion­s will focus on anti-money laundering steps and consumer protection, rather than how cryptocurr­ency trading could affect the banking system,” one of the officials said.

“The general feeling among the G20 members is that applying too stringent regulation­s won’t be good.”

Finance ministers and central bankers of the Group of 20 major economies will meet in Buenos Aires on March 19-20, with cryptocurr­encies set to be on the agenda.

The Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a 37nation group set up by the G7 industrial powers to fight illicit finance, will report to the G20 its findings on ways to keep cryptocurr­encies from being used for money laundering.

Japanese policymake­rs fear that while there is broad consensus among the G20 nations on the need for such steps, some nations have looser regulation­s than others, which leaves loopholes for money laundering, the official said.

Japan was the first country to adopt a national system to oversee cryptocurr­ency trading, although it carried out checks on several exchanges this year after the theft of US$530 million (RM2.1 billion) from one exchange, Coincheck Inc. – Reuters

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