Compliance
Global Financial Think Tank Frets Over Crypto-assets
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The global crypto-assets market is now measured in trillions of dollars, although not yet more than a small share of all financial assets. An international body recommending policy and tracking developments has raised a red flag over potential problems that cryptos may cause.
Bitcoin’s price action is volatile – falling from its highs above
$68,000 last year to $42,000 yesterday (source: Coindesk) – and
this is giving global regulators heartburn.
“Crypto-asset markets are fast evolving and could reach a point
where they represent a threat to global financial stability due
to their scale, structural vulnerabilities and increasing
interconnectedness with the traditional financial system,”
according to the Financial
Stability Board, an international body that monitors and
makes recommendations about the global financial system.
Cryptos such as bitcoin have often been created by those
seeking an alternative to state fiat currencies, with interest
heightened by the massive central bank money printing, aka
quantitative easing, since the global financial crash of 2008.
Some advocates even talk of bitcoin as a “digital
gold.” However, regulators have been concerned that it could
be a conduit for money launderers and tax evaders. And central
banks might fret that they could be put out of business if
cryptos expand massively.
Regulations vary, with some nations such as Switzerland taking a
relatively liberal approach, while mainland China, on the other
hand, has banned “mining” bitcoin. El Salvador has gone
to the other extreme by saying that bitcoin counts as legal
tender.
The FSB report looks at “developments and associated
vulnerabilities relating to three segments of the crypto-asset
markets.” Areas of focus include unbacked crypto-assets
(such as bitcoin); stablecoins; decentralized finance (DeFi) and
other platforms on which crypto-assets trade.
The report said that although the extent and nature of
crypto-assets' use varies somewhat across jurisdictions,
financial stability risks could rapidly escalate, underscoring
the need for timely and pre-emptive evaluation of possible policy
responses.
While capitalization of the crypto-asset market rose 3.5
times last year to $2.6 trillion, this remains a small share of
total financial system assets.
“Direct connections between crypto-assets and systemically
important financial institutions and core financial markets,
while growing rapidly, are limited at the present time.
Nevertheless, institutional involvement in crypto-asset markets,
both as investors and service providers, has grown over the last
year, albeit from a low base. If the current trajectory of growth
in scale and interconnectedness of crypto-assets to these
institutions were to continue, this could have implications for
global financial stability,” the FSB said.
Crypto-assets and other entities, including the infrastructure of
distributed ledger technology known as blockchain, continue to be
regular discussion points in wealth management circles. To some
degree the sector has gone more “mainstream.” Large
financial groups such as BNY Mellon, Julius Baer and Morgan
Stanley, among others, are involved in varying degrees. This news
service is looking at how wealth management industry figures
think these technologies will change the industry, whether in the
form of new monetary systems, back-office efficiencies, or new
ways of protecting privacy and
authenticating transactions safely.
Late last year, Fidelity Investments launched a physical
bitcoin spot exchange traded fund in Canada, and it has launched
a similar product in Europe. As noted by the Financial
Times (2 December 2021), the ETF, called the Fidelity
Advantage Bitcoin ETF, is designed to invest in “physical” spot
bitcoin, a model the US Securities and Exchange Commission has so
far rejected, rather than bitcoin futures contracts, which the US
financial regulator has permitted.