Compliance
Global Regulators Frown On Facebook's Cryptocurrency Ambitions

The social media giant's cryptocurrency ambitions are rattling cages of regulators around the world. It is an issue that even wealth managers need to watch.
Global regulators will ask Facebook as early as today about its
Libra cryptocurrency, as European Union member states - and
possibly others - worry about how such a digital currency could
hit financial stability and possibly enable illicit transfers,
according to the Financial Times.
Officials from 26 central banks, including the US Federal Reserve
and the Bank of England will meet with representatives of Libra
in Basel on Monday, the newspaper, citing officials, said.
A report by Reuters said Facebook did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
Already, countries such as France have criticised the Libra
project, seeing it as a threat to the EU state's sovereignty.
Ironically, advocates of digital currencies such as Bitcoin have
sometimes championed them precisely because they weaken central
banks' ability to create new money, hence inflating currencies.
In the eyes of some defenders, digital currencies are a kind of
"virtual gold standard", exerting a brake on governments'
capacity to depreciate the value of money. Opponents worry that
cryptocurrencies are so volatile, and opaque, that they encourage
money laundering, and are not stable enough to be regarded as
money.
The fact that a social media heavyweight is developing such
currency ideas demonstrates, however, how the lines between
financial services, banks and technology are increasingly
blurring: a big issue for the world's wealth management
sector.
CoinCorner’s CEO, Danny Scott, commented: “It’s been announced
that France plans to block Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency in the
EU over concerns that it poses a threat to the sovereignty of
national currencies. This comes as no surprise given the
regulatory backlash Facebook has received since the announcement
of Libra back in June."
"It's unrealistic to think that a single, private entity could be
accountable for that level of control, and the French Economy and
Finance Minister thinks so too. At a conference this week, Bruno
Le Maire stated that Facebook is a `sole actor with more than 2
billion users on the planet' - clearly Facebook is out for world
domination, something I’ve actually suggested before," he
said.
"It’s also important to remember that this isn’t the first time
Facebook has tried to enter the financial space, in fact, they’ve
had numerous failed attempts before. Unfortunately, it just so
happens that this time they’ve launched into an emerging industry
which receives global attention and the result is that they’ve
managed to gain momentum with this project," he said. "We expect
to see this ban having somewhat of a domino effect, with more
countries following suit to ban Libra over the coming
months.”
Bambos Tsiattalou, founding partner at specialist fraud and
financial crime law firm, Stokoe Partnership Solicitors, said:
"It's all very well that the Paris-based Financial Action Task
Force seeks to cement its attitude as uncompromising and
unyielding, however, their claims to monitor developments on
Facebook’s planned Libra cryptocurrency is simply virtue
signalling at its finest."
"Monitoring developments will not make a difference to crime
fighting and it reeks of the usual vague jargon that we are very
much used to with financial task forces," Tsiattalou added.