Experts Warn of Tighter Policing Ahead for Stablecoins

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Experts Warn of Tighter Policing Ahead for Stablecoins 101
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It appears that regulatory strife may well be in store for stablecoins, with experts opining that fiat-pegged tokens could fall under the scrutiny of financial policymakers.

Quoted in the Financial Times, John Salmon, the head of the legal firm Hogan Lovells’ blockchain and cryptocurrency division, opined:

“Certainly the direction of travel is to look at regulating [stablecoins].”

The warning comes ahead of forthcoming new guidelines from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which is set to update its stablecoins policies in a set of regulatory standards to be published next month.

And the same media outlet quoted more warnings from Rohan Grey, a professor of law at Willamette University and one of the architects of a bill put forward last year by United States Congress members. The draft bill, if approved, would require stablecoin issuers to obtain banking charters prior to issuance, as well as abide by American banking regulations – and apply for approval from both the Federal Reserve and the regulatory Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Grey said:

“All of [the variations of stablecoins], to me, are just shadow banking which should have been regulated?.[…] as part of the banking system.”

According to him, there is this long history of new entrants into the financial sector using a technological edge?to offer a variation on bank money and to avoid regulation in the short term as a bank so that they can establish market share.

Indeed, the regulatory push may not be a uniquely American phenomenon.

The same media outlet quoted Linklaters lawyer Harry Eddis as opining: “If a stablecoin falls into the unregulated or e-money category, a lot of regulatory oversight and conduct rules fall away. That’s why you’re seeing a lot of regulators wanting to assert regulation.”

Aside from American politicians, the European Commission and the British Treasury have both spoken of the need for increased levels of regulation in the sector and what Eddis agreed was the legal “ambiguity surrounding the status of stablecoins.”

The co-authors of the American draft bill, including Representatives Rashida Tlaib and Stephen Lynch, have claimed that stablecoins “represent a growing source of the market, liquidity and credit risk.”

Furthermore, experts called for more unity and transparency from existing stablecoin players, such as Tether, the operator of the USDT token. One expert was quoted as calling it “preposterous” that the firm had offered such “scant details” about the nature of the billions of dollars worth of “assets” it claims underpin its tokens.

Stablecoins are likely to fall under a heightened level of scrutiny if Facebook and its Diem partners get their way: The social media giant and the rest of its Diem stakeholders are looking to begin pilots on a USD-pegged stablecoin project of their own in conjunction with Silvergate, which holds chartered bank status in the USA. The project is a scaled-back version of the tech behemoth’s once-grand Libra global stablecoin plans.

But there were more words of caution from Jonathan Knegtel, co-founder and CEO of the blockchain analyst Blockdata, who told the FT,

“This is going to be the big geopolitical discussion over the next decade. Are the regulators going to be comfortable with stablecoins coexisting with central bank digital currencies?”

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Learn more:

- Stablecoins May 'Penetrate Non-Crypto Markets' & Surpass USD 100B in 2021

- Stablecoins May Threaten EU Market Integration And Interoperability - ECB

- FATF Makes Small Crypto Platforms Easy Prey For Big Players

- Can't Beat Crypto Regulators? Educate Them

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