The Guardian (USA)

EU moves to rein in ‘wild west’ of crypto assets with new rules

- Dan Milmo Global technology editor

The EU has moved to rein in the “wild west” of crypto assets by agreeing a groundbrea­king set of rules for the sector, adding to pressure on the UK and US to act too.

Representa­tives from the European parliament and EU states inked an agreement on Thursday that contains measures to guard against market abuse and manipulati­on, and require that crypto firms provide details of the environmen­tal impact of their assets.

“Today, we put order in the wild west of crypto assets and set clear rules for a harmonised market,” said Stefan Berger, the German MEP who led negotiatio­ns on behalf of the parliament.

Referring to the recent slump in cryptocurr­ency prices – the total value of the market has fallen from $3tn (£2.5tn) last year to less than $900bn – Berger added: “The recent fall in the value of digital currencies shows us how highly risky and speculativ­e they are and that it is fundamenta­l to act.”

The European parliament’s markets in crypto assets (MiCA) law is expected to come into force at the end of 2023. Globally, crypto assets are largely unregulate­d, with national operators in the EU required only to show controls for combating money laundering.

The EU’s move came amid further turmoil in the digital asset market on Friday as Voyager Digital, a crypto broker, said it had suspended withdrawal­s, trading and deposits to its platform.

Voyager’s chief executive, Stephen Ehrlich, said the move gives the company “additional time to continue exploring strategic alternativ­es with various interested parties”. US-based Voyager said the value of the crypto assets it holds is $685m, compared with the $1.1bn in crypto assets it had loaned.

Cryptocurr­ency is the term for a group of digital assets that share the same underlying structure as bitcoin: a publicly available “blockchain” that records ownership without having any central authority in control.

The sector’s supporters have said it represents a good investment because, for instance, it carries low fees and, unlike convention­al currencies, is not tied to government­s. Its detractors say a lack of regulatory oversight or implicit government support make it susceptibl­e to scams and wild fluctuatio­ns in price.

MiCA will be the world’s first comprehens­ive regime for crypto assets and will contain strong measures to guard against market abuse and manipulati­on, said Ernest Urtasun, a Green party MEP.

The law gives issuers of crypto assets and providers of related services a “passport” to serve clients across the EU from a single base, while meeting capital and consumer protection rules. Non-fungible tokens (NFTs), a $40bn market last year, are not covered by MiCA.

The EU negotiatio­ns on Thursday also focused on issues such as supervisio­n and energy consumptio­n of crypto assets. “We have agreed that crypto asset providers should in future disclose the energy consumptio­n and environmen­tal impact of assets,” Berger said.

The UK and US, two significan­t crypto centres, have yet to approve similar rules, although regulators in both countries have warned of the need for stronger safeguards.

The MiCA law is expected to set a benchmark for other regulatory regimes globally, although one expert said the all-encompassi­ng nature of the EU regime might not be replicated.

Harry Eddis, the global co-head of fintech at Linklaters, a London-based

law firm, said the EU had “nailed its crypto colours to the mast”.

“Other jurisdicti­ons have shown little appetite to date in following their lead in implementi­ng such an allencompa­ssing regulation, although we can surely expect to see other financial services centres upping their game in regulating the crypto community, albeit in a more piecemeal fashion.”

In the UK, the financial watchdog is weighing proposals on marketing crypto products to consumers that could lead to significan­t restrictio­ns on crypto exchanges operating in the country.

In May, the Treasury declared it wanted a regime in place for dealing with the collapse of a stablecoin, a cryptocurr­ency backed by traditiona­l assets such as short-term debt which could therefore pose a risk to the wider financial system.

Crypto assets came under pressure after the collapse of the TerraUSD stablecoin project in May, with the major US cryptocurr­ency lending company Celsius Network freezing withdrawal­s and transfers. However, the sector has also proved susceptibl­e to wider economic factors.

These include stock market declines linked to rising inflation and ensuing increases in interest by central banks. Raising rates – a path taken by the US, UK and Swiss central banks last month – can make risky assets less attractive.

The regulatory breakthrou­gh came as India’s central bank said cryptocurr­encies were based on “make believe”. The bank’s latest financial stability report said cryptocurr­encies were no more than “sophistica­ted speculatio­n”.

The bank’s governor, Shaktikant­a Das, wrote: “Cryptocurr­encies are a clear danger. Anything that derives value based on make believe, without any underlying [value], is just speculatio­n under a sophistica­ted name.”

 ?? Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? Cryptocurr­ency prices have slumped recently, with the total value of the market falling from $3tn last year to less than $900bn. Photograph:
Dado Ruvić/Reuters Cryptocurr­ency prices have slumped recently, with the total value of the market falling from $3tn last year to less than $900bn. Photograph:

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