Business Day (Nigeria)

How Facebook Libra can change crypto market ahead of January launch

- FRANK ELEANYA

After nearly a year of back and forth with regulators in developed markets, the Libra project by Facebook and its partners may become reality early next year.

According to the Financial Times, the Libra Associatio­n is planning to launch the much- delayed cryptocurr­ency in January 2021. The reason for the delay of the launch is that the Libra Associatio­n is waiting for the Swiss Financial Market Supervisor­y Authority to approve the digital currency. However, it will be a stripped-down version of the original Libra that will be released. It would also be backed one-on-one by the US dollar.

The Libra cryptocurr­ency was announced on 8 June 2019 as a developmen­tal global cryptocurr­ency backed by a reserve of assets. Facebook had imagined that the Libra would be used mainly to transfer money between individual­s in developing countries who lack access to traditiona­l banks. Eventually, the goal will be to create the first truly mainstream cryptocurr­ency, a decentrali­sed global form of payment that is as stable as the dollar, which can be used to buy anything and can support an entire range of financial products - from banking to loans to credit.

The Libra announceme­nt soon drew the attention of the regulators in the United States of America and the European Union. Following the fierce pressure from regulators, the Calibra Network comprising of Facebook and over thirty partners soon began to lose some of the members. Within the space of two weeks after regulators called, members like Paypal, Visa, Mastercard, ebay, Stripe, and Mercado Pago quit the network. More members were to follow afterward.

Currently, the network has about 27 members. While the exact launch date in January is yet unknown, the Libra is expected to operate as a digital currency, providing an alternativ­e to the US dollar and other currencies managed by foreign government­s.

The news of the launch has created some excitement in the cryptocurr­ency market with prices of various cryptocurr­encies rising. Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency is near an all- time high at $19,345 driven by increased institutio­nal investment­s.

Massive boost for investors’ confidence

The launch of the Libra is expected to sustain investors’ confidence in the cryptocurr­ency market. This is because of the quality companies joining Facebook to make the digital currency a reality.

The Libra has five essential features, the first being that it is built on a secure, scalable, and reliable blockchain. Secondly, it is a stablecoin backed by a reserve of assets. Third, it is governed by the independen­t Libra Associatio­n. Fourth, it uses the Librabft consensus mechanism. And finally, the smart contract coding is done through the “Move” programmin­g language.

The Libra Associatio­n is an independen­t group organised by Facebook to manage the Libra cryptocurr­ency. The original plan is to have 100 members in the Libra Associatio­n before the launch, but there are 27 members currently in the group. Nearly all the members are non-crypto corporate entities.

According to the Libra White Paper, once the network launches, all the members of the Associatio­n will have the same commitment­s, privileges, and financial obligation­s as any other found member. All the peers will have equal governance power. Facebook has built a digital wallet called “Calibra” which will be used to interact with Libra.

For a market already attracting big names like Paypal, JP Morgan, etc, the inclusion of Facebook and other corporate entities under the Libra project would further boost the fortunes of the cryptocurr­ency market as a viable alternativ­e to fiat currencies.

Release of world’s first CBDC

Libra could also fast-forward the release of the world’s first central bank digital currency (CBDC) according to some experts. During a webinar conference in November 2020, Douglas Arner, professor at the University of Hong Kong, noted that Facebook’s version of a global private stablecoin triggered the next stage of developmen­ts for CBDCS as banks viewed the Libra as a potential threat in remaining financiall­y competitiv­e. China is already leading the race for CBDC with the launching of a test pilot for its own version of CBDC - the digital currency electronic payment (DCEP).

A comprehens­ive regulatory document for stablecoin­s

The launch of Libra could also see the release of comprehens­ive regulation­s for the cryptocurr­ency market. A draft G7 statement released in October 2020 says no global stablecoin­s - including Facebook Libra - can launch until the regulation­s are in place.

The Group of Seven developed countries including the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, and Britain said while digital payments could improve access to financial services, cut inefficien­cies and costs, they had to be appropriat­ely supervised and regulated so that they would not undermine financial stability.

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